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⚠ REAL LAWSUIT MATCH
A business like yours was sued for the same issues
Case
Court
Filed
Allegations
Outcome
📄 View Court Filing →
Your scan found the same type of violations. Plaintiff attorneys use automated tools — just like this one — to identify targets. Businesses with unresolved WCAG violations are low-hanging fruit for serial ADA litigants.
WCAG 2.1 AA Audit Results
GET YOUR FULL AUDIT REPORT
Professional PDF with every violation, evidence, risk score, and remediation steps.
$97 flat
Complete multi-page audit with remediation plan
🔒 Payment via QuickBooks
📄 PDF delivered within 24 hours
📋 Sources: DOJ, WCAG 2.1, Seyfarth Shaw
WANT US TO FIX EVERYTHING?
FULL REMEDIATION
$497
We fix every violation on your site. Before & after PDF report with compliance certification.
One-time • Hands-off
MONTHLY PROTECTION
$97 / mo
Monthly scans with remediation included. Stay compliant as your site changes.
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WCAG 2.1 Level AA
ADA Title III
Section 508
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⚠ The Legal Reality
ADA Web Lawsuits Are Not Slowing Down
The Americans with Disabilities Act requires business websites to be usable by people with disabilities. Courts have increasingly ruled that public-facing websites fall under ADA Title III. That means accessibility barriers on your site can trigger demand letters, lawsuits, and forced settlements — nationwide.
3,948
ADA website lawsuits filed in 2025
EcomBack Annual Report
441
Digital accessibility lawsuits in Feb 2026 alone
UsableNet Tracker
95.9%
Home pages with detectable WCAG failures
WebAIM Million 2026
46%
Of defendants are businesses sued a second time
UsableNet 2025
💰 Real Cost Pressure
What an ADA Lawsuit Actually Costs
Most businesses never go to trial. They get hit with settlement pressure, legal fees, and the cost of emergency remediation — all at once.
Stage 1 — Demand Letter
Early settlement to make it go away
Smaller plaintiff firms send templated demand letters. Most businesses settle fast to avoid court.
$5K–$15K
Stage 2 — Filed Lawsuit
Legal fees + settlement + remediation
Once a case is filed in federal court, defense counsel alone can cost $15K–$25K. Add settlement on top.
$25K–$50K
Stage 3 — Litigation
Full trial with damages and attorney fees
If it goes to trial, the plaintiff's legal fees alone can exceed the damages. You pay both sides.
$75K+
🔴 California — Even Higher Exposure
The Unruh Civil Rights Act allows $4,000 minimum damages per violation per visit — and no warning letter is required. Plaintiff attorneys can file directly. A site with 10 violations visited 5 times = $200,000 in potential statutory damages before legal fees. This applies to any business that serves California residents, regardless of where you're located.
🎯 Who Gets Targeted
Some Industries Draw Far More Lawsuits
ADA web lawsuits concentrate in consumer-facing sectors. If your business is in one of these categories, you're in the crosshairs.
🍽️ Restaurants & Food
34.6%
👗 Fashion & Apparel
26.0%
💄 Beauty & Personal Care
8.0%
🏠 Home & Furniture
7.7%
🏥 Health & Medical
7.2%
🏨 Hospitality & Travel
5.8%
Source: EcomBack 2025 Annual ADA Lawsuit Report. Top 9 consumer sectors = 91.5% of all filings.
📋 Do I Need to Comply?
Almost Certainly Yes. Here's the Breakdown.
Three different federal laws require website accessibility. Most organizations are covered by at least one. There are only two narrow exemptions in the entire ADA.
ADA Title III
Businesses Open to the Public
Restaurants, retail stores, hotels, banks, hospitals, gyms, salons, professional offices — if the public walks in or buys from you online, you're covered. Courts have ruled that your website is an extension of your physical location.
Includes: Any for-profit or non-profit that serves the public — restaurants, stores, theaters, museums, hospitals, schools, social services, shelters, food banks
ADA Title II
State & Local Government
City websites, county portals, public schools, libraries, DMV, courts, transit authorities — the DOJ's April 2024 final rule makes WCAG 2.1 AA mandatory. Compliance deadlines are already in effect.
Deadline: Large entities (50K+ population) — April 2026. Small entities — April 2027. Non-compliance = DOJ enforcement action.
Section 504
Any Org Receiving Federal Funding
If your organization receives grants, contracts, or any money from the federal government, your website must be accessible. This catches most non-profits — even those not covered by Title III.
Key point: Any federal funding — even a single grant — triggers Section 504 compliance for your entire web presence.
🏛️ Non-Profits Specifically
✅ Must Comply
  • Non-profits operating as public accommodations (museums, theaters, hospitals, schools, social services, shelters, food banks)
  • Any non-profit receiving federal funding — grants, contracts, subsidies (most non-profits)
  • Non-profits with employees (must comply with Title I for employment-related web content)
❌ Exempt from ADA Title III Only
  • Religious organizations (churches, mosques, synagogues) — the only exempt category in the ADA
  • Bona fide private clubs with selective membership criteria (country clubs, fraternal organizations)
  • But: Even exempt orgs must comply if they run public programs (church daycare, school) or receive federal funding (Section 504 overrides the exemption)
The bottom line: Unless you are a church with zero federal funding or a private club with selective membership, at least one federal law requires your website to be accessible. The question isn't if you need to comply — it's whether you'll do it proactively for $97 or reactively for $25,000+.
