Service dogs and service dogs in training are granted access into public places such as restaurants, airplanes, hotels, theaters, grocery stores, etc.

There is no federal guideline stating what level of training a service dog has to attain, rather the guidelines for service dogs state that a service dog can’t be a perceived threat to other guests, patrons, or visitors of public places.

Ty the Dog Guy offers a proprietary training program that is designed to ensure that your dog is socialized well enough, trained well enough, and is equipped to accompany you in public in addition to providing a service that mitigates a disability. Our service dog training is not dependent on the type of disability you may have as that is between you and your doctor. Our training program is designed to qualify your capacity to be in public with your dog.

A trained service dog cannot be denied access to a public place unless the dog is posing a threat.

Our service dog programs are entirely dependent on what types of service the dog has to do. Each program we do is customized for the individual dog and service.

We have some programs where we work one-on-one with the dog owner to help them train their service dog. And other programs involve sending your dog to us for a time to be trained and we teach you how to maintain that training in the long run.

When we train dogs for our clients our guarantee is that if the original dog doesn’t work out we’ll provide a replacement and credit any monies spent towards the new dog. We do this to make sure that once you sign up to get a dog that we’ll get you a dog, even if the first dog fails.

The nature of service dog training is that sometimes dogs do fail out of a program. But we protect our clients in those cases.

We have provided service dogs and training for people with PTSD, diabetes, hearing impairments, autism, mobility issues, and more.