Tag: Texas ESA

How to Choose an ESA Provider: National Companies vs. Local Texas Counselors

ESA Learning Center

How to Choose an ESA Provider Your Landlord Can Trust

Not all emotional support animal providers offer the same level of clinical care, documentation quality, or follow-up support. Before choosing an ESA evaluation provider, it is important to understand what happens after the letter is issued — especially if your landlord requests verification, asks for clarification, or questions whether the documentation is reliable.

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The ESA Letter Is Only One Part of the Process

Many people searching for an emotional support animal letter assume every ESA provider offers the same service. They do not.

The evaluation and letter matter, but what often matters later is whether the provider can be verified, whether the documentation appears reliable, and whether a licensed professional is available if your landlord has questions.

This is where the difference between a large national ESA company and a local Texas counseling practice can become very important.

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Provider Differences

Not All ESA Providers Work the Same Way

ESA services can look similar online, but the level of clinical involvement, follow-up support, and landlord verification support can be very different.

Certificate or Registry Websites

ESA certificates, badges, ID cards, and online registries may look official, but they are not the same as documentation from a licensed professional after a clinical evaluation.

Large National ESA Firms

Some national companies may rely on centralized systems, customer service teams, or out-of-state providers. Follow-up support may vary, especially when a landlord requests direct verification.

Local Clinical Practices

A local counseling practice can provide a more personal clinical process, clearer provider verification, and direct therapist involvement when appropriate.

After the Letter

What Happens After You Receive Your ESA Letter?

Many clients think the process ends once they receive their ESA letter. In reality, the landlord or housing provider may still review the documentation before making a decision.

The process may include:

  • Submitting the ESA letter to the landlord or property manager
  • Waiting for the housing provider to review the documentation
  • Responding to questions about the provider or letter
  • Completing a landlord verification form
  • Clarifying that the letter was issued by a licensed professional
  • Confirming that an evaluation occurred, when properly authorized

This is one reason provider accessibility matters. If your landlord requests verification and no one responds, your housing accommodation request may be delayed or questioned.

Landlord Verification

Why ESA Letter Verification Matters

Housing providers may try to verify that an ESA letter is authentic, that the provider exists, that the provider is licensed, and that the documentation was actually issued by the professional listed on the letter.

Verification does not usually require sharing full therapy records, detailed treatment history, or private clinical notes. However, it may require the provider to confirm limited information when the client has signed an appropriate release.

Common Problem

What If the Landlord Cannot Reach the Provider?

If a landlord’s verification request goes through a call center, ticket system, or generic customer support inbox, the process may feel frustrating for both the tenant and the housing provider.

When the actual clinician is unavailable or difficult to reach, the landlord may become more skeptical of the documentation.

Cost Transparency

The Initial Price Is Not Always the Final Price

Some ESA providers advertise a simple starting price, but additional costs may appear later when the landlord requests something beyond a basic letter.

Additional charges may include:

  • Custom apartment verification forms
  • Reissued or corrected documentation
  • Updated letters
  • Expedited processing
  • Additional landlord paperwork
  • Provider verification requests
  • Therapist contact or follow-up services

At Motivations Counseling, if your therapist determines that ESA documentation is clinically appropriate, the ESA letter is included in the evaluation fee. Routine verification and reasonable clarification requests are personally reviewed by our clinical team rather than routed only through a call center.

If a landlord request involves substantial new clinical work, unusual documentation, or information outside the scope of routine verification, we discuss that with the client before any additional fee is considered.

Today’s ESA Environment

The ESA Landscape Has Changed

Obtaining an ESA letter has become only one part of the process. In recent years, housing providers have become more cautious when reviewing emotional support animal accommodation requests. Many landlords now spend more time verifying documentation and ensuring it comes from a licensed mental health professional who can be identified and contacted if questions arise.

Federal guidance surrounding emotional support animals has also evolved, creating greater emphasis on individualized clinical evaluations and reliable documentation rather than generic online certificates, registries, or unverifiable letters.

As a result, many renters are discovering that the quality of the provider — and the provider’s willingness to stand behind the evaluation — can be just as important as the letter itself.

Today, one of the most valuable parts of an ESA evaluation may not be the letter alone. It is knowing there is a licensed clinician available if your landlord has reasonable questions or requests verification.

