Climate-controlled. Photographed before delivery. Configured so accessibility isn't an afterthought.
A wedding planner in Homeland books a four-stall restroom trailer for a 220-guest outdoor wedding. The original spec was standard — no ADA configuration, no accessibility review. Three days before the event, the bride mentions that her grandfather, who'd been confirming his attendance up until that week, would need wheelchair access. The trailer the planner had booked didn't have a ramp option. The vendor wanted an emergency surcharge plus a swap fee. The planner spent eighteen hours coordinating a rushed reconfiguration. The grandfather attended, used the trailer, and never knew there'd been a problem.
The cost of skipping accessibility planning isn't visible at booking. It's visible when something has to be fixed in the final week. Accessible Mobile Toilet builds the accessibility conversation into every restroom trailer rental quote — not because every event will have a guest who needs a ramp, but because plenty of events do, and the ones that don't lose nothing by asking. The conversation takes ten minutes during the booking call. Skipping it can cost a planner an entire week of last-minute scramble.
"Accessibility isn't an afterthought at Accessible Mobile — it's built into every quote."
By event tier and accessibility need.
Compact footprint, two private stalls, full plumbing, climate control, hardwood-look interior. Sized for 50-100 guests.
Trailer configurations that include a ramp-accessible stall meeting federal standards. Available in four-stall, six-stall, and eight-stall sizes.
Four-stall configuration with separate men's and women's wings. Sized for 100-300 guest weddings, corporate events, and outdoor receptions.
Hardwood interiors, vanity lighting, full plumbing, framed mirrors. The tier for upscale weddings and donor receptions.
Trailer placed at office buildings, schools, or municipal facilities during plumbing renovation. Serviced on scheduled rotation.
For venues without power. Quiet inverter generators included as standard, not as an upcharge.
A capability statement.
We dispatch from a yard in Homeland with serial-tagged tracking on every trailer in our fleet. Each trailer logs its last refurbishment date, last service date, and condition rating. We send you a photo set of your assigned trailer 24 hours before delivery — taken that morning, of the actual unit you're getting. If anything in those photos isn't acceptable, we swap before dispatch at no cost. Every quote includes an accessibility review against your guest count and venue layout. We've delivered to weddings of 50 to 600+ guests, corporate events at venues from converted barns to downtown rooftops, multi-month renovations at office buildings, schools, and government facilities. Our drivers carry ADA reference cards including ramp angle measurements and turning radius specs as standard equipment.
Phases as commitments.
Written rate, sizing math shown, accessibility review completed, any concerns flagged before contract.
A printed placement plan you sign, including ramp angle and accessibility path checks.
Trailer placed and leveled to spec, fixtures tested, photo confirmation to your phone.
Mid-event servicing during pre-marked lulls, unmarked vehicles for premium events, coordinator on call.
Coordinated to your venue's requirements. Site cleanup. Final invoice matching the contract.
The biggest objection in this category. Worth dismantling at length.
The argument against ADA-compliant trailer configurations as a default is straightforward — they cost slightly more, and most events don't have visibly identified guests requiring them. The argument for is harder to see at quote time but lands hard in execution. First, public events in Homeland are subject to city ordinance ADA ratios regardless of identified attendees, so the "do we need it" question often isn't optional. Second, private events with 100+ guests almost always have at least one attendee with mobility considerations the host didn't know about — older relatives, recent injury cases, undisclosed disabilities. Third, the cost difference is typically 10-20% — meaningful but not transformative — while the cost of needing to swap a non-compliant unit five days before an event is significantly higher.
The math on accessibility-as-default favors the planner. The math on accessibility-as-afterthought favors regret. We've talked enough planners through both versions to know which one we'd recommend. The premium for compliance-by-default isn't a luxury — it's protection against the version of the story that starts with "I didn't realize until five days out."
"Used a four-stall ADA-configured trailer for an outdoor wedding. The driver leveled the trailer twice to ensure the ramp angle stayed compliant after a slope shift. That kind of attention is rare."
"Coordinated a 380-person corporate event in Homeland. Their team mapped placement around our catering setup, brought a quiet generator, and serviced mid-event without us noticing."
"School district renovation booked a six-stall trailer over a planned six-month engagement. The project ran nine months. Same monthly rate held the entire time."
For peak wedding season (April-October), four to six months out. Off-season, six to eight weeks. Rush bookings inside two weeks possible if inventory fits.
Most need power; we bring quiet inverter generators if your Homeland venue can't supply one. Freshwater is brought in our own tank.
Yes — four-stall, six-stall, and eight-stall configurations all have ADA-compliant variants.
Yes. Yard visits available by appointment. Pre-delivery photo sets standard on every booking.
Tell us your venue, date, and guest count. We'll send a written quote with sample photos of available trailers, a placement recommendation, and an accessibility review within one business day.
Click Here to Call (888) 341-5226Want to see the fleet first? Yard visits available by appointment.