AccessivePath

comparison

WCAG 2.2 vs Unruh Act

WCAG 2.2 (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.2, Global (referenced by most national accessibility laws), 2023) and Unruh Act (Unruh Civil Rights Act, California, United States, 1959) are two of the most-referenced accessibility frameworks in digital compliance. This guide compares them side by side — jurisdiction, scope, conformance approach, penalties, and how a single audit can cover both simultaneously.

Lin Chen · IAAP CPACC · Mobile accessibility lead3 min readPublished · Updated

What is WCAG 2.2?

WCAG 2.2 (pronounced 'wuh-cag 2.2') is the World Wide Web Consortium's globally adopted standard for web accessibility, published October 2023, defining 87 testable success criteria organised under four principles: Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, Robust.

Maintainer

World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)

Jurisdiction and enforcement

Global (referenced by most national accessibility laws). Referenced by ADA, EAA, Section 508, AODA and many others.

What is Unruh Act?

California's Unruh Civil Rights Act incorporates the federal ADA and adds statutory damages of $4,000 per violation, making California the highest-litigation US state for web accessibility — accounting for the largest share of demand letters and class actions filed each year.

Maintainer

State of California

Jurisdiction and enforcement

California, United States. California courts; private right of action.

WCAG 2.2 vs Unruh Act — the key differences

The principal difference is jurisdictional: WCAG 2.2 applies in Global (referenced by most national accessibility laws), while Unruh Act applies in California, United States. WCAG 2.2 is maintained by World Wide Web Consortium (W3C); Unruh Act is maintained by State of California. The standards differ on scope, conformance grading, and penalty structure — but a well-designed accessibility programme can satisfy both simultaneously by adopting the strictest applicable requirement and cross-mapping findings.

Scope

WCAG 2.2 covers: Web content, Mobile web, Web applications, PDF documents (with PDF/UA), EPUB publications. Unruh Act covers: Any business establishment in California or serving California consumers.

Penalties

WCAG 2.2: United States: civil penalties under ADA Title III; demand letters typically settle at $3,000–$25,000; litigated cases can reach $50,000+ in attorney-fee awards. Unruh Act: $4,000 minimum statutory damages per violation.

How to comply with both at once

Adopt the stricter applicable conformance level — typically WCAG 2.2 Level AA — as your engineering baseline. Audit against that baseline once, then cross-map findings to both WCAG 2.2 and Unruh Act specific requirements. A single Accessibility Conformance Report (ACR) using VPAT 2.5 INT can document both.

When you might need just one

If you operate exclusively in Global (referenced by most national accessibility laws) and have no cross-border procurement exposure, you may only need WCAG 2.2. The same applies in reverse for Unruh Act. For organisations selling cross-border, into the EU or US public sector, the safer default is to plan to both simultaneously.

Sources

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Cited answers. Sourced. Updated as standards and case law change.

  • Is WCAG 2.2 stricter than Unruh Act?

    Neither standard is uniformly "stricter" — they cover different regulatory domains. WCAG 2.2 is more prescriptive about web content; Unruh Act about any business establishment in california or serving california consumers. For organisations exposed to both, a unified WCAG 2.2 AA baseline typically satisfies the technical requirements of both.

  • Can a single audit satisfy WCAG 2.2 and Unruh Act?

    Yes. Both standards ultimately reference WCAG-aligned criteria. A combined audit with cross-mapped findings can produce documentation acceptable to both regulators.

  • Which jurisdictions enforce WCAG 2.2?

    Global (referenced by most national accessibility laws). Referenced by ADA, EAA, Section 508, AODA and many others.

  • Which jurisdictions enforce Unruh Act?

    California, United States. California courts; private right of action.

  • What happens if I am not compliant with WCAG 2.2?

    United States: civil penalties under ADA Title III; demand letters typically settle at $3,000–$25,000; litigated cases can reach $50,000+ in attorney-fee awards European Union: fines under EAA national transpositions vary by member state, up to €1,000,000 in some jurisdictions Canada (AODA): C$50,000–C$100,000 per day per violation in Ontario

  • What happens if I am not compliant with Unruh Act?

    $4,000 minimum statutory damages per violation Attorney fees Injunctive relief

Stop guessing. Get the audit a Fortune 500 a11y team would have written.

Free audit on your live URL. No sign-up. IAAP-format report. Ready in hours.

founders@accessivepath.com · +977 9851094056