Choosing an ESA Provider

Questions Every Renter Should Ask Before Choosing an ESA Provider

Before paying for an emotional support animal evaluation, take a few minutes to learn how the provider handles landlord questions, documentation, and follow-up support. These questions can help you avoid surprises later.

Who Actually Completes the Evaluation?

Will your evaluation be completed by a licensed mental health professional, or are you primarily interacting with customer service staff? Ask who makes the clinical decision and whether that provider is licensed in Texas.

Who Answers if My Landlord Calls?

If your landlord wants to verify the letter or ask reasonable questions, will they speak with the therapist who completed your evaluation, or will they be routed through a call center or ticket system?

Are Verification Requests Included?

Some providers charge additional fees for apartment verification forms, updated documentation, or follow-up requests. Ask what is included before purchasing an evaluation.

Is the Therapist Licensed in Texas?

A Texas-licensed clinician may be easier for Texas landlords and apartment communities to verify. Local practices also tend to be more familiar with the needs of Texas renters.

Is There a Real Counseling Practice Behind the Letter?

Does the provider operate an established counseling practice with licensed therapists, or is the letter being issued through a large online platform with limited ongoing clinical involvement?

Will the Therapist Stand Behind the Evaluation?

The most valuable question may be the simplest: If your landlord has reasonable questions after receiving your documentation, will the therapist who completed the evaluation still be available to help?

The best ESA provider is not necessarily the one with the lowest advertised price. It is the provider who completes a legitimate clinical evaluation, prepares reliable documentation, and remains available if reasonable verification or clarification is needed later.

Why Clients Choose Motivations Counseling

A Local Texas Counseling Practice That Stands Behind Every ESA Evaluation

Choosing an emotional support animal provider is about more than receiving a letter. It is about knowing your documentation comes from an established counseling practice with licensed Texas clinicians who remain available if reasonable verification or clarification is needed.

Texas Licensed Clinicians Established Counseling Practice Telehealth Across Texas Therapist-Managed Verification Same-Day Appointments Often Available
2016 Serving Texas Since
60+ Five-Star Google Reviews
Hundreds of ESA Evaluations Completed
Thousands of Texas Clients Served

Texas-Based Practice

Licensed Texas mental health professionals serving clients statewide through telehealth, with offices in Sugar Land and Katy.

Licensed Therapists

Every evaluation is completed by a licensed Texas mental health professional — not a customer service representative or automated system.

Therapist-Managed Verification

When appropriate and with your written authorization, our therapists personally review reasonable landlord verification requests and documentation questions.

No Extra Charge for the Letter

If an ESA recommendation is clinically appropriate, your ESA letter is included in the evaluation fee.

Trusted by Texas Clients

More than 60 five-star Google reviews from clients who trusted Motivations Counseling for counseling, assessments, and ESA evaluations.

Established Clinical Practice

Motivations Counseling is a long-established Texas counseling practice — not simply an online ESA website.

The difference is not simply the letter. It is knowing that your evaluation is backed by an established Texas counseling practice where licensed therapists remain available if your landlord has reasonable questions, requests verification, or needs clarification after your evaluation is complete.

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Texas ESA Evaluations

Why Working With a Texas Counseling Practice Can Make a Difference

Texas landlords, apartment communities, and property managers often want documentation that appears professional, current, clinically appropriate, and easy to verify.

A local Texas counseling practice offers several practical advantages:

  • The provider is licensed in Texas
  • The practice has a real clinical presence in Texas
  • The provider’s credentials are easier to verify
  • The clinician understands ESA evaluations as part of mental health care
  • The practice can respond directly to reasonable verification requests
  • Clients are not left trying to communicate only through a national customer service system

This does not mean every out-of-state letter is automatically invalid or that every local letter will be approved. ESA accommodation decisions belong to the housing provider and must be considered under applicable housing rules. But a clear, local, clinically grounded evaluation can make the review process more straightforward.

Provider Comparison

National ESA Company vs. Local Texas Counseling Practice

Large national ESA companies may work for some people, but clients should understand the practical differences before choosing a provider.

