Restaurants
today face a new accessibility battleground—and it’s not the dining room,
parking lot, bathrooms. It’s your website, mobile app, self-order kiosk,
reservation engine, and loyalty platform and Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru®
at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice
Solutions® thinks you should be informed.
Digital
accessibility lawsuits have surged across retail, hospitality, and foodservice.
In 2024, more than 4,200 digital ADA cases were filed nationwide—up
nearly 20% from the prior year—and restaurant brands were one of the top three
industry segments targeted.
To
better understand where restaurants are most vulnerable and how to reduce risk,
I consulted with Matthew
Elefant, Managing Director at Inclusive Web, a leader in digital
accessibility operations who has overseen thousands of ADA audits each year.
His team’s frontline experience provides clear signals on where digital
friction is growing and what restaurants must do now to protect their brand,
their guest experience, and their bottom line.
I. Mobility Barriers: Keyboard Navigation Is the #1 Driver
of Digital ADA Complaints
According
to Elefant, keyboard-accessibility failures account for the largest
share of legal filings affecting consumers with mobility limitations. This
includes guests who rely on:
·
Keyboard navigation
·
Switch devices
·
Voice-command interfaces
·
Assistive technologies common among
older adults and veterans
The
most frequent failures?
Custom menus, carousels, modals, date pickers, and input fields that cannot
be fully operated without a mouse.
Top Mobility-Related ADA Triggers
·
Missing or inconsistent focus
indicators
·
Unlabeled form inputs and
unpredictable tab order
·
Dynamic content not announced to
assistive tech
·
Hidden or off-screen interactive
elements
·
Complex widgets with missing or
incorrect ARIA roles
For
restaurants, this means your:
·
Online ordering flow
·
Table-reservation widget
·
Loyalty signup
·
Guest feedback form
·
Mobile app journey
…must all function seamlessly without a mouse.
Remediation That Works
Restaurants
that reduce complaints consistently:
·
Rebuild interactive components for
full keyboard operability
·
Standardize focus styling across all
components
·
Follow WCAG-compliant form patterns
·
Document keyboard-only testing in an
accessibility log
·
Maintain an ongoing Accessibility
Maintenance Program rather than rely on a one-time audit
The
data is clear: documentation of recurring testing—not a single audit—is the
strongest legal defense.
II. Hearing Access: The New Top-3 Source of Digital Claims
Video
has become a core communication tool for menu launches, community storytelling,
and employee recruiting. It has also become a top litigation driver.
Most Common Hearing-Related Failures
·
Videos posted without captions
·
Audio-only content lacking transcripts
·
No visual indicators for alerts or
confirmations
·
Auto-playing media without user
controls
Healthcare
portals and financial platforms may lead the volume, but restaurants—especially
multi-unit brands with heavy marketing content—are increasingly targeted.
Risk-Reducing Solutions
According
to Inclusive Web, the highest ROI practices include:
·
Mandatory captions for all prerecorded
and live videos
·
Transcripts for all audio content
·
Accessible media players with visible
controls
·
Text-based alerts that mimic audio
notifications
Considering
many ADA settlements start between $25,000–$75,000, proper captioning is
one of the industry’s most cost-effective risk mitigators.
III. Super Seniors (Age 90+): The Fastest-Growing Guest
Segment With the Highest Digital Friction
Americans
over 90 represent one of the fastest-growing segments of digital
consumers—especially in foodservice.
They
order delivery.
They book tables for large family gatherings.
They use kiosks in fast-casual restaurants.
And they increasingly file ADA complaints when digital systems fail them.
Most Common Barriers for Super Seniors
·
Low-contrast text and icons
·
Small buttons or touch targets
·
Navigational complexity
·
Confusing or technical error messages
What Actually Helps
·
High-contrast modes and larger text
defaults
·
Large touch targets (44px+
recommended)
·
Linear navigation pathways with fewer
decision points
·
Plain-language labeling
·
Interfaces that maintain stability at
200%+ zoom
·
Optional “Large Text Mode” on kiosks
and high-value screens
Restaurants
that simplify flows for super seniors also dramatically improve usability for every
guest demographic. This is the core of the Grocerant Guru® "universal
design for foodservice" philosophy.
IV. Pool Access & Amenity Booking: The Overlooked
Digital ADA Risk for Clubs, Resorts, and HOA-Connected Restaurants
Restaurants
operating within resorts, hotels, fitness clubs, golf courses, or
condominium properties face a unique risk: amenity-booking systems.
Enforcement
data shows recurring failures in:
·
Inaccessible reservation calendars
·
Kiosks without keyboard navigation
·
Missing information about accessible
features
·
UI that assumes high dexterity or
vision
Corrective Measures
Operators
should prioritize:
·
Accessible calendar widgets with ARIA
semantics
·
Manual date-entry alternatives
·
Large-target, high-contrast kiosk
interfaces
·
Clear labeling of accessible amenities
(pool lifts, hours, staff assistance)
·
Staff training on alternate booking
workflows
Linear
workflows, simplified menus, and predictable options consistently produce lower
claim rates and higher completion rates.
V. Staff Training: The Hidden ADA Failure Point
Elefant
notes something restaurant operators often overlook:
“Many
ADA disputes aren’t caused by the technology—they’re caused by staff who don’t
know how to support the technology.”
Common Training Failures
·
Staff unable to assist a guest with a
kiosk
·
Failure to enable accessibility modes
·
No accessible alternative for
completing a reservation or order
·
Incorrect explanations of company
policies
Training Protocols That Reduce Disputes
·
Annual accessibility training for all
frontline employees
·
SOPs for kiosk assistance and
alternative workflows
·
Hands-on practice with accessibility
settings
·
Disability-led training from real
users
·
Documentation of staff competencies
and refreshers
A
single accessible workflow—explained consistently—can prevent dozens of
complaints.
WHAT THIS MEANS FOR RESTAURANT LEADERS
The
intersection of digital and physical accessibility is now one of the most
important operational priorities for restaurant operators in 2025. As brands
race to roll out kiosks, mobile ordering, loyalty apps, and AI-powered
personalization, they must also ensure:
·
Keyboard operability
·
Captioned content
·
Super-senior friendly interfaces
·
Accessible amenity booking systems
·
Trained staff ready to assist
Restaurants
that treat digital accessibility as an ongoing operational discipline—not a
compliance checkbox—will see:
·
Fewer legal exposures
·
Higher guest satisfaction
·
Better order-completion rates
·
Increased loyalty from aging consumers
·
Stronger brand trust
Three Grocerant Guru® Insights for 2025
1. The aging American consumer will reshape digital design.
Restaurants
that optimize for super seniors first will outperform competitors in conversion
and guest satisfaction.
2. Digital ADA compliance is no longer optional—it’s a
frontline brand differentiator.
Consumers
equate accessibility with trust. Brands that fail here lose guests long before
lawsuits appear.
3. Simplicity sells.
Linear
ordering flows, readable typography, and high-contrast layouts don’t just
prevent complaints—they increase order accuracy, average check size, and repeat
visits.
Are you ready for some fresh ideations?
Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested
in learning how our Grocerant Guru® can edify your retail food brand while
creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participation, differentiation
and individualization? Email us
at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: us on our social media sites by clicking one of the
following links: Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter


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