Findaccessibilityissuesbeforeyourusersdo
Prioritised, role-specific fixes for designers, engineers, product, and compliance teams.
Get a full WCAG 2.2 audit in 60 seconds.
Whenyourwebsiteisn'taccessible,you'renotjustexcludingusers—you'relosingcustomers,increasinglegalrisk,andhurtingyourSEO.
“The power of the Web is in its universality. Access by everyone regardless of disability is an essential aspect.”
No one gets left behind

Blindness
Screen reader users who rely on semantic HTML and ARIA

Low vision
Users who magnify up to 400% and need reflow

Colour vision deficiency
Cannot rely on colour alone to convey meaning

Motor disabilities
Keyboard and switch device users

Deaf and hard of hearing
Require captions and visual alternatives

Cognitive and learning
Need clear language and consistent navigation

Seizure disorders
Sensitive to flashing and excessive motion
Three steps to an accessible website
11 categories, 140+ checks
Colour contrast, keyboard access, page structure, images, forms, touch targets, ARIA, and more — scored against WCAG 2.2.
See all 11 categoriesEach issue, in context
Violations show severity level, the affected element, which WCAG criterion failed, and which user groups are blocked — from screen reader users to motor-impaired visitors.
Action plans by role
Code snippets for engineers, design specs for designers, priorities and compliance risk for product owners, legal references for compliance leads — four views of the same issue.
Fixes everyone can act on
Design system guidance — how your components and patterns should change to prevent accessibility issues.
- Component-level recommendations
- Visual pattern suggestions
- Design review checklist
140+ checks across 11 accessibility areas
Remove the barriers for your audience now
Get a full WCAG 2.2 audit in 60 seconds.