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Website Accessibility Matters Before It Becomes a Problem
I help local businesses build websites that are easier for everyone to use and better aligned with modern ADA and WCAG accessibility expectations.
Your website is part of your front door.
For many customers, your website is where they decide whether to call, book, order, visit, or trust your business. If that site is hard to use for someone with a disability, it can block a real customer from taking the next step.
Accessibility is not just a technical checkbox. It affects screen reader users, keyboard users, people with low vision, people who need captions, older customers, mobile users, and anyone trying to get basic information without fighting the website.
No honest web developer should tell you a website is lawsuit proof. What I can do is help reduce risk by fixing known accessibility barriers, documenting the improvements, and building a stronger foundation for ongoing compliance.
Common problems I look for
Poor color contrast
Forms without labels
Menus that do not work by keyboard
Buttons with no accessible names
Videos without captions
PDFs or flyers with no text alternative
Booking or checkout tools that are hard to use
Mobile menus that trap users
Visual content that screen readers cannot understand
How I help.
I review the website, identify the practical accessibility issues, prioritize the fixes, update the code and content, and retest the site after remediation. The goal is to build toward WCAG AA standards and create a cleaner experience for every visitor.
- Website accessibility audit
- WCAG issue scan
- Manual page review
- Keyboard navigation testing
- Image alt text cleanup
- Form accessibility fixes
- Color contrast improvements
- Accessible page structure
- Accessibility statement page
- Ongoing maintenance checks
- Developer remediation using modern code standards
What "compliant" really means.
The practical goal is to build toward WCAG AA standards, document the work, fix known issues, and keep the site maintained as content changes. This is technical remediation and documentation, not legal advice, not ADA certification, and not a guarantee that a business cannot receive a claim.
Best fit.
This matters most for businesses that rely on their website for customer action, especially when the site handles bookings, reservations, menus, orders, events, forms, applications, memberships, or ecommerce.
The process
Audit the site
I review the pages, forms, navigation, images, content structure, and key customer paths.
Identify priority issues
Known barriers get separated by severity so the biggest customer and risk problems are handled first.
Fix the code and content
I clean up labels, contrast, structure, alt text, keyboard behavior, and practical front-end issues.
Retest and document improvements
The site gets checked again, with a clear summary of what changed and what still needs maintenance.
Do Not Wait Until a Demand Letter Shows Up
A cleaner, more accessible website is better for customers and better for the business.
Request an Accessibility Review