Accessibility
Accessible websites, built in from the start.
Section 508 and WCAG 2.1 AA, handled as part of the build, not a panic before an audit. For government contractors, healthcare, and any business that would rather not turn customers away.
Why it matters
Section 508 is a hard requirement to sell to the government, ADA complaints are a real cost for public-facing businesses, and an accessible site is simply a better site for everyone who uses it.
What we do
Accessibility as a standard, not an afterthought.
WCAG 2.1 AA, built in
Semantic structure, labeled controls, and logical reading order from the first commit, not bolted on after an audit flags it.
Keyboard and screen-reader ready
Every action reachable and operable without a mouse, tested with real assistive tech, not just an automated scan.
Contrast, text, and motion
Color contrast that passes, text that scales, and animation that respects reduced-motion, so the site works for everyone who lands on it.
VPAT documentation
When you're selling into government or healthcare, we produce the accessibility conformance report buyers ask for.
We built a Section 508 / WCAG 2.1 AA federal-contracting site, front to back.
See the workCommon questions
- Who actually needs an accessible site?
- Anyone selling into government (Section 508 is required) or healthcare, any public-facing business that wants to stay clear of ADA complaints, and honestly, anyone who'd rather not turn away customers who use assistive tech.
- Can you fix an existing site instead of rebuilding?
- Often, yes. We can audit and remediate an existing site to WCAG 2.1 AA, or build accessibility in from scratch. We'll tell you honestly which makes more sense for yours.
- Do you provide a VPAT?
- Yes, when the work is in scope for it. A VPAT (accessibility conformance report) is what government and enterprise buyers ask for, and we produce one against your finished site.
