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Web Design

What is Accessibility?

TL;DR

Making your website usable by people with disabilities, visual, auditory, motor, and cognitive. This includes proper Alt Text, keyboard navigation, sufficient color contrast, and screen reader compatibility. Accessibility is both ethical and legally required in many cases (see WCAG). It also improves Search Engine Optimization and general User Experience.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Accessibility

Why does website accessibility matter for my business?

About 15-20% of people have some disability. That's a significant portion of potential customers you might exclude. Accessibility also helps SEO, improves UX for everyone, and protects you from lawsuits, ADA web accessibility lawsuits are common and expensive.

What are the most common accessibility issues?

Missing alt text on images, poor color contrast (hard to read), forms without labels, no keyboard navigation, videos without captions, and complex layouts that confuse screen readers. Most issues are easy to fix once identified.

Can I get sued for having an inaccessible website?

Yes. ADA web accessibility lawsuits have increased dramatically, especially against businesses with physical locations. Settlements typically cost $10-50K plus legal fees. Proactive accessibility is cheaper than reactive legal defense.

How do I check if my website is accessible?

Use free tools like WAVE or axe DevTools to scan for issues. Try navigating your site using only a keyboard. Test with a screen reader. Or hire an accessibility audit. Don't rely solely on automated tools, they miss context-dependent issues.

Try it risk-free. If you don't see real progress in 30 days, I'll refund every cent.