nonprofit

independent

Assistance dog team certification

Universally respected and transparent

A clear and globally accepted qualification is the long-overdue basis for access rights, support, and protection of assistance dog teams. A universally respected certification with digital and physical ID is urgently needed to distinguish legitimate assistance dog teams from unqualified ones.

Problems with old assessment formats

After reviewing existing options (see below) we noticed substantial problems. Candidates reported extreme stress, some enduring exams that continued for 4+ hours without sufficient breaks: much more than what is humanely appropriate for dog and human.

Handlers felt haunted by examiners’ inspection, clipboard in hand. Being judged in public made the handlers feel anxious and insecure, a state of mind that transfers to the dog.
In addition, traditional exams are quite improvised. Decisions are based on fleeting, potentially biased impressions. Feeling unfairly evaluated? There is little recourse, since the audit trail, if any, is sparse. The lack of transparency and quality management leaves teams feeling helpless and disrespected.

iCert360™ – regulated and fair

We developed a comprehensive, ISO-aligned certification, iCert360™, designed to be globally accessible and comparable.
Years of research and development have been invested in its proprietary technologies and ISO-aligned certification framework. Strict data protection principles guide the process throughout. This ensures that our certification is regulated and comparable as well as fair and accessible.

What certified teams say

iCert360™ is designed to lower stress, minimize bias, prevent errors, and optimize fairness.

The certification process: iCert360 — step-by-step

  • You supply required documents about you, your needs, and your dog.
  • Your data is confidential and secured by data protection standards.
  • An independent data protection officer supports our compliance.
  • Our external certification partner follows the same high standards.
  • Your final commitment and payment are required only if you are admitted to the assessment.
  • iCert360™ is conducted by an external, regulated assessment body.
  • Fees and more details will be published as contracts are finalized.

Note:
The next exam cycle starts in spring 2026.
Secure your place on the waiting list, obligation-free.
Self-financed teams may qualify for a subsidy thanks to direct-giving impact funds.

Data safety

Data protection laws require an external data protection agent for ALL organizations, large or small, processing health data. Many organizations offering public access tests do not comply with these laws or even consider them.

Furthermore, in traditional exam formats, your paperwork, personal history, the exam, and the assessment are typically done by the same people. This easily leads to bias. Your judges have a lot of information about you, which may cause negative associations, whether unconscious or due to prejudice.

iCert360™ shares only relevant information with the examiners: your needs, your assistance dog’s tasks, and our audit-grade, multi-perspective video documentation.
We never share: your name, where you live, your service providers, whether your dog was educated by someone else or yourself, and other personal details. This is how we ensure that examiners focus on your readiness as an assistance dog team — bias-free.

  • A handbook, provided by the Assistance Dog Foundation free of charge, can help you prepare for the theoretical exam.
  • The theoretical exam is done remotely via video conferencing in multiple-choice format and lasts 30 minutes.
  • A modern set of proctoring technologies ensures compliance.
  • Technical support and accessibility adaptations as needed.
  • Once you pass your theoretical exam, you are scheduled for the practical exam.
  • Your practical exam planning follows a detailed protocol, based on the certification scheme and global standards. This ensures that all relevant aspects are covered and our certificates are universally comparable.
  • In addition to your list of assistance dog tasks, you may also submit a list of familiar locations to be considered.
  • You receive the exam route on the day of your practical exam.
Benefits for you and fairness

In traditional exams, the theoretical exam often takes place prior or during the practical exam. This accommodates the examiners and reduces their travel needs.

For the handler, this prolongs an already exhausting assessment process. Being subjected to both exams on the same day significantly adds to the stress level and may impair concentration.

iCert360™What it means for you
Three examiners assess you per aggregated video and audio documentation: focused, undistracted, unbiased. Removing all distractions results in high-quality, detailed assessments, appreciated by our clients.
Examiners do not know who the other examiners are. The scores and comments of each examiner are confidential. Examiners may not discuss the exam with others. This prevents group bias and distortions of judgment.In their assessment, our examiners solely rely on their judgment and what they see. By process design, they cannot influence each other.
“Nothing about us without us” — we honor this principle by including an experienced assistance dog handler as examiner.Nobody understands you better than someone who lives with similar impairments and has long experience living with an assistance dog.
Your name, location, assistance dog professional, and personal information remain confidential. Teams are referenced only by their abstract ID.You’re protected from bias or prejudice that may be introduced through too much personal information.
Video and audio present multiple perspectives simultaneously.This multi-perspective video shows details that examiners on-site would miss, including the handler’s perspective up close. iCert360™ supports a much more profound understanding of events.
Video evidence is assessed with care, not in the rush of the moment. The examiners may pause, rewind, zoom in, and slow-mo the video as needed.
Every decision is based on time-stamped clips and easily documented.
No details are missed because an examiner is temporarily distracted or looking elsewhere. Sound observation replaces selective and subjective perception. This creates unparalleled insights and fairness.
Reflecting our focus on human-dog partnership, examiners focus less on problems and more on how you resolve them with your dog.Our assessment focuses on the competence of the handler. Making good decisions concerning the partnership with the assistance dog leads to the expected performance as a team and certification.
Examiners are selected for high expertise in the education of assistance dog teams. After successfully assessing a set of assessments as additional examiners, they become qualified.Assistance dog professionals are best qualified, as they bring a lot of practical experience and competence. A long qualification period ensures alignment with the certification standards.
Your examiners’ exam scores are also continuously measured, and their performance is scored. An intricate algorithm tracks every score and deviation, updating the examiner’s quality score continuously. This ensures that only the best, most committed examiners work with us.
Partial retests may be offered if you fail, where appropriate.The video provides clear feedback with referenced scenes. A failed assessment turns into a learning opportunity and chance for self-improvement.
  • A certified handler has proven competence at managing the dog’s welfare and the team’s integrity.
  • We maintain a global register for certified teams and service providers.
  • Concerns and incidents are logged and tracked to resolution.
  • Recertification is only required if a substantiated concern is not resolvable.
  • Certification ends if a dog is unable to assist or on the 10th birthday.
  • Annual extensions are possible with proof that the dog is fit for work.
Benefits for you and fairness

Certified handlers and assistance dog professionals are our partners in our quest to ensure successful assistance dog teams.

