Web accessibility,
explained for humans.
Practical guides for store owners, marketers, and content editors who need to make their websites accessible — without writing code.
The European Accessibility Act is live. 94.8% of websites fail basic checks. We help you fix yours.
Resources
CMS Checklists
Platform-specific accessibility checklists for WordPress, Shopify, and more.
WCAG Fix Guides
How to fix each WCAG 2.2 criterion with code examples.
Industry Guides
Compliance requirements for e-commerce, healthcare, education, and more.
Tool Comparisons
Side-by-side comparisons of accessibility testing tools.
Latest guides
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Memorial Day Sale Banners and Pop-Ups: Five Accessibility Mistakes Small Businesses Make This Week
Memorial Day weekend is the biggest sale traffic week between Mother's Day and Father's Day. Here are the five accessibility mistakes small-business sale banners and pop-ups make that lock out screen reader users and invite ADA demand letters.
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Why Your 'Added to Cart' Toast Notification Never Reaches Screen Reader Users (And the Two-Line Fix)
Toast notifications and snackbars are the modern way to confirm 'item added to cart', 'changes saved', or 'message sent.' For most users they pop up in the corner, fade away, and feel slick. For screen reader users they often do not exist at all. Here is what is happening and how to fix it in two lines of HTML.
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Color and Size Swatches: The Product Page Pattern Quietly Excluding Blind Shoppers
Product variant pickers built from colored circles and unlabeled boxes routinely ship with no text alternative, no selected-state announcement, and no keyboard focus ring -- a WCAG 1.1.1, 1.4.1, and 4.1.2 stack of failures that costs you screen reader and keyboard customers without ever showing up in a standard scan.
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When Your Chat Bubble Hides Form Errors: The Accessibility Bug Behind Mystery Sign-Up Drop-Offs
Floating live-chat widgets pinned to the bottom-right corner routinely cover form error messages on sign-up, checkout, and contact pages — a WCAG 1.4.10 violation that doubles as a conversion killer and a fresh angle for ADA demand letters.
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Global Accessibility Awareness Day 2026: A Small-Business Action Plan for the Week Leading Up to May 21
GAAD 2026 lands on May 21. Here is a six-day plan any small-business owner can follow to do something real before the day arrives -- without hiring a developer and without spending a dollar.
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Your Site Probably Blocks Pinch-to-Zoom on Mobile. That Is a Lawsuit Risk.
A single line in your site's HTML can block customers with low vision from zooming on a phone. It is one of the most common, most invisible accessibility failures of 2026 -- and one of the easiest to fix once you know what to look for.
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Loading Spinners Are Quietly Breaking Your Website for Screen Reader Users
Spinners, skeleton screens, and 'please wait' overlays are everywhere on modern websites — and most of them say nothing to screen readers. Here's how the silence creates real accessibility failures, what an ADA demand letter for a broken loading state looks like, and a non-technical fix you can ask any developer to apply in an hour.
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Online Course Accessibility: A Non-Developer's Guide to Teachable, Kajabi, and Thinkific
If you sell online courses on Teachable, Kajabi, Thinkific, or Podia, your platform does not make you compliant. This guide walks creators through the accessibility gaps that are actually yours to fix.