Healthcare Website Accessibility — HHS Section 504 Deadline Extended to 2027
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) published an Interim Final Rule on May 7, 2026, extending Section 504 healthcare web accessibility deadlines by one year. Organizations with 15+ employees now have until May 11, 2027 to comply — but don't wait.
In this comprehensive guide, we'll cover everything healthcare providers need to know about HHS Section 504: new deadlines, requirements, who must comply, patient portal accessibility, telehealth requirements, and step-by-step compliance actions.
🏥 KEY TAKEAWAY
HHS Section 504 requires healthcare websites, patient portals, and mobile apps to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA. New deadline: May 11, 2027 for entities with 15+ employees. Non-compliance risks loss of federal funding (Medicare, Medicaid).
What Is HHS Section 504?
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 prohibits disability discrimination by any program or activity that receives federal financial assistance from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). This includes virtually every healthcare provider in America:
- Hospitals and health systems — All sizes, public and private
- Clinics and outpatient facilities — Primary care, specialty, urgent care
- Nursing homes and long-term care facilities
- Rehabilitation centers and therapy providers
- Health insurers and managed care plans
- Medical schools and teaching hospitals
- Telehealth providers
- Behavioral health and substance abuse treatment centers
The HHS Final Rule (effective May 2024) explicitly requires all web content, mobile apps, and kiosks to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards. This is the same technical standard required by ADA Title III.
HHS Section 504 Deadlines — What Changed?
On May 7, 2026 — four days before the original deadline — HHS OCR published an Interim Final Rule extending deadlines. Here are the updated deadlines:
⚠️ CRITICAL WARNING
An extension is NOT a waiver. ADA Title III private lawsuits against healthcare websites continue unaffected. You can still be sued today for an inaccessible patient portal or telehealth platform. Do not wait until 2027.
What HHS Section 504 Requires
Under the HHS Final Rule, all healthcare web content, mobile apps, and kiosks must meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards. Key requirements include:
1. Patient Portal Accessibility
Patient portals are the highest-risk area for healthcare providers. They must be:
- Fully screen reader compatible — Login, prescription refill, appointment scheduling, lab results
- Keyboard accessible — All functions operable without a mouse
- Proper form labels — Every input field must have a programmatic label
- Accessible PDF documents — Lab results, after-visit summaries, patient education materials
2. Telehealth Accessibility
Telehealth platforms must include:
- Live captioning — Real-time captions for all telehealth visits
- Screen reader compatible interface — Controls (mute, video, chat) must be accessible
- Keyboard accessible controls — No mouse required
- Transcripts for recorded sessions
3. Mobile App Accessibility
Healthcare mobile apps (iOS and Android) must be:
- VoiceOver (iOS) and TalkBack (Android) compatible
- Touch targets minimum 44x44px
- Proper accessibility labels on all interactive elements
4. Kiosk & Self-Service Compliance
Hospital intake kiosks, pharmacy pickup kiosks, and wayfinding systems must also comply:
- Physical accessibility (height, reach range)
- Screen reader compatibility
- Voice output and tactile controls
- Alternative input methods (touch, keyboard, voice)
What Are the Penalties for Non-Compliance?
HHS OCR actively investigates complaints and conducts compliance reviews. Penalties include:
- Loss of federal funding — Medicare, Medicaid reimbursements suspended or revoked
- Corrective action plans — Required remediation with government monitoring
- Civil monetary penalties — Fines per violation
- Department of Justice lawsuits — DOJ can file enforcement actions
- Private ADA lawsuits — Patients can sue under ADA Title III (unaffected by deadline extension)
- Reputational damage — Public disclosure of violations
In 2025, HHS OCR resolved multiple complaints against healthcare providers with inaccessible websites and patient portals. Enforcement is active and increasing.
Healthcare Accessibility Compliance Checklist
- ✓Patient portal fully accessible — Login, forms, navigation, lab results
- ✓Telehealth platforms have live captions — Real-time captioning for all visits
- ✓All images have descriptive alt text — Including clinical images, charts, diagrams
- ✓Color contrast meets 4.5:1 (normal text) / 3:1 (large text)
- ✓Full keyboard navigation with visible focus indicators
- ✓Proper heading hierarchy (H1, H2, H3, H4)
- ✓HTML lang attribute specified on every page
- ✓Skip navigation link present at top of every page
- ✓Accessible PDF documents — Tagged, alt text, reading order
- ✓Mobile app compatible with screen readers — VoiceOver (iOS), TalkBack (Android)
- ✓Accessibility statement published on website
- ✓Staff trained on digital accessibility
How AccessiTool Helps Healthcare Organizations
AccessiTool provides free tools specifically designed for healthcare compliance:
- HHS Section 504 Checker — Scan your healthcare website against WCAG 2.1 Level AA
- ADA Compliance Checker — For general ADA Title III requirements
- Color Contrast Checker — Ensure text meets 4.5:1 ratio
- Keyboard Navigation Checker — Test patient portal keyboard accessibility
- Screen Reader Checker — Validate ARIA labels and alt text
- PDF Accessibility Checker — Check lab results and patient education PDFs
- Mobile Accessibility Scanner — Test mobile app compatibility
Frequently Asked Questions — Healthcare Accessibility
Q1: What is the new HHS Section 504 deadline?
May 11, 2027 for entities with 15+ employees. May 10, 2028 for entities with fewer than 15 employees.
Q2: Does this deadline extension apply to all healthcare organizations?
Yes, if your organization receives HHS federal financial assistance (Medicare, Medicaid, grants, etc.).
Q3: Can a healthcare provider still be sued before the deadline?
Yes. The HHS extension does not prevent ADA Title III lawsuits. Patients can still file discrimination claims today.
Q4: What technical standard does HHS require?
WCAG 2.1 Level AA — the same standard required by ADA Title III and EAA.
Q5: Does HHS Section 504 apply to patient portals?
Yes. Patient portals must be fully accessible — including login, prescription refill, appointment scheduling, and lab results.
Q6: What are the penalties for non-compliance?
Penalties include loss of federal funding (Medicare, Medicaid), corrective action plans, civil monetary penalties, and Department of Justice lawsuits.
Don't Risk Your Federal Funding — Test Your Healthcare Website Today
With the May 2027 deadline approaching, now is the time to start your compliance journey. Scan your healthcare website now — it's free and takes less than 60 seconds.
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