Hotels & Hospitality businesses running on WordPress face a compound accessibility problem: 6 platform-level WCAG violations layer on top of 6 industry-specific violations, creating 12+ potential failure points that ADA plaintiff attorneys actively scan for. Approximately 50% of these issues originate from WordPress's platform architecture — meaning they exist before you add any hotels & hospitality-specific content.
WordPress platform issues
Hotels & Hospitality violations
Combined failure points
The critical issue for hotels & hospitality on WordPress is that platform-level fixes alone are insufficient. Even if WordPress improves its core accessibility, your hotels & hospitality content — booking engines that aren't, room photo galleries without — introduces violations that only you can fix. This dual-layer problem is why WordPress hotels & hospitality sites are disproportionately targeted by serial ADA plaintiffs.
These accessibility violations come from WordPress's platform architecture. They affect all WordPress sites but are particularly problematic for hotels & hospitality because hotels & hospitality websites rely heavily on interactive features that amplify these platform weaknesses:
These violations are specific to hotels & hospitality websites and exist regardless of platform. On WordPress, these issues compound with the platform-level violations above:
ADA lawsuits against hotels & hospitality websites have increased year-over-year, with settlements typically ranging from $10,000 to $75,000+. WordPress sites are particularly vulnerable because plaintiff attorneys can identify the platform from the page source, then cross-reference with known WordPress accessibility weaknesses to build a stronger case. The combination of identifiable platform vulnerabilities and hotels & hospitality-specific content issues creates what attorneys call a "layered violation profile" — multiple distinct WCAG failures that strengthen a complaint.
Start with an accessibility-ready theme. Audit all plugins for accessible output. Use the WordPress block editor's built-in accessibility features. Add alt text through the Media Library. Apply code fixes from ADA CodeFix through your theme's custom CSS or functions.php.
For hotels & hospitality-specific fixes, focus on booking engines that aren't keyboard navigable, room photo galleries without alt text, interactive maps that lack text alternatives. Use ADA CodeFix to scan your live WordPress site and get AI-generated code fixes for both platform-level and content-level violations.
Your legal exposure varies by state. These high-risk states have aggressive ADA enforcement and specific laws that affect hotels & hospitality businesses:
800+/year lawsuits/year — Very High Risk
1,500+/year lawsuits/year — Very High Risk
400+/year lawsuits/year — Very High Risk
200+/year lawsuits/year — High Risk
Yes. The platform you use does not affect your ADA obligations. All hotels & hospitality websites that serve the public must comply with ADA Title III requirements, which courts interpret as meeting WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards. Using WordPress does not transfer your accessibility liability to the platform — you are responsible for your site's compliance.
No. While WordPress provides some accessibility features, your specific hotels & hospitality content, images, forms, and interactive elements introduce violations that WordPress cannot automatically fix. Common issues include booking engines that aren't keyboard navigable and room photo galleries without alt text. You must actively audit and fix your site regardless of WordPress's built-in accessibility features.
The highest-risk WordPress issues for hotels & hospitality websites are: themes with poor heading hierarchy and missing skip links; page builders (elementor, divi) generating inaccessible markup; plugin-injected forms, sliders, and popups lacking accessibility. These compound with hotels & hospitality-specific violations like booking engines that aren't keyboard navigable and room photo galleries without alt text, creating multiple WCAG failure points that ADA plaintiff attorneys specifically target.
ADA lawsuits against hotels & hospitality businesses typically settle for $10,000 to $75,000+, with defense costs alone exceeding $25,000 even if you win. The cost of proactively fixing your WordPress site's accessibility issues is a fraction of a single lawsuit. Serial plaintiffs specifically target WordPress sites because they can identify common platform vulnerabilities from the source code.
No. Overlay widgets do not fix underlying code violations and are not accepted by courts as ADA compliance. Multiple federal courts have ruled that overlays do not remediate accessibility barriers. The only reliable approach is fixing the actual HTML, ARIA attributes, and content on your WordPress hotels & hospitality site. ADA CodeFix provides real code fixes, not overlay band-aids.
Start with an accessibility-ready theme. Audit all plugins for accessible output. Use the WordPress block editor's built-in accessibility features. Add alt text through the Media Library. Apply code fixes from ADA CodeFix through your theme's custom CSS or functions.php. For hotels & hospitality-specific fixes, focus on booking engines that aren't keyboard navigable, room photo galleries without alt text, interactive maps that lack text alternatives. Use ADA CodeFix to scan your live WordPress site and get AI-generated code fixes for both platform-level and content-level violations.
Get a complete WCAG 2.1 AA audit with AI-generated code fixes. Works with any WordPress site — finds both platform-level and content-level violations.
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