Some National ESA Firms May Involve Motivations Counseling Provides
Large customer service or call center systems A local Texas counseling practice with licensed mental health professionals
Limited direct access to the evaluating clinician after the letter is issued Therapist involvement with reasonable verification and clarification requests
Out-of-state clinicians who may be unfamiliar to Texas landlords Texas licensed clinicians serving Texas residents
Additional charges for custom forms, verification, or follow-up paperwork ESA letter included when clinically appropriate, with routine verification personally reviewed
Generic documentation that may feel disconnected from a real clinical practice Documentation connected to an actual ESA evaluation through an established counseling practice
Questions routed through support tickets or automated systems Direct clinical review of landlord questions when the client authorizes communication

The goal is not just to receive a letter. The goal is to have reliable documentation from a licensed professional who can stand behind the evaluation if reasonable questions arise.

Our Approach

How Motivations Counseling Supports ESA Clients After the Letter

Motivations Counseling is a licensed counseling practice serving Texas residents through telehealth and local offices in the Sugar Land and Katy area. Our ESA evaluations are completed by licensed mental health professionals, and documentation is provided only when clinically appropriate.

We also understand that the process may continue after the ESA letter is issued. Landlords may request verification, ask whether the provider is licensed, or send a form asking for clarification.

When a landlord requests verification, our therapists can:

  • Confirm that the letter is authentic, with proper client authorization
  • Confirm the clinician’s licensure and role
  • Review reasonable landlord verification forms
  • Clarify documentation when appropriate
  • Communicate directly with the landlord or property manager when the client has signed a release
  • Protect the client’s privacy by avoiding unnecessary disclosure of therapy notes or private clinical details

We Do Not Disappear After the Letter Is Issued

Direct Therapist Support Helps Build Confidence

If your landlord has reasonable questions about your ESA documentation, your request should not disappear into a generic customer service queue. At Motivations Counseling, verification requests are personally reviewed by the therapist or clinical team when the client has authorized communication.

That kind of follow-up can help reduce confusion, support the authenticity of the documentation, and give both the client and housing provider a clearer path forward.

Call or Text: (281) 858-3001

Featured Page

The Complete Emotional Support Animal Guide

Looking for the complete picture? Our clinician-written guide explains emotional support animal evaluations, ESA letters, Texas housing accommodations, landlord documentation, eligibility, service animal differences, and answers to the most common questions about Emotional Support Animals.

Who Qualifies? ESA Letters Texas Housing Landlord Questions Clinical Evaluations Common Myths

Frequently Asked Questions

Common Questions About Choosing an ESA Provider

Why does it matter who provides my ESA letter?

It matters because your landlord may review the documentation, verify the provider, or ask for clarification. A letter from a licensed professional who can be reached may be easier to verify than documentation from a generic or hard-to-contact source.

Can a landlord verify my ESA letter?

Yes. A housing provider may seek to verify that the provider exists, is licensed, and issued the documentation. A signed release may be needed before the clinician can confirm certain information.

Are national ESA companies always a bad choice?

Not necessarily. Some may provide legitimate services. The concern is that clients should understand who completes the evaluation, whether the provider is licensed in Texas, how verification works, and whether follow-up support costs extra.

Do Texas landlords prefer Texas ESA providers?

A Texas provider is not automatically required in every situation, but many Texas renters feel more comfortable using a Texas licensed clinician because the provider may be easier for local landlords and apartment communities to verify.

Does Motivations Counseling charge extra for the ESA letter?

Motivations Counseling currently offers ESA evaluations for $99. If the therapist determines that ESA documentation is clinically appropriate, the ESA letter is included in that fee.

Will Motivations Counseling talk to my landlord?

When appropriate and with a signed release, Motivations Counseling therapists can respond to reasonable landlord verification requests and clarify documentation while protecting client privacy.

Can Motivations Counseling guarantee my landlord will approve the ESA request?

No. An ESA letter can support a housing accommodation request, but it does not guarantee approval. Landlords may still review documentation, verify information, and consider legitimate animal behavior or safety concerns.

Susan Baker, M.Ed., NCC, LPC-S

Article Author

Written by a Licensed Texas Mental Health Professional

This article was written for Motivations Counseling by Susan Baker, M.Ed., NCC, LPC-S, a Texas Licensed Professional Counselor Supervisor and clinical leader at Motivations Counseling.

