Accessibility is a non-negotiable part of commercial EV charging. A site that charging customers with disabilities cannot reach, reach into, or operate is both a legal exposure and a real exclusion of people who are entitled to use it. The complication in 2026 is that the rules are in transition: the legally binding standard predates EV charging, and the EV-specific standard is still proposed, not final. Designing well means understanding both.
The legal framework, as it actually stands today
Two facts matter, and most coverage gets one of them wrong.
First, there is no final, EV-specific federal accessibility standard in force as of Q2 2026. The 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design do not contain provisions written for EV charging. That does not mean EV charging is exempt. Title III of the ADA (public accommodations and commercial facilities) and Title II (state and local government) require that fixed elements, accessible routes, and operable parts be accessible. Charging equipment is a fixed element with operable parts, and the charging space sits on a parking lot that must connect to an accessible route. So the 2010 Standards apply by their general provisions, even without an EV-labeled section. The U.S. Access Board states this directly: even absent a specific reference to EV charging stations, regulated entities must still ensure stations are accessible to and usable by people with disabilities.
Second, the EV-specific rulemaking is being led by the U.S. Access Board, not the Department of Justice (DOJ), and it is not finished. The Access Board published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on September 3, 2024, with a public comment period that closed November 4, 2024. The Access Board writes accessibility guidelines; those guidelines become enforceable only after an adopting agency (DOJ for ADA facilities, the Department of Transportation for federally assisted facilities) takes them through its own rulemaking and incorporates them into the binding Standards. As of Q2 2026, that adoption step has not been completed. So the proposed numbers below are a strong signal of where the floor is heading, but they are not yet the law.
Where federal funds are involved (for example, NEVI-funded sites), the Architectural Barriers Act and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act also apply, and federal grant terms frequently reference the Access Board's design recommendations directly.
This is a genuinely good area to involve an architect or accessibility consultant. The penalties for getting it wrong are not theoretical, and retrofitting a poured-and-striped lot is expensive.
What the current 2010 Standards require, applied to EV charging
Until an EV-specific rule is adopted, you design to the 2010 Standards' general provisions plus the Access Board's design recommendations as best practice.
Accessible route
Each accessible charging space must connect to an accessible route to the building entrance or to the public way. An accessible route under the 2010 Standards is a continuous path that is:
- At least 36 inches clear width (with allowance for short pinch points)
- Free of steps; grade changes handled by compliant ramps
- Firm, stable, and slip-resistant
- Within running-slope and cross-slope limits
This is the single most-failed item in the field, because the most electrically convenient location (next to the panel) is often the least connected to an accessible route. Solve the route first, then the conduit.
Operable parts (the charger itself)
EV charger controls, the card reader, the connector, and the cable are operable parts. Under the 2010 Standards they must be within reach range and usable with one hand:
- High reach: 48 inches maximum above the floor
- Low reach: 15 inches minimum above the floor
- Operable with one hand, without tight grasping, pinching, or twisting of the wrist, and without requiring more than 5 pounds of force
Tall pedestal units with a connector holster mounted above 48 inches, or a heavy cable that takes real force to dock, can fail here even if the parking geometry is perfect. Check the connector and holster heights on the spec sheet before you buy.
The parking space and aisle
The 2010 Standards' accessible parking provisions govern the space serving the charger: a standard accessible car space with a 60-inch access aisle, or a van-accessible space (a 132-inch space with a 60-inch aisle, or a 96-inch space with a 96-inch aisle). The Access Board's EV guidance recommends longer spaces than ordinary parking because vehicles charge at varied positions and need room to deploy a lift or ramp at the rear and side.
What the Access Board's proposed rule would add
The September 2024 NPRM is the clearest picture of where the binding standard is going. The figures below are proposed and were the proposal as of the comment close; treat them as design targets, not current law.
Scoping: how many accessible spaces
The proposed guidelines set a minimum number of accessible EV charging spaces based on the number of charging spaces at the station:
| EV charging spaces provided | Minimum accessible EV charging spaces (proposed) |
|---|
| 1 to 25 | 1 |
| 26 to 50 | 2 |
The table continues upward from there. The key change from how the old rules were often misapplied: the count is keyed to the EV charging cluster, not to the parking lot as a whole, so a lot with plenty of accessible parking elsewhere still needs accessible charging spaces at the chargers.
Three space types
The proposal recognizes more than one kind of accessible charging space, sized to different needs (proposed dimensions):
- Van-accessible: vehicle space about 144 inches wide with an adjacent access aisle
- Standard accessible: vehicle space about 108 inches wide with an adjacent access aisle
- Ambulatory: vehicle space about 120 inches wide with no adjacent access aisle (for drivers who do not transfer to a wheelchair but need more space than a standard stall)
Access aisles are proposed at 60 inches minimum width, and vehicle spaces at 216 inches (18 feet) minimum length. Allowing a single accessible space to serve more than one of these roles is part of the proposal's flexibility, but confirm against the adopted rule when it lands.
Operable parts and communication
The proposal keeps the 48-inch high side reach and 15-inch low reach and the 5-pound force limit, and adds a display-visibility requirement: the screen should be readable from a point 40 inches above the center of the clear floor space, so a seated user can read it. Clear floor space for a parallel approach is proposed at 30 inches by 48 inches, centered on the operable part.
Common compliance failures
- Charging spaces stranded from the accessible route. Electrical convenience wins the layout fight, accessibility loses. Fix this in site selection.
- No accessible space at the chargers. Accessible parking elsewhere in the lot does not satisfy the charging-cluster requirement.
- Connector or holster above 48 inches. A hardware spec problem, not a striping problem. Catch it before purchase.
- Cable too heavy to dock one-handed. The 5-pound operable-force limit is real; some high-power cables struggle.
- Surface and slope. Gravel, deteriorated asphalt, or an aisle that doubles as a drainage slope can blow the firm-and-stable and cross-slope requirements.
A practical approach
- Choose accessible charging locations from the accessible route backward, not from the electrical panel forward.
- Provide at least one van-accessible charging space in the cluster, even for a small install.
- Specify connector, holster, and screen heights during hardware selection, against the 48-inch reach and 40-inch visibility targets.
- Design to the Access Board's proposed dimensions now. Building to the proposed standard today is cheaper than retrofitting after DOJ adopts it.
- Document everything in the permit set; your drawings are your compliance evidence.
California note
California enforces its own accessibility standards through Chapter 11B of the California Building Code, which already contains EV-charging-specific accessibility provisions (the 11B-812 series) covering accessible charging space scoping, dimensions, and operable parts. In California you must satisfy both Chapter 11B and the federal ADA. Where the two differ, you comply with the more stringent. Use a California-licensed accessibility specialist (a Certified Access Specialist, or CASp) for California projects, because the state requirements are more detailed and have been in force longer than the pending federal EV rule.
Last factually verified: 2026-05-24 against the U.S. Access Board "Design Recommendations for Accessible Electric Vehicle Charging Stations" and the September 3, 2024 NPRM (ADA and ABA Accessibility Guidelines; EV Charging Stations), the U.S. DOT/Joint Office summary of those recommendations, and the U.S. DOE Alternative Fuels Data Center ADA compliance guidance. Proposed figures are from the NPRM as published and are not yet binding; verify against the adopted DOJ/DOT standard when it is finalized.