Is Your Website
ADA Compliant?
Paste any URL. Get a full accessibility report in 60 seconds. AI-powered fix instructions included — no developer expertise needed.
No signup required. Results in ~30-60 seconds.
Paste any URL. Get a full accessibility report in 60 seconds. AI-powered fix instructions included — no developer expertise needed.
No signup required. Results in ~30-60 seconds.
Full axe-core powered WCAG 2.1 AA audit in under a minute.
Every issue gets plain-English explanation and step-by-step fix instructions.
Download a professional PDF report to share with clients or developers.
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires that websites be accessible to people with disabilities. Courts have increasingly ruled that websites must conform to WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards. Non-compliance can result in lawsuits and fines.
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 are internationally recognized standards for web accessibility published by the W3C. Level AA compliance is the most commonly required standard for ADA compliance and covers issues like color contrast, keyboard navigation, alt text, and screen reader support.
AccessCheck uses axe-core — the industry-standard automated accessibility testing engine used by Microsoft, Google, and Deque. It scans your page's DOM for WCAG violations and grades them by severity (critical, serious, moderate, minor). The paid report adds AI-generated plain-English explanations and step-by-step fix instructions.
Automated testing catches approximately 30-40% of WCAG violations. It's an essential first step and identifies the most common, fixable issues. For full compliance certification, a manual audit by an accessibility expert is also recommended. AccessCheck gives you a fast, actionable starting point.
The full report includes AI-generated fix instructions for every violation — plain-English explanations, who is affected, numbered steps to fix each issue, before/after code examples, and effort estimates. It also includes a downloadable PDF you can share with your developer or use as documentation.
Yes — any publicly accessible URL. You can scan your own site, a competitor's site, or a client's site. Sites behind a login or on private networks cannot be scanned.