Anti-scam guide
Legitimate ESA letters start with evaluation.
The fastest way to spot a weak ESA product is the promise: registry, certificate, ID card, vest, or guaranteed approval. Fetch My ESA is built around licensed-professional review instead.
Rule of thumb:
If a site says registration alone makes an animal an ESA for housing, be careful.
State licensure
The professional reviewing the request should be properly licensed for the user's state context.
Clinical evaluation
Documentation should follow evaluation, not checkout automation.
Plain limits
A legitimate site explains what ESA documentation does not cover.
No fake products
Registries, cards, certificates, and vests are not a substitute for proper documentation.
Warning signs
Claims that should stop the purchase.
Guaranteed acceptance, "certified ESA," public-access promises, and airline-rights claims create legal, consumer, and ad-policy risk.