Hotel front desk staff frequently misunderstand what they can legally ask when a guest arrives with a service dog. Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, hotels cannot require documentation, certification, or "papers" proving an animal's service dog status. Yet many handlers still face illegal demands for paperwork, creating unnecessary barriers to accommodation.
The confusion stems from legitimate concerns about fake service dogs mixed with outdated training materials and state-specific programs that don't override federal law. Understanding the precise boundaries of what hotels may ask protects both handlers exercising their rights and hotel operators avoiding costly discrimination complaints.
The ADA permits hotel staff to ask exactly two questions when it's not obvious what service an animal provides:
- Is the dog a service animal required because of a disability?
- What work or task has the dog been trained to perform?
These questions establish whether the animal qualifies under the legal definition without requiring disclosure of specific medical diagnoses. Staff cannot ask about the nature or extent of a person's disability, demand medical documentation, or request a demonstration of the dog's trained tasks.
What hotels can ask about service dogs ends there. No follow-up questions about where the dog received training, how long the handler has had the disability, or whether a doctor prescribed the animal are permitted....