"ADA parking sign" and "handicap parking sign" are colloquial names for the same product: the federal MUTCD R7-8 sign with the International Symbol of Accessibility, mounted at every accessible stall. "Handicap" persists in older code and casual use; "accessible" is the current ADA-aligned term. Either name buys the same panel. What matters for compliance is the symbol, the green or blue color field, the legend, and ADA Std 502.6 mount height.
Quick Verdict for Property Managers
| Factor | Result |
|---|---|
| Are "ADA" and "handicap" signs different products? | No. Same panel under different colloquial names. |
| What is the federal code? | MUTCD R7-8 (Reserved Parking + International Symbol of Accessibility) |
| What is the binding standard? | ADA Std 502.6 (mount height) + ADA Std 703 (legend visibility) |
| What is the Oregon enforcement statute? | ORS 811.615 |
| Should the sign say "Handicap" or "Reserved"? | "Reserved" with the symbol is the federal standard. State-variant signs with "Handicap" are also acceptable. |
What Does the Federal Standard Actually Specify?
The MUTCD R7-8 sign is the federal regulatory sign for accessible parking. It carries:
- The legend "Reserved Parking" above the symbol
- The International Symbol of Accessibility (a stylized figure in a wheelchair)
- Color field: green text on white with the symbol on a blue background (most common federal variant) or all-blue field with white symbol
- Standard size: 12 x 18 inches
The federal R7-8a "Van Accessible" placard is added below R7-8 above any van-accessible stall. The full pair must be present, mounted, and readable for the stall to satisfy ADA Std 502.
Why Do Some Signs Say "Handicap" Instead?
Three reasons "handicap" wording persists on parking signs:
- State-variant codes -- Oregon's R7-201 state-variant accessible-parking sign uses the legend "Reserved Handicap Parking." It is functionally equivalent to the federal R7-8 and is acceptable on Oregon private property.
- Older code references -- early-1990s ADA-implementation signage used "Handicap" widely. Lots that were signed pre-2010 commonly still have these panels.
- Local sign-shop inventory -- distributors that serve municipal markets carry both wordings interchangeably and label both as "ADA signs."
Does the Wording Affect Enforcement?
For practical Oregon enforcement, no. ORS 811.615 authorizes citation of any vehicle parked in a stall reserved for persons with disabilities, and the binding identification element is the International Symbol of Accessibility, not the wording above or below it. A stall identified by R7-8 ("Reserved") and a stall identified by R7-201 ("Reserved Handicap Parking") both satisfy enforcement.
What does affect enforcement:
- The symbol must be present -- a sign with no symbol is not a regulatory accessible-stall identification, regardless of wording.
- The mount height must clear ADA Std 502.6 -- the bottom of the sign sits at least 60 inches above the pavement so a parked vehicle cannot block the legend.
- For van-accessible stalls, the R7-8a placard must accompany R7-8 -- ADA Std 502.4 requires identification.
What Should I Order if I'm Picking Today?
Pick R7-8 with the International Symbol of Accessibility on a 12 x 18 inch 0.080 inch aluminum panel with ASTM D4956 Type III sheeting. Pair with R7-8a on van stalls. That is the cleanest spec and it works in every Oregon jurisdiction.
If your property has existing R7-201 state-variant signs in good condition, leave them in place; they are compliant. When the time comes to replace them as part of a planned re-sign, switch to the federal R7-8 to standardize inventory.
On a 14,000 sq-ft Springfield apartment property where Cojo replaced 24 perimeter signs in March 2026, six existing R7-201 signs were on aluminum that had failed at the post grommets. We replaced them with R7-8 federal-variant signs to match the rest of the lot. The property manager confirmed with their tow contractor and the contractor accepted both.
What Other Signs Do ADA Stalls Need?
ADA Std 502 requires identification, not signage redundancy. The minimum kit per accessible stall is:
- One R7-8 sign (or R7-201 state-variant) with International Symbol of Accessibility
- One R7-8a "Van Accessible" placard on van stalls only
- Pavement marking with the same symbol (per ADA Std 502.3 and Oregon striping practice)
For pavement-side specifics, see our older guide on ADA parking lot striping guide. The striping requirements (stall width, access aisle, blue field around symbol) are separate from the sign requirements but the two must be installed together for the stall to satisfy the full ADA Std 502 spec.
Industry Baseline Range
| Item | Baseline Range |
|---|---|
| R7-8 panel (12 x 18 in, .080 alum, Type III) | $35 to $75 |
| R7-8a Van Accessible add-on (6 x 12 in) | $18 to $40 |
| 8 ft U-channel post | $30 to $55 |
| Concrete footing + labor | $75 to $200 |
| Installed R7-8 + post + footing | $200 to $450+ |
| Installed R7-8 + R7-8a + post + footing | $235 to $510+ |
Current Market Reality
Per-sign costs on R7-8 panels in 2026 are running 12 to 18 percent above 2022 baselines, mostly driven by aluminum coil and tamper-proof hardware pricing. Multi-stall ADA re-sign jobs amortize footing and crew time across the install, which keeps the per-sign installed number on the lower end of the range when several signs go up on the same crew visit.
Common Mistakes Worth Flagging
- Using a non-reflective panel on an accessible stall -- ADA visibility-in-service is the binding test. Type III sheeting is the practical floor.
- Mounting the sign below 60 inches -- a parked vehicle blocks the legend. ADA 502.6 fail.
- Skipping the R7-8a on van-accessible stalls -- the van-stall identification is required and the parent R7-8 alone is not enough.
- Removing an old "Handicap" sign without replacing the symbol -- the symbol is the binding element. A stall without it is not a regulatory accessible stall.
For ranked spec picks, see best ADA parking signs. For full sign-product spec on the ADA stall, see ADA parking sign requirements. For the broader hub, see the parking signs buyer's guide. Need a Portland-metro re-sign? See parking sign installation in Portland, Oregon or get a custom quote.