Hotel ADA Compliance in West Hollywood
331 hotels across 5 commercial corridors. With 87.4% of buildings constructed before 1990 and an average build year of 1965, West Hollywood hotels face significant ADA compliance challenges.
West Hollywood has 331 hotels, 87.4% built before 1990 (avg. year 1965), concentrated along Sunset Strip (Sunset Boulevard). Hotel ADA litigation risk is extreme in West Hollywood, with settlements reaching $52K — accessible room count deficiency is the leading trigger. West Hollywood's 14.4% disability rate and 15.1% senior population create above-average demand for accessible hotels. City of West Hollywood Building & Safety Division oversees ADA compliance for West Hollywood's hotels, with 4 local programs supporting accessibility upgrades.
Hotel Building Stock in West Hollywood
West Hollywood's Sunset Strip (Sunset Boulevard) corridor has 87.4% pre-1990 hotels with an average build year of 1965, making accessible room count deficiency especially common.
An analysis of hotel properties in West Hollywood, including building age, square footage, and key commercial corridors.
331
Hotel Properties
23.25M
Total Sq Ft
87.4%
Built Before 1990
1965
Avg Year Built
Typical Era: 1930s-present
Key Corridors
Sunset Strip (Sunset Boulevard)
West Hollywood's iconic entertainment corridor, stretching from Doheny Road on the west to a half block west of Havenhurst Drive on the east. Contains the Sunset Strip Business Improvement District. The corridor's nightlife and hotel identity spans from the 1920s (Prohibition-era venues) through 1940s nightclub prominence, 1960s counterculture/music venues, and 1970s-1980s rock-era prominence. Governed by the Sunset Specific Plan (adopted 1996; amended 2019), a form-based plan divided into eight geographic sections. Older entertainment/restaurant buildings are high-frequency sites for inaccessible primary entries, noncompliant toilet rooms, tight interior circulation, and vertical circulation constraints. Multiple outpatient surgery centers cluster at 9201 Sunset Blvd.
Santa Monica Boulevard
Runs from La Brea Avenue on the east to Doheny Drive on the west through the heart of West Hollywood. Historically an industrial strip with film studios and railway infrastructure, later evolving into a pedestrian-friendly segment and the core LGBTQ nightlife corridor. Contains small-lot restaurants/bars with constrained toilet rooms, storefront 'one step up' entries, narrow routes around bar seating, and limited on-site parking. Covered by the Santa Monica Blvd Streetscape Master Plan (completed 1999). Bus rapid transit upgrades planned for 2028 Olympics readiness. The Bond Hotel & Residences (6-story, 126 apartments + hotel) proposed at 7811 Santa Monica Blvd.
Showing corridors most relevant to Hotels. 5 total corridors in West Hollywood.
Notable Buildings
Sunset Tower Hotel
8358 Sunset Blvd
Built 1931
Whisky a Go Go
8901 Sunset Blvd
Built 1964
Rainbow Bar and Grill
9015 Sunset Blvd
Built 1972
Roxy Theatre
9009 Sunset Blvd
Built 1973
Berman/Kohner Building
9165-9169 Sunset Blvd
Built 1936
9201 Sunset Blvd (Multi-tenant Medical/Office)
9201 Sunset Blvd
One Medical West Hollywood
8570 W Sunset Blvd
Exer Urgent Care (Sunset)
8000 Sunset Blvd, Suite C110
Formosa Cafe
7156 Santa Monica Blvd
Built 1939
Irv's Burgers
Santa Monica Blvd
Built 1946
Brentview Medical Urgent Care
8264 Santa Monica Blvd
Bond Hotel & Residences (proposed)
7811 Santa Monica Blvd
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
8700 Beverly Blvd
Built 1976
East Medical Office Tower
8631 W Third St
West Medical Office Tower
8635 W Third St
ADA Litigation Risk for Hotel in West Hollywood
With a extreme litigation risk and settlements reaching $52K, hotels in West Hollywood face significant ADA exposure — Hotels operating in California—particularly in Los Angeles County—face **extreme** litigation risk.
Litigation Risk Level
extreme
Hotels operating in California—particularly in Los Angeles County—face **extreme** litigation risk. The combination of federal ADA Title III exposure, California's Unruh Civil Rights Act ($4,000 minimum statutory damages per violation per visit), and aggressive serial plaintiff activity creates a uniquely hostile litigation environment. Hotels present an outsized target surface because they must comply with accessible room ratio requirements, reservation system accessibility rules (28 CFR §36.302(e)), pool and spa lift mandates, common area access standards, and website accessibility for online booking—each representing an independent avenue for lawsuits. The DOJ has specifically and repeatedly targeted hotels in enforcement sweeps, including the landmark 2024 Marriott settlement and the 2021 Southern California 27-hotel initiative.
