Free audit
We run the full WCAG 2.1 AA check — automated and manual. You see every failure, ranked by exposure.
Most small-business sites fail WCAG. In California, the EU and increasingly the UK, that's an enforceable claim. A demand letter runs £5,000 to £50,000 to settle before lawyer fees. We audit your site against WCAG 2.1 AA, fix what fails, and certify the work — before the letter arrives.
Accessibility failures are now the most boring, profitable thing a claims firm runs. The visitor doesn't have to be a real customer. The site doesn't have to be the worst. It just has to fail the same WCAG checks every other site is failing, and a letter lands on your desk.
We run the full WCAG 2.1 AA check — automated and manual. You see every failure, ranked by exposure.
Sized against the failures, not a page-count. You see the bill before any work starts.
Contrast, alt, semantics, keyboard order, focus, ARIA. We fix the markup, not paste a widget over it.
Re-audit, sign-off statement, and a quarterly monitor so a new page doesn't reintroduce the leak.
The worry of a letter landing is gone — the site is fixed at the markup, certified, and watched so it stays that way.
The failures a claims firm would have cited are gone — fixed in the markup, not hidden under a widget — so the demand letter has nothing left to land on.
An independent re-audit and a statement of conformance, so if anyone ever asks, you have the document that says the site meets WCAG 2.1 AA.
Contrast, alt text, keyboard order and focus all work — so the disabled customer you were unknowingly turning away can actually book.
Quarterly monitoring, so a new page or a quick edit doesn't quietly reopen the exposure you just closed.
Free WCAG 2.1 AA audit. You see every failure, ranked. If you're already compliant, we'll tell you so. From £1,500 to remediate.
From £1,500. The scope depends on how many pages, how many failures and whether the platform itself can hold the fixes. Quoted after a free audit.
Audit in days. Remediation in two to three weeks for most small sites. Larger e-commerce sites scoped per case.
WCAG 2.1 AA — the de facto bar in the EU, US, and UK Equality Act case law.
Yes, increasingly. Demand letters and county-court claims are the common form in the UK. Settlements run £5,000 to £50,000 before lawyer fees. Most owners don't know they're exposed until the letter arrives.
No. Overlays are now cited in claims as evidence the operator knew the site was inaccessible and didn't fix it. They fix nothing in the underlying markup.
Find out where your site fails — for free — and quote the fix.