If you own or manage a commercial property in Utah, your parking lot is one of the most visible — and most legally scrutinized — parts of your business. Faded ADA stalls, missing access aisles, and worn signage aren't cosmetic problems. They're federal compliance violations that expose your business to lawsuits, DOJ complaints, and lost customers.
This guide walks through what ADA compliance actually requires in a Utah parking lot, where most businesses fall short, and how to fix it before it becomes an expensive problem.
What the ADA actually requires
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), through the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design, sets specific requirements for accessible parking at any business open to the public. In Utah, these federal standards apply to virtually every commercial property — retail, medical, fitness, restaurants, apartment complexes, HOA common areas, and office buildings.
Here's what matters most for parking lots.
Number of accessible stalls required
The ADA requires a minimum number of accessible parking spaces based on total lot size:
- 1 to 25 total spaces1
- 26 to 50 spaces2
- 51 to 75 spaces3
- 76 to 100 spaces4
- 101 to 150 spaces5
- 151 to 200 spaces6
- 201 to 300 spaces7
The count scales up from there. Medical facilities and rehabilitation centers have higher requirements — 10% and 20% of total spaces, respectively.
Van-accessible stalls
At least one in every six accessible stalls must be van-accessible. If your lot has only one accessible stall total, that stall must be van-accessible.
Stall dimensions
- Standard accessible stall: 8 feet wide minimum
- Van-accessible stall: 11 feet wide, or 8 feet wide with a 96-inch access aisle
- Access aisle: 5 feet wide minimum for cars, 8 feet wide for vans
- The access aisle must be marked to discourage parking
Signage
- International Symbol of Accessibility must be mounted at least 60 inches above the ground, measured to the bottom of the sign
- Van-accessible stalls require an additional "Van Accessible" sign
- Signs must be positioned so they aren't obscured by parked vehicles
Location
Accessible spaces must be on the shortest accessible route to the building entrance. If your lot has multiple entrances, accessible parking should be distributed across them.
Surface and slope
The parking surface must be stable, firm, and slip resistant. Slope in any direction cannot exceed 1:48 (about 2%). This is one of the most commonly violated requirements because it's invisible until measured.
Utah-specific considerations
Utah follows the federal ADA standards, but there are a few local factors worth knowing.
Freeze-thaw cycles wear markings fast
Utah's winters are hard on parking lot paint. Snow removal equipment scrapes the surface, road salt degrades the paint, and the freeze-thaw cycle causes cracking and flaking. Most Utah lots need ADA markings refreshed every 18–24 months to stay clearly visible. Water-based paint fails faster than acetone-based traffic paint in this climate.
Municipal code overlays
Some Utah cities have additional parking requirements on top of federal ADA rules. Salt Lake City requires hard-surfaced lots with 15 or more spaces to comply with municipal striping standards. West Valley, Sandy, and West Jordan have similar overlays. Check with your city's business licensing department if you're unsure.
Fire lane markings
Not technically ADA, but often bundled with compliance work. Utah fire marshals require clearly marked fire lanes at commercial properties. Faded fire lane paint can trigger citations independent of any ADA issue.
The most common violations in Utah lots
Based on what we see across Salt Lake, Utah, and Davis County properties:
1. Faded ADA symbols
The blue field around the wheelchair symbol fades faster than any other marking on the lot. Once it's washed out, it fails ADA visibility requirements even if you can still see the outline.
2. Missing or worn access aisles
The hatched access aisle next to each accessible stall is what actually makes the space usable. When those diagonal hatch lines fade, the space no longer functions as accessible — even if the stall lines themselves are still visible.
3. Wrong dimensions after re-striping
Well-meaning contractors sometimes re-stripe accessible stalls at the same width as regular stalls. If your ADA stall is under 8 feet wide, or your van-accessible stall lacks the required aisle width, you're out of compliance the day the paint dries.
4. Signs mounted too low
The 60-inch minimum height for the accessibility sign is measured from the ground to the bottom of the sign, not the top or middle. Signs mounted at 48 inches — common on older properties — do not comply.
5. Slope violations
Access aisles and accessible stalls cannot slope more than 2% in any direction. This is impossible to fix without regrading or resurfacing, but it's also the violation most likely to appear in a lawsuit because it makes the space unusable for wheelchair users.
6. Distance from entrance
If your lot was expanded or the building entrance moved, the accessible stalls may no longer be on the shortest accessible route. This is a compliance problem even if the stalls themselves are perfect.
What non-compliance actually costs
The financial exposure from ADA violations is real:
- Federal DOJ penalties: Up to $75,000 for a first violation, $150,000 for subsequent violations.
- Private lawsuits: Individuals can sue for compliance and legal fees. Utah has seen a rising volume of ADA "drive-by" lawsuits where plaintiffs identify violations from parking lot surveys.
- Loss of tenants: Property managers report losing tenant renewals when ADA issues aren't addressed.
- Insurance implications: Some commercial general liability policies have compliance exclusions.
The cost of bringing a lot into compliance is almost always a fraction of the cost of a single lawsuit or penalty. Most restripe jobs to fix ADA issues run $500–$2,500 depending on lot size.
Walk your lot with these questions:
- Can you clearly see the wheelchair symbol on every accessible stall from 20 feet away?
- Is the blue background around each symbol solid, not faded?
- Is there a hatched access aisle next to every accessible stall, clearly marked?
- Is there a sign at least 60 inches high on a post next to each accessible stall?
- Do van-accessible stalls have the additional "Van Accessible" sign?
- Is the accessible parking on the shortest route to the main entrance?
- Are fire lanes clearly marked and visible?
If any answer is no, your lot has a compliance issue worth addressing.
When to restripe
Most Utah commercial lots need a full restripe every 2–3 years, with ADA-specific refreshes closer to every 18–24 months. Signs of overdue work:
- Faded or peeling paint on any accessible marking
- Snow plow damage to stall lines
- Cracking or spalling around painted areas
- Reflective loss on fire lanes at night
- Complaints from tenants, customers, or delivery drivers
Spring, after the last freeze-thaw cycle, is the best window for restriping in Utah. Paint requires surface temperatures above 50°F and 4–6 hours of dry conditions to cure properly.
Getting your lot compliant
SouthPaw Striping is a Salt Lake Valley–based parking lot striping company serving Salt Lake, Utah, and Davis Counties. We handle ADA compliance work as a specialty — from full restripes to targeted stall repainting, access aisle refreshes, and sign installation.
If you'd like a no-obligation ADA compliance assessment of your parking lot, we're happy to walk your property, identify any violations, and send a written estimate within one business day.
Request a free estimate or call (801) 513-0979.