Flat, honest pricing — $149 for the letter, $199 with an optional ID card, and you only pay if approved.
An ESA letter in Texas should never involve mystery pricing. Here’s exactly what it costs, what the fee covers, and when your card is actually charged.
The fee buys a genuine evaluation — a private phone or video visit with a professional holding an active Texas license — and, on approval, a signed letter bearing their license details, usually delivered within 10–15 minutes. The ID card add-on is purely optional and carries no legal weight.
From Houston and Dallas to fast-growing Austin and San Antonio, Texas’s huge managed apartment communities frequently enforce pet fees, deposits, and breed limits. In a rental market like that, documentation a landlord accepts on first reading pays for itself.
Compare totals, not stickers: a rejected quiz-generated letter can cost a lost deposit and a second purchase. One legitimate evaluation, accepted the first time, is the cheaper path.
No hidden fees · HIPAA secure · Pay only if approved.
Your payment method is authorized at checkout but only charged after your evaluation is completed and a licensed professional approves you. Not approved? You aren’t charged for the letter.
None. What you see is what you pay — flat pricing, with $60 per extra animal as the only optional add-on.
Ultra-cheap “instant” letters usually skip the licensed evaluation entirely, which is exactly why Texas landlords reject them. A letter that doesn’t hold up costs more than it saves.
Completely. You pay nothing to find out whether the evaluation makes sense for you, and even then you’re only charged on approval.
The bundle with the ID card is $199 — $50 more than the letter alone — and it’s entirely optional, since no card is ever legally required.
Free pre-screening · Licensed in Texas · You only pay if approved
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