Families making a home accessible for a wheelchair user or recovering surgery patient want to know how much ramp length they need, whether modular ramps can be removed when no longer needed, and what the installation timeline looks like. A website that explains the options and shows real installations earns the call. Free mockup, no commitment.

For Accessibility Ramps in KC

Web Design for Wheelchair Ramp Installation Companies in Kansas City

Wheelchair ramp customers are families with a member who has a permanent disability, homeowners preparing for a post-surgical recovery period, or adult children making a parent's home accessible as mobility declines. The decision is driven by urgency — a hospital discharge date or a fall that has already happened — and the primary questions are how much ramp, how quickly, and whether it is permanent. The slope requirement drives everything: ADA guidelines specify a 1:12 rise-to-run ratio — one inch of rise requires twelve inches of ramp length — so a twenty-four inch step height requires a twenty-four-foot ramp run. This surprises many families who expected a six-foot ramp to cover a two-foot rise. The modular aluminum ramp is the dominant residential solution: aluminum sections (EZ-Access, Prairie View, National Ramp, Amramp are the major manufacturers) bolt together without permanent attachment to the structure, can be configured as straight runs, switchbacks, or L-shapes to fit constrained spaces, and can be fully removed when no longer needed — the system can even be sold back or rented. Wooden ramps are built-in, lower cost if lumber prices are favorable, but permanent and require ongoing maintenance. Rental programs are available for temporary needs (post-surgical recovery of six to twelve months). Vertical platform lifts are an alternative where yard space does not allow a ramp run. A wheelchair ramp website that explains the slope calculation, shows modular vs. wood options, and offers emergency fast-install booking earns families who need a solution this week.

What families research before installing a wheelchair ramp

  • How much ramp — the 1:12 ADA slope rule, calculating ramp length needed for a specific rise height
  • Modular vs. permanent — aluminum modular ramps that can be removed vs. built wood ramps
  • Rental vs. purchase — when renting makes sense, what happens when the ramp is no longer needed
  • Installation timeline — how quickly a ramp can be installed, same-week or next-day availability
  • Platform lifts — when there is not enough yard for a ramp run, vertical platform lift as an alternative

What your wheelchair ramp website would include

  • Slope calculator — simple tool or explanation of the 1:12 rule, how to estimate ramp length needed
  • Modular aluminum ramps — configuration options (straight, L-shape, switchback), brands, removable design
  • Rental program — how ramp rental works, monthly cost, pickup and return process, who it is right for
  • Wood ramps — when a built-in ramp makes more sense, construction timeline, material comparison
  • Platform lifts — vertical lifts for tight spaces, indoor stair lifts, what each application requires
  • Quote form with rise height, doorway location, entry type, timeline urgency, rental or purchase

What clients say

“Most of my calls come from families with a parent being discharged from the hospital and they need a ramp in three days. They are stressed and just want to know it can be done. Without a website they found me through a referral and still had a hundred questions about length, cost, and whether the ramp could come out later. The site with the slope explanation, the modular system photos, and the rental option meant families called already knowing it would work and ready to book. Emergency installs are our best margin jobs.”

— T. Bergman, accessibility ramp installer, Kansas City, MO

Simple pricing

A wheelchair ramp site with slope guide, modular system options, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with rental program, platform lift section, and configuration gallery is $425–$750. One modular ramp installation covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.

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(816) 520-5652