A practical guide for HR teams, line managers, and equality leads — Equality Act 2010 duties, step-by-step onboarding, free template pack.
Updated April 2026. Free to use and adapt.
An employee walks in with an assistance dog. Nobody had a process. HR improvised. The manager asked the wrong question. The employee felt like a problem before they'd even sat down.
It happens in offices, warehouses, hospitals, councils, and shops across the UK every week. Not because employers are unkind. Because they never had to think about it before.
The legal starting point is not a "no dogs" building rule. It is the Equality Act 2010. Employers must not unlawfully discriminate against disabled applicants or employees, and they must consider reasonable adjustments where a disabled person would otherwise be placed at a substantial disadvantage. The EHRC Employment Statutory Code is the key reference.
Real employers are already formalising this. Cotswold District Council's Dogs at Work Policy (September 2025) treats assistance dogs separately from general workplace rules and links the approach explicitly to Equality Act reasonable adjustments.
The Equality Act 2010 frame
Most employers ask the wrong question. They ask: "Do we allow dogs?"
The right question is: "What reasonable adjustment is needed here, and how can we implement it proportionately?"
Under the Equality Act 2010, employers must not discriminate against disabled people in recruitment or employment, and they have a duty to consider reasonable adjustments. Whether an adjustment is reasonable depends on practicality, effectiveness, cost, disruption, and the employer's size and resources.
A workplace "no dogs" rule does not automatically settle the issue. A blanket refusal carries legal risk. Employers need to assess the actual circumstances, avoid reflex refusal, and document the reasoning behind whatever arrangement they put in place.
The same principle applies in recruitment. Applicants are protected too. An employer should not use an assistance dog as a disguised reason to reject a disabled applicant.
Owner-trained dogs have equal legal standing
Many employers wrongly assume that only dogs from one familiar charity route "count." That is not a legally safe position. In the UK, there is no single official register or mandatory proof document for assistance dogs. As ADUK's own guidance on registration and proof acknowledges, no official or mandatory scheme exists.
Assistance dogs in UK workplaces may have been:
The important questions are: whether the disabled employee relies on the dog, what the dog is trained to do, and whether the arrangement can be managed safely and reasonably in that workplace.
No official UK certificate exists
Many employers think they need to see a specific certificate, charity card, or official-looking document before they can proceed. There is no official registration or certification process for assistance dogs in the UK, so there is no single legal proof document employers can insist on as the gateway to workplace access.
Policies such as these are poor policy wording and create unnecessary legal risk:
A better approach is to focus on what information is reasonably needed to plan the workplace arrangement: the dog's working role, how the dog assists the employee, what practical adjustments are needed, and expected behaviour standards.
Where ADR helps
Assistance Dog Registry provides optional practical tools that reduce friction: registration records, public profile pages, ID materials, and employer-facing documentation. These are not "official proof" — no such standard exists. They are practical planning tools that make workplace conversations easier and more structured.
A written policy does three important things. First, it stops HR and managers improvising under pressure. Second, it helps the organisation respond consistently. Third, it reduces the chance of the employee being challenged repeatedly by different people inside the organisation.
A good policy does not need to be long. It needs to say: what the general position on animals is, that assistance dogs are considered separately under equality obligations, how requests are handled, what the onboarding process looks like, what standards apply, and how concerns are managed. That is enough.
Most workplace friction comes from ambiguity, not from the dog itself.
Where possible, the employee tells HR or their manager in advance that they rely on an assistance dog and that workplace arrangements will be needed — before a start date, during recruitment, after a role change, or when an existing employee begins working with a dog.
Meet with the employee to discuss what the dog does, what the employee needs to work effectively, what practical arrangements are required, and whether any workplace-specific issues need to be planned for.
Assess the workplace for operational issues: rest space, water access, toileting arrangements, movement through the building, meeting rooms, shared spaces, reception and security awareness, and emergency evacuation.
Record the agreed arrangement. A short assistance-dog plan is usually enough — daily working arrangements, interaction rules, emergency procedures, and a review date. The free template pack below includes a ready-to-use checklist.
Where colleagues need to know, tell them in advance. Brief, calm, factual. What colleagues should and should not do — and how to raise any genuine concerns privately. A template email is included in the free pack below.
Reception, line managers, and relevant staff should be ready. The goal is not to create a performance around the dog. It is to make day one operationally smooth and unremarkable.
A short review catches small issues early. Twenty minutes with the handler and HR is usually enough. Update the individual plan if anything has changed.
The two most common concerns are allergies and fear of dogs. Both should be taken seriously. Neither is an automatic reason to exclude the disabled employee.
EHRC guidance on assistance dogs supports a practical balancing approach. If there is a real allergy issue or another genuine concern, employers should look at proportionate ways to manage it rather than defaulting to refusal — seating in different areas, agreed routes through the building, keeping the dog's rest area away from a colleague's workstation, controlled introductions, or other practical separation measures.
Manage the conflict. Do not turn the disabled employee into the problem.
A dog should not be judged by who trained it. A dog should be judged by behaviour, control, hygiene, safety, and workplace practicality. That is the fair standard.
If a dog is repeatedly out of control, aggressive, not toilet-trained, creating a hygiene issue, or creating a genuine safety concern that cannot reasonably be managed, the employer may be justified in reviewing or withdrawing workplace access. Published assistance-dog workplace guidance supports that behaviour-and-risk-based approach. Employers should stay proportionate — one minor incident should not trigger automatic exclusion.
"The organisation will assess assistance dogs on behaviour, safety, hygiene, and workplace practicality — not on whether the dog was trained by a particular provider. Where a dog creates a genuine and unmanageable risk or serious operational issue, workplace access may be reviewed or withdrawn on a case-by-case basis."
Can an employer insist on one specific certificate or ID?
No. There is no single official register or mandatory proof document for assistance dogs in the UK. Focus on the workplace arrangement and the employee's actual needs — not on invented paperwork thresholds.
Can an employer ask questions at all?
Yes. Employers can ask questions reasonably connected to planning adjustments, workplace safety, and practical implementation. What they should avoid is rigid gatekeeping based on one specific provider or document.
What if the office has a "no dogs" policy?
That does not automatically answer the Equality Act issue. Employers still need to consider reasonable adjustments in the actual circumstances. A blanket refusal carries legal risk.
What if the dog is owner-trained or independently trained?
That does not automatically make the dog invalid. Focus on the disabled employee's needs, the dog's function, and workplace practicality — not the training route.
Can an employer ask for the dog to be removed?
Potentially yes, but only where there is a genuine behaviour, hygiene, safety, or operational issue that cannot reasonably be managed. The decision should be based on actual risk and conduct — not on the dog's provider or paperwork.
Free Download
Assistance Dogs at Work policy template · Onboarding checklist · Manager briefing notes · Team announcement template. Four documents. Free. Adapt before use.
⬇ Download the free Policy Pack
4 documents · PDF · 213 KB · Adapt for your organisation before use
Many of the people most affected are the very people most likely to be misunderstood. Owner-trained and independently trained assistance-dog handlers are often left explaining themselves repeatedly to employers who assume only one narrow route is valid. That creates delay, frustration, and unnecessary exclusion.
A good workplace policy fixes that without lowering standards. It does not say anything goes, any dog counts, or behaviour does not matter. It says: UK law matters, reasonable adjustments matter, genuine behaviour and workplace standards matter, and myths about "official-only" proof should not drive employer decisions. That is the fairer and more professional standard.
Further reading and sources
This article is provided as general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Employment cases are fact-specific. For advice on a specific situation, consult an employment solicitor or refer to the EHRC's employment guidance. Last updated: April 2026.