I usually don’t write reviews, but I feel compelled to warn anyone considering QuickESA.com for an ESA letter. If you need something that actually stands up to landlord scrutiny in 2026, this is not it.
Where QuickESA.com fell short:
1. No real evaluation, just a checklist
They call it an “assessment,” but it’s more like ticking boxes on a form. No real conversation about my mental health history, no depth, no follow-up questions. It felt like they were in a rush to issue a letter rather than actually understanding my situation.
2. Generic letters that look disposable
The letter I received could have been copy-pasted for anyone. Minimal personalization, vague wording, and nothing that would inspire confidence if a landlord reviewed it carefully. In today’s environment, that’s a huge risk.
3. Marketing over legitimacy
QuickESA.com promises “instant letters” and “fast approval,” but speed without credibility is worthless when housing is on the line. Everything felt like hype, not genuine care.
4. Customer support disappears after payment
Before I paid, responses were quick and reassuring. After payment? Crickets. Questions about verification or landlord pushback went unanswered. Once you have the letter, you’re on your own.
5. No guidance if challenged
If your landlord doubts the letter, there’s zero support. You’re left figuring it out alone, and your money is gone.
QuickESA.com is volume-based and cares more about pushing out PDFs than providing defensible documentation or meaningful mental health care. If you just want a quick PDF and don’t care whether it holds up, maybe it’s fine. But if housing security matters to you, this is a gamble.
Recommendation:
Work with a licensed mental health professional who actually knows you and can provide proper documentation if questioned. I wouldn’t use QuickESA.com again, and I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone who values their housing stability.
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