New Jersey businesses face ADA Title III requirements for website accessibility. Our scans of 26 New Jersey websites found an average compliance score of 64/100 with a 35% fail rate — ranking the state #26 out of 51 for ADA compliance risk.
New Jersey ADA Compliance Scan Data
64/100
Avg compliance score
35%
Website fail rate
26
Sites scanned
#26
Risk rank (of 51)
Lawsuit count source: Seyfarth Shaw ADA Title III News & Insights, 2024 data. Scan data: OnePageAudit 2025-2026.
ADA Compliance Legal Framework in New Jersey
Federal ADA Title III
Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in places of public accommodation. Federal courts have applied this requirement to websites. The DOJ's 2024 final rule formally designates WCAG 2.1 Level AA as the compliance standard for state and local government websites, and courts apply the same benchmark to private businesses. New Jersey businesses in any sector with a public-facing website can be subject to ADA Title III demands and lawsuits.
New Jersey State Law
New Jersey does not have a standalone web accessibility statute with penalties separate from the federal ADA. Federal ADA Title III is the primary legal framework. State civil rights laws covering places of public accommodation may also apply in New Jersey, and businesses should monitor state legislative activity.
What ADA Compliance Requires for New Jersey Businesses
WCAG 2.1 Level AA
The DOJ and federal courts consistently reference WCAG 2.1 AA as the benchmark for ADA-compliant websites. All US federal districts — including those in New Jersey — apply this standard.
Images with Alt Text
All non-decorative images must have descriptive alternative text so screen readers can convey the content to blind and low-vision users.
Keyboard Navigation
Every interactive element on your website must be operable with a keyboard alone. Users who cannot use a mouse depend on this.
Accessible Forms
Form inputs must have programmatically associated labels, and errors must be communicated to assistive technology — not just displayed visually.
Check Your New Jersey Website Now
Enter your URL to get a free ADA compliance scan. See exactly which WCAG issues your New Jerseywebsite has before a plaintiff's attorney does.
Frequently Asked Questions: New Jersey ADA Website Compliance
Are New Jersey businesses required to have ADA-compliant websites?▾
Yes. Businesses in New Jersey that are open to the public are subject to Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Federal courts — including those in New Jersey — have consistently held that websites of public-facing businesses must meet accessibility standards. The DOJ's 2024 final rule formally designates WCAG 2.1 Level AA as the applicable standard.
What WCAG standard applies to New Jersey websites?▾
The DOJ's final rule under ADA Title III (effective June 24, 2025) requires state and local government websites to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA. Federal courts and the DOJ use WCAG 2.1 AA as the benchmark for private business websites as well. This covers 13 guidelines across four principles: Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, and Robust.
How many ADA website lawsuits are filed in New Jersey?▾
New Jersey federal courts recorded approximately 267 ADA website accessibility lawsuits in 2024, according to Seyfarth Shaw ADA Title III reporting. New Jersey ranks #26 out of 51 states and DC for overall ADA compliance risk.
What should a New Jersey business do first for ADA compliance?▾
Start with a free automated scan to detect the most common violations: missing image alt text, unlabeled form fields, missing page titles, missing skip navigation, and poor heading structure. These account for the majority of issues cited in ADA demand letters. After fixing the basics, work toward full WCAG 2.1 AA conformance and document your remediation efforts.
Does New Jersey have its own web accessibility law?▾
New Jersey does not have a standalone web accessibility law with penalties separate from the federal ADA. Federal ADA Title III is the primary legal framework for New Jersey businesses. However, businesses should monitor state legislative activity, as several states have introduced accessibility bills in recent sessions.
ADA Compliance by Industry
ADA lawsuit risk and WCAG requirements vary by industry. Select your sector for tailored guidance.