A calm Labrador assistance dog in a harness sits beside its owner at a UK pub doorway
UK Assistance Dog Law

Refused Entry With an Assistance Dog? What to Say, What to Ask, and What to Do Next

You should not have to explain private medical details at a doorway. This guide gives you calm words, practical steps, and a free refusal checklist.

📖 9 min read·By the ADR Team·Updated 27 June 2026

Key takeaways
  • Stay safe first. An access refusal is not an argument to win at the door. Protect yourself, then complain in writing afterwards.
  • You do not have to disclose your diagnosis. Many disabilities are invisible, and you are not required to discuss private medical details in public.
  • There is no government assistance dog ID in the UK. Staff cannot lawfully demand a yellow booklet, certificate, jacket or harness as the price of entry.
  • Refusing an assistance dog may raise Equality Act 2010 concerns, but dog behaviour still matters, and a genuinely unsafe dog is a separate issue.
  • Record everything. Venue, time, staff names and what was said turn a bad moment into a complaint that gets results.
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If your assistance dog is refused: 3 steps
A calm, repeatable response for the doorway.
1
Stay calm and state the basics
"This is my trained assistance dog. My disability may not be visible."
2
Ask the right question
"Are you refusing access because of my assistance dog? Please put the reason in writing."
3
Record it and complain later
Note the venue, time, staff and words used. Win the complaint, not the doorway.
📋 Table of contents (click to expand)
  1. 1. First: stay safe and calm
  2. 2. What to say if staff challenge you
  3. 3. What not to say or do
  4. 4. What staff often misunderstand
  5. 5. What the law protects, and what it does not give you
  6. 6. When a business may still act
  7. 7. What to record after an incident
  8. 8. How to complain in writing
  9. 9. How ADR tools can help
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Being turned away at a doorway with your assistance dog is one of the most stressful things a disabled handler can experience. It often happens in front of other people, with no warning, and at the exact moment you were simply trying to get on with your day. The shame and adrenaline can be overwhelming, and that is precisely why having a calm, rehearsed response matters so much.

This guide gives you the practical wording to use, the questions to ask, and the details to record, whether you have a charity-trained dog or an owner-trained assistance dog and an invisible disability. None of it requires you to argue, raise your voice, or hand over private medical information. At the end, you can download a free Access Refusal Kit to keep on your phone for the moment you need it.

First: stay safe and calm

An access refusal can trigger panic, PTSD, autistic distress, anxiety, embarrassment or a meltdown. If that is happening to you, the single most important thing to know is this: your wellbeing comes before the principle. You do not have to stand and fight at the door to be in the right.

The first priority is safety, not winning an argument on the spot. Staff who are refusing you are often flustered, poorly trained, or worried about their manager, and a tense exchange rarely changes their mind in the moment. If the situation is becoming unsafe or overwhelming, it is completely acceptable to leave, regroup, and complain in writing afterwards. A calm written complaint after the event is far more powerful than a heated conversation at the threshold.

You are allowed to walk away. Leaving to protect yourself is not "losing". The complaint you make afterwards is where access actually improves.

What to say if staff challenge your assistance dog

Short, calm, repeatable lines work best. You are not trying to deliver a legal lecture; you are trying to de-escalate and create a clear record. Keep your sentences simple and say them slowly. Here are four you can use in order.

Use this wording

"My disability may not be visible. This is my trained assistance dog, and I do not need to discuss private medical details in public."

"Please can I speak to the manager or duty manager?"

"Can you confirm whether you are refusing access because of my assistance dog?"

"If you are refusing access, please can you provide the reason in writing?"

That last line is quietly powerful. Most staff who are acting on a vague "no dogs" assumption will hesitate the moment you calmly ask them to commit a refusal to writing, because it signals that you intend to follow up properly. If they back down, you can carry on with your day. If they do not, you now have a clear sequence of events to put in a complaint.

What not to say or do

Knowing what to avoid is as useful as knowing what to say. Three things tend to make a refusal worse rather than better:

What staff often misunderstand

Most access refusals are caused by genuine misunderstanding rather than malice. It helps to know what staff commonly get wrong, because it tells you where to aim your calm explanation:

The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) is clear in its guidance for businesses that assistance dogs do not legally need to wear a jacket or harness, and that a disabled person should not be turned away simply because they cannot produce an identity book. Knowing this lets you correct a misunderstanding gently, without it becoming a confrontation.

What the law protects, and what it does not give you

It is worth being precise here, because precision protects you. UK disability law, principally the Equality Act 2010 (and the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 in Northern Ireland), protects disabled people and requires businesses and service providers to make reasonable adjustments. In many situations, refusing entry to a disabled person with an assistance dog may raise Equality Act 2010 concerns.

But there is an honest gap that handlers run into every day: there is no single government-issued assistance dog ID that you can show at every doorway, and no legal requirement to carry one. The law gives you rights; it does not hand you a simple, official tool to prove those rights on the spot. That practical gap is exactly why many handlers choose voluntary tools such as ID cards, online profiles, QR lookup, vests and emergency contact details to present their assistance dog information clearly and reduce friction at the door.

The law gives you rights. It does not give you a government ID card. Voluntary tools fill that practical gap. They do not replace the law.

When a business may still act

A credible guide has to be balanced, and being honest about this actually strengthens your position. No ID card, vest, registry or profile overrides behaviour or safety. If a dog is aggressive, disruptive, out of control, not toilet trained, or creating a genuine safety concern, a venue may still need to act appropriately, and that is a separate issue from disability discrimination.

