Parking Lot
ADA Parking Lot Compliance in Eagle Point, Oregon: 2026 Guide
Cojo
May 30, 2026
7 min read
Eagle Point is a growing Jackson County city northeast of Medford, set along the Crater Lake Highway where the Rogue Valley meets ranch and agricultural country. As a bedroom community that has expanded steadily, Eagle Point has added retail, dining, and service businesses whose parking lots all carry the same federal ADA and Oregon accessibility obligations as any commercial property in the state. New shopping centers and offices along Highway 62 are also exactly the kind of development where ADA standards must be built in from the design stage.
Compliance is a legal duty and a practical one. Non-compliance exposes an Eagle Point business to federal civil penalties, private lawsuits with attorney fees, and Oregon state enforcement — and accessible parking decides whether all of your customers can reach the door. This 2026 guide covers the essentials. For the full statewide picture, start with our ADA parking compliance guide for Oregon.
The required accessible count scales with total parking under the 2010 ADA Standards for Accessible Design:
| Total Parking Spaces | Required Accessible Spaces | Van-Accessible Minimum |
|---|---|---|
| 1–25 | 1 | 1 |
| 26–50 | 2 | 1 |
| 51–75 | 3 | 1 |
| 76–100 | 4 | 1 |
| 101–150 | 5 | 1 |
| 151–200 | 6 | 1 |
Two accessible stalls can share one aisle between them. The aisle must never be parked in or blocked.
Accessible stalls and their aisles must not exceed 2 percent slope in any direction on the finished surface. Eagle Point sits on gently rolling terrain at the valley's edge, and lots built on a grade or on fill can run steeper than they appear — and settlement pushes slopes out of tolerance over time. A stall that looks flat may measure 3 or 4 percent, which is a violation. Verifying slope takes a level, and where it fails, regrading and repaving the affected area is the fix. This is one of the most overlooked requirements.
Each accessible stall needs a vertical sign with the International Symbol of Accessibility, mounted at least 60 inches from the ground to the bottom of the sign and visible when a vehicle is parked. Van stalls add a "Van Accessible" plate. Oregon requires a supplemental sign stating the fine for unauthorized parking — an Oregon-specific detail that out-of-area installers often miss. Our ADA parking sign placement guide details heights, plates, and the fine sign.
Compliance extends to ongoing surface condition. The accessible stall, aisle, and route must stay firm, stable, and slip-resistant, with no abrupt level changes over a quarter inch, no cracks wider than half an inch, no potholes, and no ponding water. The Rogue Valley's hot, dry summers and cold winters create UV and freeze-thaw stress that fade and crack pavement over time. Prioritize accessible areas in seasonal maintenance and address trip hazards promptly.
Routine maintenance — sealcoating, crack filling, patching, restriping existing markings — does not trigger ADA upgrades. A full repave, significant reconstruction, lot expansion, or regrading counts as an "alteration," obligating you to make the path of travel accessible and spend up to 20 percent of the project cost on accessibility where the existing route is not compliant. With Eagle Point's ongoing growth, many new commercial projects already trigger this rule — build accessibility into the scope from the start.
The efficient path is an audit followed by remediation: the audit measures every accessible element and produces a fix list, and remediation handles the restriping, signs, and grading. Our ADA compliance audit process page explains the walkthrough. For local striping pricing and seasonal timing, see our parking lot striping in Eagle Point guide.
Understand what happens during an ADA parking compliance audit, common violations found in Oregon commercial lots, and how to prepare your property.
Complete guide to ADA parking requirements in Oregon, including space dimensions, van accessible standards, signage rules, and ORS 447.233 specifics for commercial property owners.
See real before-and-after results of commercial sealcoating projects in Oregon and learn how this affordable maintenance extends parking lot life by a decade or more.
Have a question about this topic? We'll respond within 24 hours.