Full-service accessibility partner

Digital Accessibility Services for WCAG, ADA, and Section 508 Compliance

We help teams test and improve digital accessibility for websites, software, and ICT products. Our services cover WCAG audits, ADA website compliance, Section 508 testing, VPAT/ACR reporting, training, and hardware accessibility testing.

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FAQ

Common Questions About Accessibility Services

Is there a single law that defines website accessibility requirements?
There is no single, universal law that lists exact technical rules for every website. In the United States, accessibility obligations come from broader civil rights laws such as the ADA and Section 508. Technical standards like WCAG are widely used to measure compliance, even when not explicitly written into every statute.
Does the ADA specifically mention websites?
The ADA does not explicitly reference websites in its original text. However, courts and the U.S. Department of Justice have increasingly interpreted the ADA to apply to digital services when they are connected to public access, goods, or services. As a result, websites are commonly evaluated under accessibility expectations.
Why does my website need to be accessible?
Website accessibility reduces legal exposure, supports procurement requirements, and ensures equal access for users with disabilities. It also improves usability, clarity, and overall user experience for all visitors. In many industries, accessibility is no longer optional — it is an operational and reputational standard.
Are accessibility plugins enough to make a website compliant?
No. Accessibility plugins and overlays do not replace proper accessibility implementation. Automated tools and overlays cannot fix structural issues in code, content, or user flows. Even automated accessibility tests do not treat a plugin as proof of compliance. Accessibility requires proper design, development practices, and conformance with technical standards.
Is WCAG legally required in the United States?
WCAG itself is not a law. It is a technical standard developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). However, WCAG is widely recognized as the benchmark for evaluating digital accessibility and is referenced in Section 508 standards and many ADA-related legal settlements.

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