ADA Porta Potties For Sale - Handicap Portable Restrooms
Buy ADA porta potties and handicap portable restrooms for sale. Wheelchair-accessible units with ramps, grab bars, and ADA-compliant dimensions. Nationwide...
Shop ADA porta potties and handicap portable restrooms designed for accessible restroom access at public events, jobsites, schools, parks, municipalities, and commercial locations. These units are larger than standard portable toilets and are built to support easier entry, more interior space, and accessibility-focused use.
Choose an ADA unit when wheelchair access, roomier interior space, or public-facing restroom coverage is part of the buying requirement.
ADA Portable Restrooms & Handicap Porta Potties Products
Compare ADA Porta Potties for Sale
ADA porta potties are built for accessible restroom access, wider entry, more interior space, and ramp-supported use. The main buying decision is whether the site needs a basic accessible unit or an accessible unit with hand washing inside the restroom.
| Unit | Best for | Starting price | Sink | Freshwater | Ramp | Dimensions | Lead time | View details |
| ADA Compliant Restroom | Public events, jobsites, schools, parks, municipal sites, and accessible restroom clusters | Starting at $1,695 | No | N/A | Included | 61" W x 61" D x 86" H | 2-3 weeks | View details |
| ADA Restroom with Sink | Accessible restroom setups that also need hand washing inside the unit | Starting at $1,995 | Accessible | 5 gal | Included | 61" W x 61" D x 86" H | 2-3 weeks | View details |
How to Choose an ADA Portable Restroom
An ADA Compliant Restroom is the practical choice when a site needs accessible restroom access in a standalone portable unit. It is larger than a standard porta potty and is designed around wider entry, ramp access, grab bars, and more interior room for maneuvering.
An ADA Restroom with Sink is better when the accessible restroom also needs hand washing inside the unit. That can matter for public events, schools, parks, food-service areas, healthcare-adjacent sites, and facilities where a separate sink may not be convenient on the accessible route.
Placement, Access, and Site Planning
ADA portable restrooms should be planned as part of the site layout, not added as an afterthought. Think about the accessible route, level ground, ramp approach, door swing, turning space, signage, privacy, lighting, and whether users can reach the unit without crossing soft soil, curbs, cables, steep slopes, or crowded service lanes.
For clustered restroom areas, place accessible units where they are easy to find and close to the main restroom group. Service teams also need enough room to pump and clean the unit without blocking the ramp or approach path.
When to Upgrade Beyond a Single ADA Unit
A standalone ADA porta potty is best for simple accessible coverage. If the site needs multiple stations, climate control, running water, or a more finished guest experience, compare ADA restroom trailers and restroom trailers. For mixed sites, buyers may combine ADA units with standard porta potties and portable hand wash stations.
Accessibility requirements can vary by event type, site ownership, funding source, and local rules. Use the ADA porta potty requirements article, the ADA requirements guide, and the porta potty dimensions guide as planning resources, then confirm the final requirement with the authority or project owner responsible for the site.
ADA Porta Potty FAQs
What is the difference between an ADA porta potty and a standard porta potty?
An ADA porta potty is larger than a standard unit and is built around accessible use, with features such as a wider entry, interior grab bars, more turning space, a lower toilet position, non-slip flooring, and ramp access. A standard porta potty is smaller and better suited for basic restroom coverage where accessibility is not the primary requirement.
When should I choose an ADA restroom with sink?
Choose an ADA restroom with sink when the site needs accessible restroom access and hand washing inside the same unit. This is useful for schools, parks, public events, healthcare-adjacent sites, food-service areas, and locations where a separate sink station may be harder to place along an accessible route.
How many ADA porta potties do I need for an event or site?
The right count depends on the event type, site layout, number of restroom clusters, local rules, and whether the site is public-facing. Federal accessibility guidance commonly uses at least 5% accessible portable units at each cluster, with a minimum of one where accessible portable units are required, but buyers should confirm the requirement for their jurisdiction and use case.
Where should ADA portable restrooms be placed?
Place ADA portable restrooms on level, stable ground along an accessible route. Leave room for the ramp approach, door swing, wheelchair maneuvering, service access, signage, and user privacy. Avoid placing accessible units only at the far edge of the site if other restrooms are grouped closer to the main activity.
Are ADA porta potties required on construction sites?
Requirements can vary by site type, crew needs, public access, contract terms, and local enforcement. Some construction-only personnel areas have different rules than public-facing sites, but many contractors still include accessible units to support workers, inspectors, visitors, and project requirements.
What features should I compare before buying an ADA unit?
Compare entry width, ramp setup, interior turning space, grab bars, floor surface, tank capacity, service access, sink availability, overall dimensions, product weight, manufacturer support, and whether the unit fits your transport, storage, and placement plan.
Should I choose an ADA porta potty or an ADA restroom trailer?
Choose an ADA porta potty when you need a standalone accessible unit with simple placement and servicing. Choose an ADA restroom trailer when you need a more finished restroom experience, multiple stations, climate control, running water, or a higher-comfort setup for events, venues, or long-term public use.
ADA Portable Restroom Resources