Maryland Laws on Service Dogs and Emotional Support Animals

Under Maryland and federal law, you can bring a service animal into housing or any public place.

By Lisa Guerin , J.D. UC Berkeley School of Law Updated 5/03/2023

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Read on to learn which animals qualify as service animals in Maryland and which public accommodations are covered. You'll also learn some rules you need to know when you have your service animal in a public place.

Which Animals Are Covered in Maryland?

The ADA and Maryland law protect your right to have a service animal in public accommodations. But each law defines "service animal" a bit differently. If you're disabled, you have the right to rely on whichever law offers the most protection.

Maryland's service animal law applies to guide dogs, signal dogs, and other animals that are individually trained to perform tasks for people with disabilities. The tasks a service animal might be trained to do include things like:

Under the ADA, a service animal is a dog trained to perform disability-related tasks for someone with a physical or mental disability. In some cases, a miniature horse can also qualify as a service animal. Examples of service animals that must be allowed into public accommodations under the ADA include: