Miniature HORSES can now travel as service animals on domestic flights according to new rules – as they join a bizarre list of pets that passengers have bought onto planes
- US Department of Transport has published new guidelines allowing disabled passengers to bring miniature horses on flights
- Airlines could now face fines if they block travelers from bringing the pets onto planes if they are designated as ‘service animals’
- Traveling with ’emotional support animals’ has exploded in popularity in recent years, with ducks and kangaroos accompanying owners on flights
- However, airlines have begun cracking down on several bizarre species boarding their planes
- Last year American Airlines banned emotional support insects, goats, and hedgehogs from flying with their handlers
Miniature horses will now be allowed to travel on domestic flights under new guidelines provided by the federal government.
The rules, published on Thursday, allow passengers to bring the creatures on board American aircraft so long as they are designated as service animals.
In a statement, the US Department of Transport told CBS 62: ‘With respect to animal species, we indicated that we would focus our enforcement efforts on ensuring that the most commonly used service animals (dogs, cats, and miniature horses) are accepted for transport’.
Airlines may now face fines should they ban the horses from travelling with their owners.
However, airlines will still be able to consider whether other service animals – with the exceptions of dogs and cats – are fit for travel on a case-by-case basis.
Miniature horses will now be allowed to travel on domestic flights under new guidelines provided the federal government
Last year, Southwest became the first airline to allow miniature horses to travel with passengers if they were designated as service animals.
At the time, Southwest said the creatures ‘must be trained to behave in a public setting and must be under the control of the handler at all times.’
The American Disabilities Act differentiates between service animals and emotional support animals – which are commonly used to help calm the nerves of anxious travelers.
Unlike emotional support animals, service animals must have special training to assist their disabled owners with specific tasks.
The ADA Training Association website states: ‘Even though some states have laws defining therapy animals, these animals are not limited to working with people with disabilities and therefore are not covered by federal laws protecting the use of service animals’.
Back in 2016, a turkey was allowed a seat on a United flight because it classified as a service animal for its disabled owner.
However, in recent years, airlines have often blocked passengers from travelling with pets dubbed ’emotional support animals’.

Back in 2016, a turkey was allowed a seat on a United flight because it classified as a service animal for its disabled owner

In January of last year, United Airlines famously stopped a female passenger from bringing her ’emotional support peacock’ aboard a flight

A woman and her large pet pig were booted off a flight from Connecticut to Washington state in 2014
In January of last year, United Airlines famously stopped a female passenger from bringing her ’emotional support peacock’ aboard a flight out of Newark Liberty Airport.
The company claimed that the peacock – named Dexter – surpassed weight and size restrictions.
Elsewhere, squirrels and hamsters have also been booted off planes, while American Airlines last year banned insects, goats, and hedgehogs from travelling with their owners.
However, other fliers have been more successful in bringing aboard their support pets.
In 2015, a snap of a flight attendant cradling a kangaroo on board an American plane went viral.
And, on a 2016 flight from Charlotte to Asheville, North Carolina, commuters were left stunned when a passenger brought his pet duck, Daniel, onto the plane.

An emotional support kangaroo is pictured on a plane back in 2015

Commuters were left stunned when a passenger brought his pet duck, Daniel, onto a plane in 2016