Typical Settlement Range
$2,500 – $51,500
Most Targeted Property Types
Plaintiff Firms Targeting Hotels
| Firm | Focus | Volume |
|---|---|---|
| So Cal Equal Access Group (Jason Kim, Jason Yoon) | Physical access barriers, hotels, retail | 2,598 federal ADA Title III lawsuits in 2024 alone |
| Potter Handy LLP / Center for Disability Access | Hotel reservation websites | 565+ hotel-specific cases |
| Theresa Brooke / Peter Strojnik (The Strojnik Firm LLC) | Hotel parking, loading zones, physical access | 168 hotel cases in LA/Beverly Hills area |
| Orlando Garcia | Hotel reservation system compliance | Hundreds of similar lawsuits in California; lost and ordered to pay $57,604.90 in fees in *Garcia v. Zarco Hotels* |
| Traci Morgan | Hotel website accessibility | Serial plaintiff; lost and ordered to pay $55,414.84 in fees in *Morgan v. Zarco Hotels* |
ADA Violations & Risk Profile for Hotels
Accessible Room Count Deficiency
Hotels must provide a specific number of mobility-accessible guest rooms proportional to total room inventory. Many older hotels, especially pre-1990 properties, lack the required number. For example, a 100-room hotel needs 5 total accessible rooms (4 without roll-in showers + 1 with roll-in shower).
Under ADA §224.2 and CBC 11B-224.2, the required number of accessible guest rooms scales with total room inventory: Rooms without roll-in showers must provide either an accessible bathtub (CBC 11B-607) or a transfer-type shower (CBC 11B-608.2.1). Roll-in shower rooms must have a standard or alternate roll-in shower (CBC 11B-608.2.2/11B-608.2.3) with a folding seat.
Non-Compliant or Missing Accessible Parking
Parking lots must contain the minimum number of accessible spaces. California requires 2 accessible spaces per 25 total (stricter than the federal 1 per 25). One in every six accessible spaces must be van-accessible. Hotels frequently fail on slope, striping, signage, access aisle width, or proximity to entrance.
An unbroken accessible route must connect from the accessible parking spaces and passenger loading zones through the hotel entrance, lobby, front desk, elevators (if applicable), and corridors to all accessible guest rooms and common areas (pool, fitness center, restaurant, meeting rooms). Routes must maintain 36" minimum clear width (48" preferred), have compliant thresholds (½" maximum), proper door hardware, and elevator cab dimensions per ADA §407. *
Exterior and Interior Path-of-Travel Barriers
Accessible routes must connect parking areas through the lobby to accessible guest rooms without barriers. Common deficiencies include uneven surfaces, excessive slope/cross-slope, lack of detectable warnings, non-compliant thresholds, and missing curb ramps. Hotels with multi-building layouts and older construction are especially vulnerable.
Pool Lift and Spa Accessibility Deficiency
All hotel pools and spas must have fixed pool lifts or sloped entries since January 31, 2013. Pool lifts must accommodate 300+ lbs, submerge to 18" minimum, have a seat height of 17–19", and be independently operable. Many hotels still lack compliant lifts or have non-functional equipment. Pool lift lawsuits are particularly prolific in California.
All hotel pools require at least one accessible means of entry—typically a fixed pool lift or sloped entry. Spas require a pool lift, transfer wall, or transfer system. Pool lifts must be fixed to the deck, accommodate 300+ lbs, have operable controls from the deck and water, and be independently usable without staff assistance.
Bathroom/Shower Non-Compliance in Accessible Rooms
Accessible guest room bathrooms must meet exact specifications for roll-in or transfer showers, grab bar placement, turning radius, toilet clearance, sink height, and door swing. Hotels with 51+ rooms must provide a specific number of roll-in shower rooms. CASp inspectors verify measurements down to the inch—a grab bar off by one inch triggers a violation.
Website and Reservation System Non-Compliance
Hotels must identify and describe accessible features on their reservation websites in sufficient detail for guests to independently assess whether rooms meet their needs. Accessible rooms must be bookable during the same hours and in the same manner as other rooms, held for disabled guests until all other rooms of that type are sold, and guaranteed when reserved. Potter Handy alone filed 565+ lawsuits targeting hotel reservation websites. The 2024 Marriott DOJ settlement expanded requirements to include OTA availability and loyalty-point bookability.
