One flat price, published up front: $149, or $199 with an optional ID card — charged only if you’re approved.
The price of an ESA letter in Nebraska should be the least stressful part. Here’s the complete cost picture, including the one optional add-on.
The fee buys a genuine evaluation — a private phone or video visit with a professional holding an active Nebraska 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.
Omaha and the Lincoln university market anchor Nebraska’s rentals, where managed apartment communities commonly apply pet rules. In a rental market like that, documentation a landlord accepts on first reading pays for itself.
The cheapest letter is the one that works the first time. A rejected “instant” certificate means lost application fees, delayed move-ins, and paying twice — a clinically issued letter avoids all of it.
No hidden fees · HIPAA secure · Pay only if approved.
Renewal is a separate, equally priced service when you need an updated letter — typically about a year later.
Rock-bottom prices usually mean no real evaluation — and Nebraska housing providers have learned to reject exactly those letters. Paying twice is the expensive option.
Yes — the pre-screening costs nothing and carries no obligation. Your card is only authorized when you book the evaluation, and only charged if you’re approved.
Health plans rarely cover ESA documentation, so we keep Nebraska pricing flat and published rather than hiding it behind a quote.
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 Nebraska · You only pay if approved
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