American is legally required to accommodate passengers with disabilities, including providing wheelchair assistance and allowing service animals, but can impose safety-based restrictions.
This analysis describes what American Airlines's agreement states, permits, or reserves. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Regulatory applicability and practical outcomes may vary by jurisdiction, enforcement context, and individual circumstances. Read our methodology
Disability accommodation rights under the ACAA and DOT regulations are statutory and cannot be contractually limited by the CoC; passengers with disabilities have enforceable rights to accommodation that exist independently of what the contract states.
Interpretive note: The specific scope of required accommodations, particularly for service animals and medical devices, is subject to evolving DOT regulatory guidance and may differ from the general language in the CoC.
Passengers with disabilities have federal rights to accommodation on American flights that cannot be waived or reduced by the CoC's other provisions, though the scope of specific accommodations such as service animal policies has been subject to recent DOT regulatory changes that tightened permissible animal types.
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"American will provide services to passengers with disabilities in accordance with the Air Carrier Access Act and applicable DOT regulations. American will make reasonable efforts to accommodate passengers with disabilities, including those requiring wheelchair assistance, service animals, or medical equipment, subject to safety requirements.— Excerpt from American Airlines's American Airlines Terms of Use
REGULATORY LANDSCAPE: The Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) and DOT implementing regulations at 14 CFR Part 382 govern disability non-discrimination in air travel; enforcement is by the DOT Civil Rights Division. The Americans with Disabilities Act applies to airport facilities but not directly to in-flight services. DOT updated service animal rules in 2020-2021, permitting airlines to limit acceptance to trained dogs only. GOVERNANCE EXPOSURE: High. Disability accommodation complaints are a significant source of DOT enforcement actions and civil litigation against airlines. The intersection of safety exceptions and accommodation obligations requires careful operational management. JURISDICTION FLAGS: EU Regulation 1107/2006 provides separate accessibility rights for disabled passengers on flights to and from EU airports; these rights may differ from ACAA protections in scope and enforcement. UK passengers post-Brexit retain similar protections under retained EU law. CONTRACT AND VENDOR IMPLICATIONS: Airport ground handling and wheelchair service contracts should include ACAA compliance requirements and clear service level standards. Codeshare partners operating American-marketed flights must also comply with ACAA requirements. COMPLIANCE CONSIDERATIONS: Compliance teams should audit current service animal acceptance policies, pre-boarding assistance procedures, and medical equipment carriage rules against the most recent DOT guidance. Staff training on ACAA requirements and documentation of accommodation requests and responses are important controls for managing enforcement exposure.
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Disability accommodation rights under the ACAA and DOT regulations are statutory and cannot be contractually limited by the CoC; passengers with disabilities have enforceable rights to accommodation that exist independently of what the contract states.
Passengers with disabilities have federal rights to accommodation on American flights that cannot be waived or reduced by the CoC's other provisions, though the scope of specific accommodations such as service animal policies has been subject to recent DOT regulatory changes that tightened permissible animal types.
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