Susan Baker, M.Ed., NCC, LPC-S
Texas Licensed Professional Counselor Supervisor
EMDR Therapist & EMDRIA Member
Texas LPC License #73957

Susan Baker is the Clinical Director of Motivations Counseling and provides trauma-informed counseling, EMDR therapy, depression counseling, anxiety treatment, emotional support animal evaluations, and mental health assessment services. Motivations Counseling serves clients from offices in Sugar Land and Katy, Texas, with telehealth services available statewide for Texas residents.

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Choose an ESA Provider Who Can Stand Behind the Letter

If you are preparing to request an ESA housing accommodation, Motivations Counseling can help you complete a clinical evaluation, determine whether ESA documentation is appropriate, and respond to reasonable landlord verification requests when authorized.

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Emotional Support Animal Letters in Texas: What You Need to Know

ESA Learning Center

Emotional Support Animal Letters in Texas: What You Need to Know

Emotional support animal letters can be confusing because there is so much misinformation online about ESA registration, instant letters, housing rights, and what a licensed mental health professional actually evaluates. This guide explains how ESA documentation works in Texas, what an ESA letter can and cannot do, and what to consider before seeking an evaluation.

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ESA Documentation Is a Clinical Recommendation, Not a Pet Registration

An emotional support animal letter is documentation from a licensed mental health professional stating that an emotional support animal may be clinically appropriate for a person with a mental health condition. It is not the same as registering a pet, buying a certificate, or obtaining a service dog credential.

A legitimate ESA letter should be based on a clinical evaluation. The evaluator considers symptoms, functioning, mental health needs, and whether the animal appears to provide therapeutic benefit related to the individual’s emotional or psychological condition.

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What Is an Emotional Support Animal?

An ESA Provides Emotional or Therapeutic Support Through Its Presence

An emotional support animal is an animal that may help reduce symptoms or provide emotional support for someone with a mental health condition. For some people, the presence of an animal may help with anxiety, depression, trauma-related symptoms, panic, emotional regulation, loneliness, or stress-related difficulties.

Emotional support animals are different from service animals. A service animal is trained to perform specific tasks for a person with a disability. An ESA does not need specialized task training in the same way. Instead, the therapeutic benefit usually comes from the animal’s presence, companionship, routine, grounding effect, or emotional support.

Emotional support animals may be clinically meaningful for some individuals, but ESA documentation should be based on an actual mental health evaluation rather than a quick online purchase or generic certificate.

An ESA may provide support by helping with:

  • Reducing feelings of loneliness or emotional isolation
  • Providing routine, comfort, and companionship
  • Helping with grounding during anxiety or trauma-related distress
  • Supporting emotional regulation during periods of stress
  • Encouraging daily structure, care, and responsibility

How ESA Letters Work

A Letter Should Come After a Clinical Evaluation

ESA documentation should reflect a licensed professional’s clinical judgment, not a guaranteed transaction.

Clinical Evaluation

A licensed professional reviews the individual’s mental health history, current symptoms, and treatment-related needs.

Mental Health Assessment

The evaluation considers emotional symptoms, functional limitations, and whether the animal may help alleviate symptoms.

Clinical Determination

Documentation is provided only when the clinician determines that an ESA recommendation is clinically appropriate.

Documentation

If clinically justified, the provider may issue ESA documentation that can be used as part of a housing accommodation request.

Ethical Standards

A legitimate ESA process avoids guarantees, fake registries, and documentation that is issued without clinical review.

Follow-Up Support

When authorized and appropriate, a provider’s office may clarify documentation while protecting client confidentiality.

Who May Qualify?

Qualification Depends on Clinical Factors, Not Just Wanting to Keep a Pet

A person may potentially qualify for ESA documentation when they have a mental health condition and the emotional support animal helps alleviate symptoms or supports functioning in a clinically meaningful way. The decision is not based only on loving an animal or wanting to avoid pet fees.

The clinical question is whether the animal provides emotional or therapeutic support connected to the person’s mental health needs. A clinician may consider diagnosis, symptoms, daily functioning, emotional distress, treatment history, and the role the animal plays in helping the person manage symptoms.

