Running a business is no small feat. Between managing daily operations, keeping customers happy, and staying on top of your digital presence, it’s easy to overlook something like web accessibility. But in today’s world, where more users rely on assistive technology to browse online, accessibility is no longer optional—it’s essential.
That’s where an accessibility audit comes in. It’s a smart, proactive step that helps you understand how well your website works for people with disabilities and where improvements are needed. It’s not just about avoiding legal trouble—it’s about creating a better experience for all your visitors.
Let’s break it down so you know exactly what to expect.
Why Accessibility Matters
Reaching Every Visitor
Web accessibility is about making sure everyone can use your website—no matter their ability. That includes people who rely on screen readers, keyboard navigation, or voice control, as well as those with visual, hearing, or cognitive challenges.
A more accessible site leads to:
- Better user experience
- Improved search engine visibility
- Increased customer trust
It’s a win for your users and your business.
Reducing Legal Risk
ADA-related lawsuits over inaccessible websites are on the rise, and many target small to mid-sized businesses. In fact over 67% of lawsuits in 2024 were targeting businesses with an annual revenue under $25 million or less.
These cases can be stressful and expensive—even if the issues weren’t intentional.
A professional accessibility audit helps you spot and fix issues early, protecting your business while showing your commitment to inclusion.
What Is an Accessibility Audit?
An accessibility audit is a full review of your website to find any barriers that might stop people with disabilities from using it. These barriers could be anything from missing image descriptions to forms that don’t work with a screen reader.
The audit is based on the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG), which provide a clear set of standards for accessible web design. Following WCAG helps ensure your site meets legal requirements—and, more importantly, that it works for everyone.
The Accessibility Audit Process: Step-by-Step
Here’s what typically happens during a full accessibility audit:
Initial Consultation & Scope Definition
The process starts with a conversation. You and your audit team will review your website’s goals, user flows, and top-priority pages—like your homepage, checkout process, or contact form. This helps focus the audit on what matters most.
Automated Testing
Automated tools run quick scans to catch common issues like:
This is a great first step, but automated testing only catches part of the picture. That’s why manual checks are so important.
Manual Evaluation
Accessibility specialists then take a deeper look at your site. They’ll test things like:
- Can users navigate with just a keyboard?
- Are screen readers reading content in the correct order?
- Do buttons and links have clear, accessible labels?
Manual testing finds the issues that machines often miss—and ensures your site works for real people in real situations.
User Testing with Assistive Technology
In some cases, the team may bring in people who use assistive tools daily—like screen readers or alternative input devices—to test your site. Their feedback offers invaluable real-world insight that helps uncover problems no tool or developer could spot alone.
Documentation of Findings
Once testing is done, you’ll receive a report that includes:
- A list of all issues
- Where each problem exists
- The specific WCAG criteria it violates
- Visual examples and code references for clarity
This report serves as your roadmap to fixing issues efficiently.
Prioritization of Issues
Not all issues are created equal. The audit team will help you prioritize based on the following:
- How severe the issue is
- How many users it might impact
- Whether it poses a legal risk
This lets you address the biggest barriers first and build a smart action plan moving forward.
Remediation Recommendations
Finally, you’ll receive clear, actionable guidance for fixing each issue. These recommendations will be tailored to your site’s platform, content, and team capacity. Some fixes might be quick, while others may take more planning—but you’ll know exactly what to do and where to start.
What Happens After the Audit?
Implementing Fixes
After the accessibility audit, it’s time to put the findings to work. Your team—or a trusted partner like 216digital—can help implement those changes, making sure they align with best practices while preserving your brand’s design and functionality.
Team Training
To keep your site accessible over time, it helps to train the people who update it. That could mean a short session on how to use alt text or a checklist for adding new content. A little knowledge goes a long way in preventing future issues.
Ongoing Monitoring
Accessibility isn’t something you check off once and forget about. Websites are living things—they change, grow, and update over time. That means new accessibility issues can pop up without warning, especially as content is added or platforms evolve.
That’s why regular monitoring is key. Running periodic scans, reviewing key pages, and staying alert to new barriers helps you maintain accessibility long after the initial audit. Tools like a11y.Radar, 216digital’s ongoing monitoring service, are designed to make this easier. It quietly keeps tabs on your site, flags issues early, and helps ensure your site stays in line with accessibility best practices—without the need for constant manual checks.
Your Website’s Future Just Got Brighter
A professional accessibility audit gives you more than just a report—it gives you peace of mind. It’s a smart, future-focused way to protect your business, improve your site, and welcome every visitor who comes your way.
At 216digital, we specialize in helping small to mid-sized businesses make sense of accessibility. Our expert-led audits, clear documentation, and hands-on remediation support make the process easy to follow and effective to implement. We help you go beyond compliance—to a website that’s truly inclusive.
If you’re ready to create a better experience for everyone and reduce your legal risk, let’s talk. A more accessible site isn’t just better for users—it’s better for business.