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Compliance

What is ADA Compliance?

TL;DR

Making your website accessible to people with disabilities, as covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act and interpreted through web accessibility guidelines (WCAG). While the ADA was written before the web existed, courts have ruled that websites are "places of public accommodation" and must be accessible. An accessible website works with screen readers (software that reads pages aloud), allows keyboard-only navigation (for those who can't use a mouse), provides captions for videos, uses sufficient color contrast (for low vision), and includes alt text on images. Beyond legal compliance, Accessibility is good business. 15% of the world has some disability, and accessible sites often have better Search Engine Optimization and User Experience for everyone. Common accessibility issues: missing alt text, poor color contrast, forms without labels, content only accessible via mouse hover, and auto-playing media. ADA website lawsuits have increased dramatically, particularly targeting e-commerce and service businesses. WCAG 2.1 Level AA is the practical standard; tools like WAVE, axe, and Lighthouse help identify issues. Full compliance often requires professional auditing, but addressing common issues reduces risk significantly.

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Frequently Asked Questions About ADA Compliance

Is my website legally required to be accessible?

The ADA has been interpreted to cover websites. Businesses have been sued for inaccessible websites, including small businesses. Full compliance details are unclear, but making reasonable accessibility efforts protects you and serves more customers.

What are the most common accessibility problems?

Missing alt text on images, poor color contrast, forms without proper labels, keyboard navigation not working, videos without captions, and auto-playing media. These affect screen reader users and people with visual or motor impairments.

How do I check if my website is accessible?

Start with free tools: WAVE, axe DevTools, Google Lighthouse. Try navigating with keyboard only. Test with a screen reader. These catch many issues, though full compliance requires manual testing and potentially professional auditing.

Do accessibility overlays/widgets make my site compliant?

No. Those toolbar widgets that promise one-click compliance don't actually fix underlying code issues and can make things worse. Real accessibility requires fixing the website itself, not adding a band-aid overlay.

Does accessibility help SEO?

Yes, significant overlap. Alt text helps both screen readers and Google Images. Proper heading structure helps both navigation and crawlers. Clean, semantic HTML benefits both accessibility tools and search engines.

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