Dorm or student apartment, Utah campus housing falls under the Fair Housing Act — your animal can stay with you.
College students in Utah can keep an emotional support animal in most campus and off-campus housing — the Fair Housing Act generally applies to dorms too.
The University of Utah, BYU in Provo, and Utah State in Logan all maintain residence-hall accommodation procedures.
Residence halls and university apartments in Utah are generally subject to the Fair Housing Act, so a valid ESA letter obligates the school to consider your accommodation request — even where pets are banned. Each campus has its own paperwork and deadlines, so check with your housing or disability services office early.
The evaluation is fully online — fit it between classes from anywhere in Utah. Meet a licensed Utah mental health professional by phone or video, and if approved, your letter arrives in 10–15 minutes. Submit it with your housing request, keep copies, and follow up in writing.
Start the process weeks before move-in, time the letter to your housing application, talk to future roommates early, and keep expectations straight: ESA rights cover where you live, not lecture halls or labs.
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Get your letter first, then submit it to your campus housing or disability services office and follow their accommodation process. Requirements vary by school, so start early.
Housing offices weigh allergies and conflicts and may adjust room assignments, but a roommate’s preference alone doesn’t erase your accommodation rights.
Yes — for school housing in Utah, the letter should come from a professional licensed in Utah, which is exactly who we match students with.
No — an approved ESA isn’t a pet, so pet deposits and pet rent don’t apply in student housing either.
Four to eight weeks ahead is the safe window — enough time for the evaluation, the campus paperwork, and any housing-office follow-up.
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