Home Depot ADA Payment Terminal Accessibility Settlement
Home Depot has settled a class action under the Americans with Disabilities Act over in-store payment terminals that were not accessible to blind and visually impaired customers. The settlement requires Home Depot to install audio-enabled payment terminals nationwide — there are no individual cash payments.
Do I Qualify?
You may be eligible if:
- Visually impaired customers who shop at Home Depot stores
- The settlement remedy is improved accessibility, not cash payments
- No claim form is required for the accessibility improvements
- Home Depot is implementing audio features on payment terminals nationwide
No proof is required. The remedy is the accessibility improvement itself, not individual cash payments.
File your claim through the official settlement website.
File Your Claim →What Happened?
Home Depot settled a class action lawsuit brought under the Americans with Disabilities Act alleging that the company's in-store payment terminals were not accessible to blind and visually impaired customers. The lawsuit alleged that Home Depot's payment terminals lacked audio features and tactile keypads that would allow visually impaired customers to enter their PIN and complete transactions independently and privately.
As part of the settlement, Home Depot agreed to add audio features to its payment terminals nationwide, ensuring blind and visually impaired customers can complete purchases without needing to share their PIN with a cashier or companion.
How Much Will I Actually Get?
This settlement does not provide individual cash payments. The remedy is the accessibility improvement itself — Home Depot's commitment to install audio-enabled payment terminals across its stores nationwide.
Last updated: June 18, 2026 | Information verified from court records and official settlement documents.