Clinical concerns that may be considered include:

  • Anxiety-related symptoms
  • Depression or mood-related symptoms
  • Trauma-related symptoms or PTSD
  • Panic symptoms
  • Emotional regulation difficulties
  • Other mental health concerns that substantially affect functioning

A diagnosis alone does not automatically mean ESA documentation is appropriate. The evaluator also considers functional limitations and whether the animal helps alleviate symptoms in a clinically relevant way.

Housing Accommodation Requests

ESA Letters Are Often Used for Housing Accommodation Requests

Many people seek ESA documentation because they live in housing with pet restrictions, pet rent, breed limitations, or other animal-related policies. ESA documentation may support a reasonable accommodation request when the individual has a qualifying mental health condition and the animal helps alleviate symptoms.

However, an ESA letter does not force automatic approval. Housing providers may review documentation, request clarification in appropriate situations, and make accommodation decisions based on applicable laws, policies, and facts.

Important Clarification

No Therapist Can Guarantee Housing Approval

ESA documentation is a clinical recommendation. It does not guarantee that a landlord, property manager, university housing office, or other housing provider will approve a request.

  • ESA documentation is not pet registration.
  • There is no official national ESA registry.
  • Housing providers may review documentation.
  • Accommodation decisions are made by the housing provider.
  • Documentation should be issued only when clinically appropriate.

Common Misconceptions

ESA Myths Can Lead People Toward Bad Information

Many websites sell certificates, ID cards, or instant letters that may look official but do not replace a clinical evaluation.

Myth: ESAs Must Be Registered

There is no official national emotional support animal registry. Registration websites do not determine whether an ESA is clinically appropriate.

Myth: ESA Letters Are Guaranteed

A legitimate provider should not guarantee documentation before completing a clinical evaluation.

Myth: ESAs Are Service Dogs

Emotional support animals and service animals are different. Service animals are trained to perform specific disability-related tasks.

Reality: Evaluation Matters

ESA documentation should be based on symptoms, functioning, treatment needs, and the clinical role of the animal.

Reality: Housing Rules Differ

Housing accommodations are different from airline policies, public access rules, and ordinary pet policies.

Reality: Ethics Matter

A careful ESA process protects the client, the clinician, and the credibility of legitimate mental health documentation.

Choosing an Evaluator

Choose a Licensed Professional Who Takes the Evaluation Seriously

Because ESA documentation can affect housing accommodation requests, it is important to work with a licensed mental health professional who understands the difference between ethical clinical documentation and quick online letter sales.

A qualified evaluator should complete an actual assessment, explain that documentation is not guaranteed, and avoid making promises about housing approval. The process should focus on mental health needs rather than simply producing a letter.

Licensed Professional

Look for a licensed mental health professional who is legally and clinically qualified to evaluate mental health concerns.

Real Evaluation Process

The provider should gather clinical information and assess whether an ESA recommendation is appropriate.

Avoid Instant-Letter Claims

Be cautious of websites that promise instant approval, registration, certification, or guaranteed acceptance.

ESA Evaluations at Motivations Counseling

Texas ESA Evaluations Through a Licensed Counseling Practice

Motivations Counseling provides emotional support animal evaluations for Texas residents. Evaluations may be completed through secure telehealth when clinically appropriate, with in-person services available through our Sugar Land and Katy-area counseling practice when scheduling allows.

Our process is designed to be clear, ethical, and clinically grounded. Documentation is provided only when the evaluator determines that an ESA recommendation is clinically appropriate based on the evaluation.

Clinical ESA Evaluation

Schedule an ESA Evaluation in Texas

The ESA evaluation fee is currently $99. If you qualify and ESA documentation is clinically appropriate, there is no additional charge for the letter.

  • Licensed Texas mental health professionals
  • Telehealth available statewide for Texas residents
  • Same-day options may be available when scheduling allows
  • Documentation provided only when clinically appropriate

ESA Learning Center

Continue Learning About ESA Letters, Housing, and Mental Health Support

These related resources can help you better understand emotional support animal documentation, housing accommodation requests, and when an ESA evaluation may be clinically appropriate.

Texas Emotional Support Animal Laws Explained

Learn how ESA documentation may relate to housing accommodation requests and what Texas residents should understand.

Read article →

Can a Landlord Deny an Emotional Support Animal?

Understand common reasons housing providers may review, question, or deny an ESA accommodation request.

