Is your website ADA compliant? Find out in 30 seconds.
Most small-business sites quietly fail the visitors who need them most, and a growing number of owners are getting legal letters because of it. Scan your homepage free and see exactly where you stand. No email needed for your score.
Free ADA Snapshot
Enter your website. We check it against the WCAG 2.2 AA standard courts actually use.
Checks your homepage. Takes about 20 seconds.
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We are not going to scan our own site, that would be cheating. We already did: 0 violations, receipts right below. Now let's see how your site holds up.
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Book your full auditThis is an automated snapshot, not a full audit or legal advice. Automated scans catch common machine-detectable issues. A full audit reviews every page plus what only a person can test.
Sources: UsableNet 2025 · CDC · U.S. FTC, 2025
Let's be honest for a second.
We are not here to scare you into buying anything. Two things are true at once. First, roughly 1 in 4 U.S. adults lives with a disability, and a site they cannot use is a customer you simply never hear from. Second, there is a legal industry built around suing businesses whose sites fall short. The good part: fixing the first one takes care of the second. Make your site work for everyone, and you stop being an easy target in the same move.
It's not just risk. It's revenue you're leaving on the table.
An accessible site does three things at once. Most owners only ever hear about the scary one.
Lower your legal risk
There is no government ADA certificate, but courts measure your site against WCAG 2.2 AA. We fix the barriers and document it, so you have a real, defensible position instead of a guess.
Win customers you're losing
If your site trips up a screen reader, that is a buyer who quietly leaves and spends their money elsewhere. Accessible sites work for 1 in 4 more people.
Rank better on Google
The same clean code a screen reader needs is the code Google rewards. Accessibility and SEO pull in the exact same direction, so you fix one and help both.
How a law from 1990 ended up being about your website
The Americans with Disabilities Act was signed in 1990, back when almost nobody had heard of the internet. It was written for the physical world: wheelchair ramps, wide doorways, accessible restrooms. The idea was simple. If you open your doors to the public, everyone gets to come in.
Then life moved online. Courts started asking an obvious question. If your website is how customers find you, book you, and pay you, is that not a door too? Most courts have landed on yes. Your website gets treated like a place of business, and it has to be usable by people with disabilities.
The government never published an exact rulebook for private business websites. So courts borrowed one, the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), written by the web's own standards body. In 2024 the Justice Department made WCAG the official standard for government sites, which told everyone where this is heading. Today, WCAG 2.2 AA is the bar smart businesses aim for.
ADA signed. Written for physical spaces, long before the web.
Business moves online. Courts begin treating sites as public accommodations.
DOJ makes WCAG the official standard for government sites.
WCAG 2.2 AA is the practical bar courts and lawyers point to.
The lawsuit machine, and how to not be its next target
A small group of law firms has turned website accessibility into an assembly line. They run automated scanners across thousands of sites at once, flag the ones with obvious problems, and mail out near-identical demand letters. Most ask for a quick settlement, often a few thousand dollars, betting it is cheaper for you to pay than to fight.
In 2025, a reported 5,114 of these lawsuits were filed, and a large share targeted businesses that had already been sued once. South Florida is one of the busiest spots in the country for it.
The scanners these firms use look for the exact same problems a real disabled visitor would hit. So the fix is identical either way. Clean up your site, document it, and you do right by your customers while quietly dropping off the easy-target list.
⚠️ One thing to skip: the accessibility widget overlays that promise instant compliance. They do not work, the government has said so, the FTC fined one maker $1 million in 2025, and sites that use them get sued more, not less. There is no shortcut here. There is just doing it properly, which is the whole point of what we do.
What accessible actually means
WCAG sounds technical. In practice it comes down to a handful of common-sense questions about your site.
Can people read your text?
Enough contrast between text and background, even on a phone in the sun.
Can a screen reader describe your images?
Every meaningful image needs a short text description behind it.
Can someone use it without a mouse?
Keyboard-only visitors should be able to reach everything and see where they are.
Are your forms labeled?
Every field should clearly say what it is for, out loud and on screen.
Do buttons say what they do?
"View our pricing" beats a mystery icon with no name.
Does it respect reduce motion?
Animations should calm down for visitors who get dizzy or distracted.
None of it is exotic. Most of it is just careful web building that a lot of sites skip.
Here's what your competitors miss: most of this is also SEO.
We are an SEO agency first. So when we make your site accessible, we are flexing the same muscle that ranks you on Google. You fix one thing and win twice.
Accessibility is not money spent away from your marketing. It is the same investment, doing double duty.
We fixed our own site to WCAG 2.2 AA. Here's the receipt.
We ran this exact process on thryvmarketingsolutions.com: scanned it, found the gaps, and fixed every one. No overlay widgets, just real code changes. The same playbook we run for you.
Verified across the homepage, contact page, service pages, and blog. Done, and documented.
Three steps, no jargon
Free snapshot
Scan your site above and see where you stand in 30 seconds. No commitment.
Full human audit
We check every page and test the things scanners cannot, then hand you a prioritized, plain-English report.
We fix and document
We remediate the code, re-scan to confirm, and publish your accessibility statement.
Start free. Fix it for less than one demand letter costs.
The honest answers
See where your site stands, free.
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