The DOJ's Reservation Rule (28 CFR §36.302(e)) requires hotels to: Allow guests with disabilities to reserve accessible rooms during the same hours and in the same manner as other guests Identify and describe accessible features in enough detail for independent assessment Hold accessible rooms for disabled guests until all other rooms of that type are sold Guarantee the specific accessible room reserved Make accessible rooms available on third-party OTAs (per 2024 Marriott settlement position) Allow booking of accessible rooms using loyalty program points (per 2024 Marriott settlement position)
Communication Features Deficiency
A percentage of guest rooms must include communication features for deaf or hard-of-hearing guests: visual alarms connected to the fire alarm system, visual notification devices for telephone calls and door knocks, TTY devices on request, and closed captioning on televisions. Hotels must also maintain a TTY at the front desk. Not more than 10% of mobility-accessible rooms can double as communication rooms.
Hotels must provide guest rooms with communication features (visual alarms, visual notification devices for telephone/door, TTY capability) per ADA §809 and CBC 11B-806.3. Not more than 10% of mobility-accessible rooms may simultaneously satisfy communication feature requirements. Hotels must also provide TTY devices at the front desk and on request for guest rooms, and staff must be trained in TTY operation.
Front Desk/Service Counter Height Non-Compliance
Hotel registration/service counters must have a portion no higher than 36 inches above finished floor with a clear floor space of 30" × 48" for wheelchair approach. Many older hotel front desks are built at 42"–44" heights with no lowered section.
Service counters must include an accessible portion no higher than 36 inches with 30" × 48" clear floor space. Many pre-ADA hotel front desks, typically 42"–44" high, require modification. The ADA-compliant range for work surfaces is 28–34 inches with a minimum 27" knee clearance.
8,667 cases
Federal ADA Title III filings nationwide (2025)
2nd nationally (2,380 filings)
California rank among states for Title III filings (2023)
2,696 filings (16.5% of all civil cases)
Central District of CA — ADA civil filings (FY2024)
35% increase (1,997 → 2,696)
Central District ADA filing increase (FY2023 → FY2024)
3,152 complaints
Central District Title III filings (2019, Columbia Law study)
$4,000 minimum
Unruh Act minimum statutory damages per offense
A CASp (Certified Access Specialist) inspection is the single most effective risk-reduction step available under California law. Properties with a current CASp inspection report qualify for 'Qualified Defendant' status under Cal. Civ. Code §55.51, which triggers a mandatory 90-day court stay on construction-related accessibility claims, an early evaluation conference within 50 days, and confidential treatment of the CASp report. On the damages side, Cal. Civ. Code §55.56 provides a 75% reduction in minimum statutory damages—from $4,000 to $1,000 per offense—when violations identified in the CASp report are corrected within 60 days and specified conditions are met.
Who Needs Accessible Hotels in West Hollywood
West Hollywood's 14.4% disability rate and 15.1% senior population create high demand for accessible hotels.
14.4%
Residents with Disabilities
15.1%
Residents 65+
531
Veterans
Accessible accommodations serve traveling populations with disabilities and mobility needs.
Cost vs. Risk for Hotels in West Hollywood
With hotel ADA settlements in West Hollywood ranging from $3K to $52K and 8 documented violation categories, a proactive CASp inspection is the most cost-effective protection.
A CASp inspection costs a fraction of a single ADA lawsuit settlement.
Inspection Cost
$2,500–$5,000
5-8 hours on-site
Typical Settlement
$3K–$52K
Based on West Hollywood data
Protection Value
1:12
Return on compliance investment
Building Department & Permit Requirements
City of West Hollywood Building & Safety Division in West Hollywood oversees ADA compliance for 331 hotels — 2022 California Building Code with Los Angeles County amendments.
City of West Hollywood Building & Safety Division
Independent municipal jurisdiction — West Hollywood is an incorporated city and does not fall under LADBS (Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety).
| Current building code | 2022 California Building Code with Los Angeles County amendments |
| Path-of-travel trigger | CBC Section 11B-202.4 — alterations to public accommodations require accessible path-of-travel upgrades, with 20% disproportionate cost exception below the state valuation threshold (~$200,000 for 2026) |
Local Programs & Resources
4 local programs
Accessible West Hollywood (ADA Self-Evaluation & Transition Plan)
Launched July 2025, this citywide program surveys city-owned facilities, parks, sidewalks, and curb ramps to identify barriers and set priorities for removal. Phase I includes field inspections, policy review, and a community survey, with a public transition plan to follow. Focused on public infrastructure, not private businesses.
Seismic Retrofit Design & Construction Grants
City-funded grants for mandatory seismic retrofit work: design grants cover 75% of cost up to $2,000 (SWOF) or $5,000 (NDC/PNSMF); construction grants cover 40% of cost up to $15,000 (SWOF) or 75% up to $20,000 (NDC/PNSMF). Not ADA-specific, but retrofit work frequently triggers CBC path-of-travel accessibility upgrades.
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
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 West Hollywood Hotel
Schedule a CASp inspection and activate Qualified Defendant status under California Civil Code §55.56.