What a Legit ESA Letter Looks Like: Checklist and Annotated Example
Most people have never actually seen a legitimate ESA letter before buying one, which is exactly how lookalike products survive. This walkthrough shows you every element a real letter carries, top to bottom, so you can audit any letter in about ninety seconds.
Key Takeaways
- Top: professional letterhead with practice name and contact information
- Opening: provider identifies their license type, number, and state
- Middle: disability-related need stated in FHA language, no diagnosis disclosed
- Middle: your animal identified as providing disability-related support
- Bottom: wet or verified digital signature, issue date, and a verification path
- Nowhere: registry numbers, badges, seals of approval, or expiration countdowns
The Full Picture
The tell that gives away most fakes is decoration. Real clinical letters are visually boring: letterhead, a few paragraphs, a signature. Fakes compensate with gold seals, official-looking crests, QR codes leading to a registry the seller invented, and laminated ID cards for your dog. Every one of those elements is a costume.
The second tell is verifiability. Take the license number on the letter and run it through your state licensing board's public lookup; a real provider appears in seconds with an active license. Then check whether the issuing service can confirm the letter if a landlord calls. If both checks pass, the letter is legitimate.
How to Put This Into Practice
Verification is not a threat to fear but a check to invite. Choose documentation with a live verification path, offer the check before it is demanded, and the review closes in your favor. That is the entire strategy, and it is why every SignMyESA letter ships with a verification ID and a staffed records line.