Making Websites Accessible for Everyone

Give every visitor equal access to your information and services with an accessible website designed to meet WCAG 2.1 AA, support public sector obligations, and reduce compliance risk.

Worldwide.svg

Trusted by public sector teams across the EU for accessible digital services

What are the benefits?

Websites become accessible to all users, comply with WCAG 2.1 standards, and prepare your organisation for upcoming EAA requirements.

When your website does not meet recognised accessibility requirements, your institution faces avoidable legal, reputational and operational risk. Missing alt text, unclear forms, poor keyboard access or inaccessible documents can lead to complaints, scrutiny and urgent remedial work under tight deadlines.

If visitors cannot use menus, forms, documents, search tools or media with a keyboard, screen reader or magnification software, they may be blocked from accessing public information and services. This creates unnecessary dependence on phone or in-person support and undermines equal access.

Public sector websites often involve multiple editors, departments and language versions. Without clear governance, accessible content standards and review processes, issues reappear after updates, and accessibility quality becomes inconsistent across pages, documents and translated content.

Procurement officers, communications teams and IT coordinators need a clear picture of what is compliant, what is not, and what must be fixed first. Without a structured audit, documented findings and a usable accessibility statement, decision-making becomes slower and harder to justify internally.

Accessibility audits and remediation plans

Get a clear assessment of the barriers affecting your website, including issues that impact navigation, forms, documents, media and core user journeys. We provide prioritised recommendations so your team can act on what matters most first.

Keyboard and assistive technology usability

Ensure visitors can move through your website, use menus, submit forms and access content without relying on a mouse. We help you remove barriers that affect people using keyboards, screen readers and other assistive tools.

Accessible content and document publishing

Make everyday publishing safer by improving headings, link text, tables, images, PDFs and multimedia content. We help your teams publish information in ways that are easier to read, understand and use across languages and devices.

Accessibility statements and governance support

Receive support preparing or updating your accessibility statement, documenting known issues and setting up practical internal processes for review, ownership and ongoing maintenance.

Inclusive design for public-facing services

Improve the clarity of layouts, forms, calls to action and service journeys so people can find information and complete tasks with less confusion. Accessibility improvements are built around real public interactions, not just checklist compliance.

FAQ

Yes. We support public sector institutions that need their websites to align with WCAG 2.1 AA and the accessibility expectations that apply to public bodies in the EU. We focus on practical improvements, documented findings and clear next steps so your team can address risks in a structured way. Where needed, we also help you prepare supporting documentation such as accessibility statements.

Yes. We understand that public sector projects often require formal scoping, documentation, staged approvals and clear deliverables. We can structure the work so procurement, communications and IT stakeholders have the information they need to review scope, assess priorities and approve implementation with confidence.

We can do both. In addition to identifying issues, we help institutions put workable content governance in place so accessibility is maintained after launch. This can include editorial guidance, review processes, support for multilingual content teams and practical recommendations that reduce the risk of recurring issues.

In most cases, yes. We prioritise changes based on user impact, compliance risk and operational constraints, so improvements can be planned in manageable stages. That means you can address the most important barriers first while keeping essential public information and services available.

lt