Medical Office ADA Compliance in Inglewood
With 85.2% of buildings constructed before 1990, Inglewood medical offices face significant ADA compliance challenges.
Medical Office ADA litigation risk is extreme in Inglewood, with settlements reaching $1M — non-compliant or insufficient accessible parking is the leading trigger. Inglewood's 13.7% disability rate and 13% senior population create above-average demand for accessible medical offices, served by 31 healthcare facilities. Inglewood Building & Safety Division (Development Services Department) oversees ADA compliance for Inglewood's medical offices, with 4 local programs supporting accessibility upgrades.
Who Needs Accessible Medical Offices in Inglewood
Inglewood's 13.7% disability rate and 13% senior population create high demand for accessible medical offices.
13.7%
Residents with Disabilities
13.0%
Residents 65+
4,727
Veterans
Healthcare facilities serve the highest concentration of people with accessibility needs.
31
Healthcare Facilities
1
Hospitals
ADA Litigation Risk for Medical Office in Inglewood
With a extreme litigation risk and settlements reaching $1M, medical offices in Inglewood face significant ADA exposure — Medical offices face elevated litigation risk compared to most commercial properties.
Litigation Risk Level
extreme
Medical offices face elevated litigation risk compared to most commercial properties. Several factors converge to create heightened obligations: - **Patient vulnerability and care delivery**: Medical offices serve populations that disproportionately include individuals with disabilities. The ADA and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act explicitly require medical care providers to offer full and equal access to health care services and facilities. Patients cannot simply choose an alternative provider the way they might choose a different retail store.
Typical Settlement Range
$4,000 – $1,000,000
Most Targeted Property Types
Plaintiff Firms Targeting Medical Offices
| Firm | Focus | Volume |
|---|---|---|
| Seabock Price APC (Dennis Price)Scott Johnson | Physical barriers statewide; most prolific CA filer | 4,000+ since 2010 |
| Potter Handy LLP (formerly)Brian Whitaker | Physical barriers; filings sharply declined mid-2023 | 1,700+ federal |
| Potter Handy LLP / shifting firmsOrlando Garcia | Physical barriers; shifted from LA to SF state courts in 2024 | 800+ federal; 600+ state |
| Manning Law APCAnthony Bouyer | Physical and website cases in LA | Dozens monthly |
| Manning Law APCCesar Cotto | Physical and digital cases | Active |
| Manning Law APCJesus Torres | LA County focus | Active |
ADA Violations & Risk Profile for Medical Offices
Non-Compliant or Insufficient Accessible Parking
Medical offices frequently lack the required number of accessible parking stalls, especially because healthcare facilities serving patients with mobility impairments may require a higher ratio of accessible spaces than standard commercial properties. Common issues include incorrect signage, improper slope, missing van-accessible spaces, and inadequate access aisles.
Non-Compliant Restroom Facilities
Missing or incorrectly installed grab bars, insufficient turning radius, non-compliant toilet height, inaccessible sinks/lavatories, and improper door hardware. Restrooms in medical offices are heavily scrutinized because patients may have limited mobility.
Non-Compliant Exam Room Maneuvering Clearance
Exam rooms lack the required 36-inch minimum clear space along each side of the exam table, or do not provide the 60-inch turning radius for wheelchair access. CBC 11B-805.4 requires all examination, diagnostic, and treatment rooms to be accessible. Movable equipment, chairs, or storage frequently obstructs required clear floor space.
Inaccessible Examination Tables (Non-Adjustable Height)
Examination tables that do not lower to wheelchair-transfer height (17–19 inches from the floor). The DOJ and HHS have made this a priority enforcement area. Providers cannot refuse to examine patients simply because they lack accessible equipment, and cannot require patients to bring their own transfer assistance.
ADA guidance and the 2024 DOJ/HHS rules establish that medical providers must have height-adjustable examination tables that lower to 17–19 inches from the floor. Providers may not examine patients in their wheelchairs as a substitute for transferring them to an exam table when lying down is necessary for a thorough examination. Providers must also train staff to assist with transfers and may need patient lifts (portable floor lifts or overhead track lifts).
Inaccessible Check-In/Reception Counter Height
Reception and check-in counters exceed the maximum allowable height (36 inches for a parallel approach, 34 inches for a forward approach) or lack the required 30×48-inch clear floor space. Many medical offices have standard 42-inch counters with no lowered section for wheelchair users.
At least one section of the reception/check-in counter must not exceed 36 inches in height (parallel approach) or 34 inches (forward approach) and must be at least 36 inches long, with a 30×48-inch clear floor space. A forward approach also requires knee and toe clearance beneath the counter. Many medical offices with standard 42-inch counters are non-compliant.
No Accessible Weight Scale
Medical offices lack a wheelchair-accessible scale with a platform large enough to accommodate a wheelchair. Weight is essential medical information used for diagnostics and treatment, yet patients who use wheelchairs are routinely not weighed. By July 8, 2026, providers receiving federal funding must have at least one accessible weight scale.
Non-Compliant Accessible Route/Path of Travel
Paths from parking to building entrance, or from entrance to exam rooms, do not meet slope, width (36-inch minimum), or surface requirements. Door hardware requiring tight grasping, twisting, or pinching is also a frequent violation. Entry doors must provide 32-inch minimum clear width.
