The Interactive Guide includes a “Legal Help” category that lists attorneys who handle ADA Title III matters. Listings are added over time, and featured listings appear first. Attorney listings on this site are informational only; they are not endorsements, they are not legal advice, and they do not create an attorney-client relationship. If you contact an attorney, a conflict check and a written engagement agreement are what create representation — not a listing on a public directory.
Browse current listings
Open the Interactive Guide, select the Legal Help category, and pick a listing. Each listing shows the firm name, city and state, practice areas, and contact information. Use the search bar at the top of the Guide to find attorneys in a specific city or state.
For attorneys: how to be listed
Attorneys licensed in the U.S. who regularly handle ADA Title III (public-accommodation) matters may request a listing by sending the following to the site administrator:
- Firm or attorney name, as you’d like it displayed.
- City, state, and bar license information.
- Practice areas (for example: ADA Title III, Fair Housing, Rehabilitation Act §504, state disability statutes).
- Phone, email, and website.
- A short blurb (about 60 words) describing the practice.
Listings are reviewed before they are published. Listings can be edited or removed on request. No fee is charged for a standard listing. We may add “Featured” placement for firms that provide pro bono or sliding-scale intake; email for details.
Other resources
- DOJ Civil Rights Division: The Justice Department handles ADA complaints at civilrights.justice.gov. No attorney required.
- State human-rights or civil-rights agency: Many states have their own agencies that enforce disability-access laws and accept complaints from residents.
- Protection and Advocacy (P&A) agencies: Each state has a federally funded P&A agency that provides free legal services to people with disabilities. The national directory is at ndrn.org.
- Local bar associations: Most county and state bar associations run Lawyer Referral Services that will match you with an attorney who practices disability law.