Sources: 42 U.S.C. § 12181 (ADA Title III), 28 CFR Part 35 (DOJ April 2024 Final Rule), Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 42 U.S.C. § 12187 (Religious & Private Club Exemptions)
🔍 What We Check
A Real Audit, Not a Widget
We scan your entire site against WCAG 2.1 Level AA — the same standard courts reference, the DOJ enforces, and plaintiff attorneys test against.
🖥️
Multi-Page Crawl
We don't just scan your homepage. We crawl your sitemap and test up to 30 pages in one scan.
📊
Risk Score
Get a 0–100 risk rating based on violation count, severity, and the types plaintiff attorneys target most.
🔬
Code-Level Evidence
Every violation includes the actual HTML that fails — so developers know exactly what to fix.
⚖️
Lawsuit Case Matching
We match your violations to real ADA lawsuits filed against similar businesses. See the actual case.
🛡️
Plain-English Impact
Each finding explains what it means for real users — not just technical jargon. Built for business owners.
🔧
Remediation Available
We don't just find problems — we fix them. $497 for full remediation. $97/mo for ongoing protection.
💳 Transparent Pricing
Fix It Before a Lawyer Finds It
No hidden fees. No subscriptions required. Pay only for what you need.
FREE SCAN
$0
See your risk score and top violations instantly.
  • Full multi-page crawl
  • Risk score (0–100)
  • Violation summary
  • Code-level evidence
  • Lawsuit case match
Scan Now — Free
FULL FIX + MONITORING
$497
+ $97/mo monitoring
We fix every violation and keep you compliant monthly.
  • Everything in Audit Report
  • We fix every violation
  • Before & after verification
  • Compliance certification
  • Monthly re-scans included
Start With a Scan
❓ FAQ
Common Questions
Yes. The DOJ has consistently taken the position that ADA Title III covers websites of businesses that serve the public. Federal courts — including the 1st, 2nd, 6th, 7th, 9th, and 11th Circuits — have ruled that websites can qualify as places of public accommodation. The DOJ's April 2024 rule explicitly requires state and local government websites to meet WCAG 2.1 AA, and private sector enforcement follows the same standard in practice.
Yes. The ADA is a federal law — it applies in all 50 states. California's Unruh Act adds extra statutory damages ($4,000 per violation per visit), but ADA lawsuits are filed nationwide. New York, Florida, and California lead in filing volume, but every state is covered. If your website is public, you're in scope.
We crawl your sitemap and test each page against WCAG 2.1 Level AA — the standard used by the DOJ, courts, and plaintiff attorneys. We check for missing alt text, broken form labels, color contrast failures, keyboard navigation issues, ARIA errors, heading structure problems, and more. Every finding includes the actual HTML code that fails and a plain-English explanation of the impact.
Browser extensions scan one page at a time and miss server-rendered content. Our tool crawls your entire site (up to 30 pages), tests the actual HTML as served, and adds legal context — risk scoring, lawsuit case matching, California Unruh Act exposure calculations, and prioritized findings based on what plaintiff attorneys target most. The free scan gives you more than most paid tools.
Any public website. WordPress, Shopify, Squarespace, Wix, Webflow, custom-built sites — if it has a URL, we can scan it. Our remediation team handles all major platforms.
No. The FTC fined accessiBe $1 million in 2025 for claiming their widget could make any site compliant. Overlay widgets do not fix the underlying code. Courts have not accepted them as a defense, and plaintiff attorneys specifically target sites using overlays — 983 ADA lawsuits in 2025 were filed against sites with accessibility widgets installed. You need actual code-level remediation.
Just your website login — that's it. If your site is on WordPress, Squarespace, Wix, Shopify, or Webflow, we log in, fix everything at the code level, and you're done in 24–48 hours. If you have a web developer, we can send them a ready-to-apply patch file instead. And if you can't share access at all, we generate a single line of code you paste into your site header — works on any platform, takes 30 seconds. 90% of fixes need nothing but a login. We handle the rest.
Most sites are fully remediated within 24–48 hours after we receive access. Our process is automated — missing alt text, broken form labels, color contrast failures, ARIA errors, keyboard navigation issues, heading structure, and language declarations are all fixed programmatically. Complex custom-coded sites may take 3–5 business days. You'll receive a before-and-after compliance report when the work is complete.
Websites change constantly — new pages, updated content, plugin updates, and theme changes can reintroduce violations overnight. Our $97/month monitoring plan rescans your entire site automatically, flags any new violations the moment they appear, and fixes them before a plaintiff attorney finds them. You get a monthly compliance status report so you always have documentation that your site meets WCAG 2.1 AA.

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