We turn to them for timely, effective solutions when concerns arise.

  • We apply the same quality standards and processes to every team.
  • Examiners’ performance and outcome are tracked (quality score).
  • Examiners stay current on developments in the assistance dog sector.
  • Regular internal and external audits advance the processes.
  • Feedback channels invite suggestions and concerns from applicants, candidates, certified teams, and the public.
  • Independent studies strengthen welfare and acceptance.
  • Our comprehensive bibliography supports research.
  • Our global register will serve as reliable verification for the public, decision-makers, and funders.

We provide a carefully optimized certification scheme for assistance dog teams. For all things certification, we are your point of contact and also host register.

Responsibility for the full certification process itself, however, rests with a 3rd-party certification agency we recruit to comply with ISO-standards.
This setup ensures global validity of your certification while also taking care that the standard is informed by an organization deeply rooted in the assistance dog sector and the full range of stakeholders. The Assistance Dog Foundation also aims to keep costs low and secure additional support.

Compare us to other options

A few governments have tried to regulate assistance dog teams and service providers. The following are some typical problems:

  • National relevance only, no international recognition.
  • Regulations, once implemented, become static.
  • Rarely reviewed and adapted to progress in the sector.
  • At times, weak feedback loops and unclear processes.
  • Often skewed by lobbying activities or ideology.
  • Written by sector outsiders, laws may contradict practical requirements and be overly or non-inclusive.
  • Overly inclusive: ranging from mere self-declaration to inventing new assistance dog categories, inviting abuse.
  • Non-inclusive and rigid: prescriptive laws may clash with concept requirements or fail the needs of teams.

Every service provider should assess the readiness of their teams before concluding their education. Such assessments are valuable for internal purposes.

Obviously, however, there are conflicts of interest with this approach. Provider assessments have limited to no validity as a public certification, even when done by colleagues or others within a professional association.

Funding bodies, like health insurance agencies, typically require a comprehensive assessment to ensure that the handler and dog are competent, tasks are successfully executed, and that both can safely navigate life together.

. They often last many hours, with very little flexibility to accommodate problems arising. They frequently bring teams to their limits, causing welfare concerns for both humans and dogs.

Documentation is sparse, and disputes are frequent and costly, adding to the travel expenses caused by multiple examiners.

  • Payment and the future of the team depend on the outcome, making them high-stakes exams and very stressful.
  • Controversial with assistance dog handlers and service providers alike.
  • Done by examiners sent by the health insurance, who are frequently not assistance dog practitioners.
  • Due to the high conflict potential, additional observers are often added, at times up to five.
  • High costs, since examiners sometimes travel across the country for an exam.
  • Rigid planning without a lot of flexibility to accommodate the needs of handlers and dogs.
  • Exams sometimes taking place in detrimental weather or while handler or dog are not fit, causing inhumane conditions.
  • Previous conflicts between examiners and service providers can create a stressful atmosphere before the exam starts.
  • Bias, prejudice, and unfair treatment are difficult to prove or resolve.
  • Despite high expenses, there is no audit-grade documentation to prevent disagreement in case of a problem.

A range of nonprofits have attempted to provide qualified teams with validation. These efforts typically suffer from a lack of funding and/or professional structures and quality management. Sometimes this results in micro-exams of 30 minutes to an hour — by far not enough to conduct a comprehensive and reliable assessment. Sometimes unsustainable structures derail the intended vision, causing these public access tests to fall short of what is needed,

Assistance Dog Foundation is a nonprofit as well, yet we are partnering with a third-party certification agency to ensure that processes are independent, validated, well-structured, and ISO standard-aligned. Using proprietary cutting-edge technologies and pairing them with the professional conformity framework, we create certification that is respectable around the world. Assistance Dog Foundation has created its certifciation scheme in dialog with a wide range of stakeholders and commits to repeat this process regularly. We offer assistance dog team certification for a reasonable and sustainable fee, subsidized by “our angels” if needed.

A lucrative income to the creators, these “IDs” are simply issued for a fee. At times, submitting a doctor’s letter of recommendation is required; sometimes these services even offer to write such an attestation remotely for an additional fee. If there is an “exam”, it is minimal and flawed, like sending in video snippets.

A flood of official-looking assistance dog IDs and harnesses confuse the public. This encouraged a flood of unqualified or outright fake teams, jeopardizing this life-saving concept. This abuse endangers the assistance dog concept, and ending it is our goal. Qualified handlers, who depend on their assistance dog for improved autonomy, finally need to be recognized beyond a doubt and their rights protected.

Helping hand in action with assistance dogs supporting independence for people with disabilities.

Be a part of our vision - via direct giving Impact Fund or a donation.

Assistance Dog Fdn., The Hague Humanity Hub, Fluwelen Burgwal 58, 2511 CJ The Hague, Netherlands
While our phone number is being set up, please contact us here or email us: [email protected]

Assistance Dog Foundation is a stichting with charitable mission. We are currently applying for recognition of our nonprofit status as Algemeen Nut Beogende Instelling (ANBI) by the Dutch Tax and Customs Administration.
 

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