— Anaheim · Home, furniture & decor

Home & Decor websites in Anaheim that ships to everyone.

303 home-goods retailers got hit with ADA web lawsuits in 2025 — 7.67% of all filings. Anaheim's restaurant and lodging concentration around the resort district sits next to a much larger ecosystem of independent neighborhood businesses across Anaheim Hills and West Anaheim — most on older sites, most never audited, most exactly the cohort 2025's litigation wave is naming. We rebuild home-goods retailer sites in Anaheim to WCAG 2.1 AA in 1–2 weeks.

  • 303home-goods retailer lawsuits in 2025
  • $25–50kaverage settlement
  • 1–2 wksour turnaround
  • 100/100target Lighthouse

The five places home & decor sites fail WCAG.

  1. — 01

    Product images without alt — and at high volume

    Furniture sites typically have 5–10 photos per SKU × thousands of SKUs. Almost universally untagged. The most-cited failure on home-goods sites in 2025 demand letters.

  2. — 02

    Dimensions & specs rendered as images

    "73 W × 36 D × 31 H" baked into a JPG diagram. Screen readers can't read it; conversion-killing for sighted users on mobile too. WCAG 1.1.1 fail.

  3. — 03

    Color / fabric / finish pickers without ARIA

    Custom swatch grids rendered as <div>s. No role='radio', no aria-checked, no keyboard support. The most-cited interaction-failure on furniture sites.

  4. — 04

    Virtual room visualizers with no fallback

    Augmented-reality 'see this couch in your room' tools — mostly inaccessible. WCAG-compliant fallback (a static photo + dimensions in text) is rare. Sites that ship the visualizer without the fallback get sued.

  5. — 05

    Free-shipping / sale banners with poor contrast

    "Free White-Glove Delivery" in cream over a peach background. Common pattern, common fail. Easy litigator's screenshot.

Drop your URL. See what's broken.

Live mobile scores in seconds — same engine Google uses to rank you. No email required.

Everything a modern home-goods retailer site actually needs.

What's included

  • Product detail pages with descriptive alt text per photo
  • Dimensions + specs rendered as semantic HTML (not images)
  • Color/fabric/finish pickers with proper ARIA + keyboard support
  • Visualizer fallback: static photo + readable dimensions
  • Cart, checkout, and saved-room flows passing WCAG keyboard tests
  • Free-shipping + sale badges adjusted to AA contrast
  • LocalBusiness + Product schema for SEO
  • Published accessibility statement

Timeline · 1–2 weeks

  • Day 1–2 · Free audit + fixed-scope written quote
  • Day 3–7 · Build (you see progress daily, not weekly)
  • Day 8–10 · Your review + iteration
  • Day 11–14 · Ship + accessibility statement live
  • Quarterly · Optional compliance review retainer

7.67% of all ADA web lawsuits hit home-goods retailers in 2025.

That's 303 cases. Average settlement runs $25,000–$50,000; attorneys' fees on top. 77%of defendants are small businesses earning under $25M. Remediation costs a small fraction of either number — and the demand letter doesn't care how good your service is.

Source: EcomBack 2025 ADA Website Accessibility Lawsuit Report · UsableNet 2025 Year-End Report

Audit. Quote. Ship. No agency runaround.

  1. — 01

    Audit (free)

    Run our automated audit above, or let us hand-write one. We return a written report with every WCAG criterion you fail, every Core Web Vital miss, and what each one would cost to fix.

  2. — 02

    Fixed-scope quote

    Tied to a defined deliverable list. Not hourly. We tell you the price before any work begins; if it changes, you sign off first.

  3. — 03

    1–2 week build, daily check-ins

    You see what we're building each day, not in a Friday update. We ship on the date in the quote.

The questions every home-goods retailer owner asks first.

What about my AR / room-visualizer tool?

We keep it for sighted users and add a WCAG-compliant text alternative — every product needs a static photo + dimensions + description that conveys the same info. The visualizer becomes the enhancement, not the gate.

Do you work with my existing inventory system (NetSuite, Shopify, custom)?

Yes. We don't replace your backend. We rebuild the front-end (or just the accessibility-failing parts), backed by your existing inventory + checkout.

Furniture has a lot of SKUs. Do we need alt text on every image?

Yes, per WCAG. We auto-draft from product title + variant, then hand-review the top 50–100 sellers. We document the pattern so your team can apply it to new products going forward.

Can you keep my photographer's editorial style?

Yes. Photography stays; we just add alts and optimize for the web. We don't replace your visual brand.

Get the audit. Then decide.

Free. 1–2 weeks if you move forward. No overlay widgets. No 6-month timelines.