This matters for two reasons. First, it is simply true and fair. Second, when you make a complaint, demonstrating that your dog was calm and under control removes the most common defence a business will reach for. A well-behaved assistance dog is your strongest evidence.

What to record after an incident

If you are refused, the details you capture in the next few minutes are what turn a painful experience into an effective complaint. As soon as you are somewhere safe, note down:

  • Venue name and address
  • Date and time
  • Staff name or a description
  • Exactly what was said (use quotation marks where you can)
  • Whether your dog was calm and controlled
  • Witness details, if anyone saw what happened
  • Receipt, booking confirmation or photo evidence
  • Whether CCTV may exist
  • How the incident affected you

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How to complain in writing

A written complaint is where access actually changes. Keep it factual and unemotional; the detail does the work. In your message to the venue (email or their formal complaints form), ask them to:

If the response is unsatisfactory, you can seek free, independent advice from the Equality Advisory and Support Service (EASS), which exists specifically to help with discrimination issues in England, Scotland and Wales. For complex or ongoing problems, a qualified solicitor or your local Citizens Advice can advise on your options under the Equality Act 2010.

📄

Free download: Assistance Dog Access Refusal Kit

What to say, what to ask, and what to record if your assistance dog is challenged or refused entry. Save it to your phone so it is ready when you need it.

Download the free refusal guide

How ADR tools can help

The Assistance Dog Registry (ADR) is a voluntary information and support platform. To be completely clear: ADR is not a government register, it is not legally required, it does not certify disability or training, and it does not guarantee access anywhere. What it does do is help you organise and present your assistance dog information clearly, so that a doorway conversation can be calmer and shorter.

For many handlers, that practical readiness is the point. An ADR membership gives you a live online profile and a unique ADR number, a QR and NFC lookup a nervous manager can scan to see your information presented neutrally, an ID card, dog tags and an optional vest, plus emergency contact details and optional emergency instructions. None of it overrides the law or your dog's behaviour. It simply gives you a tidy, confident way to show who you and your dog are. You can read more about your protections on our assistance dog rights page.

🐾 Create a live assistance dog profile

A permanent profile, smart ID card, dog tags and clear QR-linked information you can present at the door: voluntary, handler-controlled, and ready on your phone.

See the Lifelong Partner plan →

Quick handler checklist

  • ☐ Stay calm; protect yourself before the principle
  • ☐ Say the four calm lines; ask for a written reason
  • ☐ Do not disclose your diagnosis or argue
  • ☐ Record venue, time, staff, exact words, witnesses
  • ☐ Complain in writing; ask for their assistance dog policy
  • ☐ Escalate to EASS or a solicitor if unresolved

Copy-paste complaint email

Dear [Venue] team,On [date] at approximately [time], I was refused entry / challenged at [venue, address] while accompanied by my trained assistance dog. The member of staff involved was [name/description], who said: "[exact words]". My dog was calm and under control throughout.Please could you: (1) review this incident; (2) send me a copy of your assistance dog policy; (3) confirm whether owner-trained assistance dogs and invisible disabilities were considered; and (4) confirm whether the refusal was based on my dog's behaviour or simply a lack of paperwork.I would also welcome confirmation that staff will receive assistance dog awareness training. I look forward to your reply.Kind regards, [Your name]

About this guide

This guide was written by the Assistance Dog Registry UK team and checked against current EHRC guidance for businesses, Assistance Dogs UK (ADUK) public information, and the Equality Act 2010. It reflects the most common access-refusal situations UK handlers report to us.

If you spot anything that needs updating, contact us.

ADR
The Assistance Dog Registry UK Team Verified

Founded by Norbert Szeverenyi · 6,000+ UK handlers supported · Materials reviewed against UK statute and official EHRC, Shelter and GOV.UK guidance.

Contact the team Norbert on LinkedIn ↗
Disclaimer

This article is general information, not legal advice. ADR registration is voluntary and does not, by itself, create a legal right of access.

If your access or housing is at risk, please seek specialist advice from the Equality Advisory and Support Service, Citizens Advice, the EHRC, or a qualified solicitor.

Key terms explained

Assistance dog
A dog trained to help a disabled person with tasks related to their disability. It is not a pet, and it may be charity-trained or owner-trained.
Owner-trained assistance dog
An assistance dog trained by its disabled handler rather than by a charity. It is recognised in UK guidance and is not required to be trained by an ADUK organisation.
Reasonable adjustment
A change a business or service must reasonably consider so a disabled person is not placed at a disadvantage, including admitting an assistance dog.
Equality Act 2010
The UK law that protects disabled people from discrimination in services, work and housing across England, Scotland and Wales.
Invisible disability
A disability that is not immediately obvious to others, such as PTSD, autism, epilepsy or a medical-alert condition.

Sources

ADR
Written & reviewed by the ADR Team
Assistance Dog Registry, supporting UK assistance dog handlers since 2020

We're a UK-based team dedicated to assistance dog handlers. Since 2020 we've supplied 20,000+ assistance dog ID cards and supported thousands of handlers, owner-trained and charity-trained alike. Our guidance on the Equality Act 2010 and assistance dog access rights is referenced in UK public-sector accessibility policy and relied on by NHS staff, employers and carers. We're not a government body: registration is voluntary, and we'll always tell you so honestly. Learn more about us →  |  [email protected]

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