Who this site is for
ADA Compliance Info is built for three audiences: the people who encounter accessibility problems and want to know whether what they saw is actually a violation; the small-business owners, property managers, and facility staff who want to fix problems without hiring a consultant for every question; and the advocates, inspectors, and attorneys who need a fast, mobile-friendly field reference.
What’s on the site
- A searchable guide to the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design — 28 topics across 9 categories, each with exact measurements, ratios, percentages, degrees, and a link back to the official text on ada.gov.
- A public violation-report form with GPS capture, mobile camera upload, and a compliance-era hint that adjusts the applicable standard based on when the building was built and renovated.
- A state selector with placard-parking rules, statutory citations, and state building-code references for all 50 states, Washington D.C., and Puerto Rico.
- An attorney referral directory that site users can add to over time. Attorneys who handle ADA Title III cases can be listed with contact details and a short blurb.
- Measurement-tool recommendations — small, affordable instruments that make on-site verification possible: a digital angle meter for ramp slopes, a door-force meter for opening-force compliance, and a tape measure for everything else. These are Amazon-affiliate links and labeled as such.
Accessibility of the site itself
It would be absurd to build an ADA reference that failed basic accessibility, so the site enforces a few non-negotiables: 48-pixel minimum tap targets, keyboard navigation on every interactive element, ARIA labels throughout, an adjustable text size (A+ / A++), a high-contrast dark mode, and voice search on the guide. If something on this site does not work for you, please tell us — that counts as a bug.
What this site is not
It is not legal advice. It is not a substitute for a licensed architect’s review of a specific building. It is not a complaint-filing portal for the U.S. Department of Justice; if you want to file a formal complaint, the DOJ’s own intake is at civilrights.justice.gov. The attorney listings are informational and do not create an attorney-client relationship.