Read article →

ESA Letter vs Service Dog

Learn the difference between emotional support animals, service animals, public access, and housing documentation.

Read article →

Can Anxiety Qualify for an Emotional Support Animal?

Explore how anxiety symptoms, functional limitations, and clinical need may be considered during an ESA evaluation.

Read article →

What Documentation Can a Landlord Request?

Review what housing providers may commonly ask for when reviewing an ESA accommodation request.

Read article →

How ESA Evaluations Work

Learn what to expect during an emotional support animal evaluation with a licensed mental health professional.

Coming soon →

How to Choose a Qualified ESA Evaluator

Learn what to look for when choosing a licensed professional for an emotional support animal evaluation.

Coming soon →

Is an Online ESA Letter Legitimate?

Understand the difference between telehealth-based clinical evaluations and websites that sell instant letters.

Coming soon →

Beware of Instant ESA Letter Websites

Learn why instant approvals, fake registries, and guaranteed documentation can create problems for clients.

Coming soon →

Emotional Support Animal Resource Center

Browse our complete library of emotional support animal articles, FAQs, and practical resources covering housing, Texas laws, landlord requests, evaluations, and more.

Explore Resource Center →

Featured Page

The Complete Emotional Support Animal Guide

Looking for the complete picture? Our clinician-written guide explains emotional support animal evaluations, ESA letters, Texas housing accommodations, landlord documentation, eligibility, service animal differences, and answers to the most common questions about Emotional Support Animals.

Who Qualifies? ESA Letters Texas Housing Landlord Questions Clinical Evaluations Common Myths

Frequently Asked Questions

Common Questions About Emotional Support Animal Letters in Texas

Is an ESA the same as a service dog?

No. A service dog is trained to perform specific tasks for a person with a disability. An emotional support animal provides emotional or therapeutic support through its presence and relationship with the individual, but it is not the same as a service animal.

Do emotional support animals need to be registered?

No. There is no official national ESA registry. Websites that sell registrations, certificates, ID cards, or vests do not replace a clinical evaluation from a licensed mental health professional.

Can anxiety qualify for an emotional support animal?

Anxiety may be considered during an ESA evaluation when symptoms substantially affect functioning and the animal helps alleviate symptoms in a clinically meaningful way. Qualification depends on the individual evaluation.

Can a landlord deny an emotional support animal?

Housing providers may review accommodation requests and documentation. An ESA letter may support a request, but it does not guarantee approval. Housing decisions depend on applicable laws, documentation, and the specific circumstances.

Are ESA letters guaranteed?

No. ESA documentation should not be guaranteed before an evaluation. A licensed clinician may provide documentation only when it is clinically appropriate based on the assessment.

How much does an ESA evaluation cost at Motivations Counseling?

Motivations Counseling currently offers ESA clinical evaluations for $99. If the evaluator determines that ESA documentation is clinically appropriate, there is no additional charge for the letter.

Can the evaluation be completed online?

In many cases, ESA evaluations may be completed through secure telehealth for Texas residents when clinically appropriate. Some situations may require additional clinical follow-up before documentation can be issued.

Susan Baker, M.Ed., NCC, LPC-S

Article Author

Written by a Licensed Texas Mental Health Professional

This article was written for Motivations Counseling by Susan Baker, M.Ed., NCC, LPC-S, a Texas Licensed Professional Counselor Supervisor and clinical leader at Motivations Counseling.

Susan Baker, M.Ed., NCC, LPC-S
Texas Licensed Professional Counselor Supervisor
EMDR Therapist & EMDRIA Member
Texas LPC License #73957

Susan Baker is the Clinical Director of Motivations Counseling and provides trauma-informed counseling, EMDR therapy, depression counseling, anxiety treatment, emotional support animal evaluations, and mental health assessment services. Motivations Counseling serves clients from offices in Sugar Land and Katy, Texas, with telehealth services available statewide for Texas residents.

Start Your ESA Evaluation

Schedule an Emotional Support Animal Evaluation in Texas

If you are seeking ESA documentation, Motivations Counseling can help you complete a clinical evaluation and determine whether an emotional support animal recommendation may be appropriate. Evaluations are available for Texas residents through telehealth and through our Sugar Land and Katy-area counseling practice when scheduling allows.

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