Wheelchair-accessible portable toilets that meet ADA requirements. Ground-level entry, 60-inch turning radius, grab bars. Required at public events with 20+ standard units.
By calling this number, you consent to be connected with a licensed porta potty rental provider. Calls may be recorded for quality and training purposes.
ADA-compliant portable toilets aren't a nice-to-have - they're legally required under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 for public events and many construction sites. Getting the rules right protects you from legal exposure and ensures every attendee can use your facilities.
Under ADA guidelines, public events with 20 or more standard portable toilets must include at least one ADA-compliant unit. The rule isn't 5% as some sources claim - that's a stricter standard from permanent facility ADAAG. For portable units at temporary events, the threshold is at least one ADA unit when you have 20+ standards.
Construction sites with workers who have mobility impairments need ADA units regardless of total unit count. Even if you don't have a current ADA-requiring worker, having one unit on-site is a smart compliance buffer.
Private events don't strictly require ADA units, but adding one is the right call for any event with older guests or family members with mobility needs. The marginal cost is small relative to the guest experience cost of excluding someone.
True ADA-compliant porta potties meet specific dimensional and accessibility requirements. The interior turning radius must be at least 60 inches to accommodate a standard wheelchair. The doorway must be at least 32 inches wide. The toilet seat height must be 17-19 inches from the floor (standard chair-transfer height). Reinforced grab bars are installed on the wall behind and beside the toilet at specific heights and load capacities.
The exterior includes a pull-out aluminum ramp for ground-level wheelchair access. The door swings outward and has a lever handle (not a knob) reachable from a seated position. The toilet paper holder and hand sanitizer dispenser are mounted at reachable heights.
ADA units typically cost 50-75% more than standard units. Weekly rates run $175-$250 versus $100-$175 for standard. Daily event rates run $200-$300 versus $125-$200 for standard. The reason for the premium: larger materials, reinforced construction, more complex internal layout, and lower utilization (each ADA unit serves fewer total users than a standard unit).
ADA units need a flat, firm, level surface with at least 60 inches of clear approach space on the door side. The path from the parking or activity area to the unit must be accessible - no steps, no soft ground, no obstacles. For events, place ADA units in the same general area as standard units, not segregated to a corner.
For construction sites, the ADA unit should be on a hard surface (typically a pallet or wood platform if the site is muddy) and accessible from the active work zone.
ADA units are serviced on the same schedule as standard units - typically weekly for construction, daily for major events. Service includes everything standard units get plus extra attention to grab bars and floor cleaning, since wheelchair use can track in more dirt.
60-inch interior turning radius accommodates standard wheelchairs and mobility scooters.
No step-up. A pull-out aluminum ramp connects ground to floor for clean wheelchair access.
Reinforced grab bars positioned to current ADA specifications for transfer and support.
Public events with 20+ standard units must include at least one ADA unit. We help you stay compliant.
ADA units are available for next-day delivery in most metros, same as standard units.
Reachable from wheelchair height. Touchless dispensers available.
Talk directly to a porta potty specialist. No forms, no waiting.
📞 (855) 916-8844