The Fair Housing Act keeps Georgia renters and their animals together — even where the lease says no pets.
Across Georgia, the Fair Housing Act quietly resolves thousands of pet-policy standoffs a year. Here’s how to put it to work in yours.
Once you present a valid letter from a Georgia-licensed professional, your housing provider must waive pet fees, deposits, and pet rent and drop breed, size, and weight restrictions for your animal. Their checking rights end at verifying the license — your medical details stay yours.
Start with the evaluation; an approved letter usually lands within 10–15 minutes. Then send it to your landlord with a short written request and keep dated copies of every exchange. In Georgia — whether you rent in Atlanta, Savannah, Augusta and Columbus — properly documented requests are overwhelmingly approved.
Owner-occupied buildings of four units or fewer, certain owner-managed single-family homes, or a specific animal with a documented history of danger or serious damage. “We have a no-pet policy” isn’t, by itself, a lawful reason.
No hidden fees · HIPAA secure · Pay only if approved.
In most cases a no-pet policy must yield to a valid ESA accommodation in Georgia. The exceptions are limited to small owner-occupied properties and animals that pose a real, documented threat.
Provide it in writing with a short accommodation request before or alongside your application. Keep a copy, and stay matter-of-fact — the letter speaks for itself.
Get the refusal in writing first. From there, HUD and Georgia’s fair-housing agency both take complaints — though in practice most disputes end as soon as the license behind the letter checks out.
It does. The accommodation follows you across Georgia; just keep the letter reasonably fresh when you present it to a new property manager.
Requesting an ESA accommodation is a protected act; punishing you for it would violate fair-housing law on top of the original refusal.
Free pre-screening · Licensed in Georgia · You only pay if approved
Start Your Evaluation