Waiting Room Seating and Wheelchair Space Deficiencies
Waiting rooms lack adequate wheelchair spaces integrated among fixed seating, or furniture placement creates barriers to accessible routes. Medical offices must provide wheelchair-accessible spaces that allow patients to sit alongside companions in the waiting area.
Waiting areas must include wheelchair spaces integrated with regular seating, allowing patients using wheelchairs to sit alongside companions. Fixed seating arrangements must include accessible companion seating. Clear floor space and accessible routes within the waiting area are essential.
3,252 cases (37.5% of national total)
Federal ADA Title III filings in California (2025)
8,667 cases
National ADA Title III federal filings (2025)
3,513 state and federal filings with 10,994 alleged violations
CCDA construction-related accessibility complaints (2024)
2,598 federal ADA filings in a single year
Top law firm filings — So Cal Equal Access Group (2024)
$12,000 statutory damages ($4,000 x 3 visits) plus injunctive relief; affirmed by Ninth Circuit
Confirmed Inglewood lawsuit — Smith v. 116 S Market LLC (2019)
$4,000–$75,000 (typical: $16,000)
Typical single-visit settlement range
A CASp inspection completed before any lawsuit confers Qualified Defendant status under Cal. Civ. Code §55.51, providing three critical protections: a mandatory 90-day stay of court proceedings (halting attorney fee accumulation), a mandatory early evaluation conference facilitating rapid settlement, and a 75% reduction in statutory damages from $4,000 to $1,000 per offense for violations corrected within 60 days. Despite these powerful protections, the CCDA reported that 99% of defendants in 2024 did not utilize them — making proactive CASp inspection one of the most cost-effective risk mitigation strategies available to Inglewood property owners.
Building Department & Permit Requirements
Inglewood Building & Safety Division (Development Services Department) in Inglewood oversees ADA compliance — Up to 100 business days for first review; expedited service available at 1.5x permit fee (approximately 30 business days).
Inglewood Building & Safety Division (Development Services Department)
Independent municipal jurisdiction — fully incorporated city with its own building department, planning department, and municipal code. NOT under LADBS jurisdiction.
| Plan check timeline | Up to 100 business days for first review; expedited service available at 1.5x permit fee (approximately 30 business days) |
| Architect stamp requirement | Effective January 5, 2026, all commercial construction plans must be stamped by a California Registered Architect (not an engineer) |
Local Programs & Resources
4 local programs
Destination Market Street Facade and Tenant Improvement Program
Funded through $8.5 million in state funds via SB 170 and Caltrans, this program provides grants of up to $250,000 per project for facade upgrades and tenant improvements for businesses along Market Street between Florence Avenue and Hillcrest Boulevard. Administered by PCR Business Finance. Eligible improvements overlap significantly with common ADA barrier removal items at building entrances including entrance modifications, accessible door hardware, signage, path-of-travel grading, and storefront threshold adjustments.
City of Inglewood CDBG Public Facility and Infrastructure Improvements
The City's FY 2025-2026 CDBG allocation includes $509,021 in CDBG funds and $1,138,486 in CDBG-CV funds directed toward public facility and infrastructure improvements, including ADA-accessible facility upgrades. Recent projects include ADA-accessible restroom rehabilitation at Darby Park.
License #991
State-Certified Accessibility Specialist
Built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center
MS Structural Engineering · Tutor Perini
Qualified Defendant Status
Reduces statutory damages 75% with 90-day litigation stay
What a CASp Inspector Evaluates: Medical Office
Key CBC 11B and ADA Standards requirements checked during a CASp inspection
ADA Compliance Costs: Medical Office in Inglewood
Understanding remediation investment and litigation risk
Remediation Investment
Cost of Inaction
4–5 hours on-site
Based on Inglewood data
Factors That Affect Your Remediation Cost
- •Number of exam rooms and treatment areas
- •Corridor widths for gurney passage
- •Elevator cab dimensions
- •Diagnostic equipment accessibility
- •Multi-tenant vs. single-tenant building
Estimates based on industry data and typical remediation projects in California. Actual costs vary based on property condition, scope of barriers identified, and local contractor rates. A CASp inspection report will identify specific barriers and prioritize remediation.
Inglewood Medical Office Compliance Landscape
Local enforcement data combined with medical office ADA requirements
Inglewood medical office properties face a extreme litigation risk environment, with 7.1 ADA filings per 1,000 commercial properties. Typical settlements for medical office violations in this market range from $4K to $1M. Medical offices face elevated litigation risk compared to most commercial properties. Several factors converge to create heightened obligations: - **Patient vulnerability and care delivery**: Medical offices serve populations that disproportionately include individuals with disabilities. The ADA and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act explicitly require medical care providers to offer full and equal access to health care services and facilities. Patients cannot simply choose an alternative provider the way they might choose a different retail store.
Jose Rubio
Certified Access Specialist
CASp #991Jose Rubio brings over 15 years of structural engineering and construction experience to every CASp inspection. He built Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center with Tutor Perini and holds an MS in Structural Engineering.
View full credentials →Frequently Asked Questions
Protect Your Inglewood Medical Office
Schedule a CASp inspection and activate Qualified Defendant status under California Civil Code §55.56.