Make your website work for everyone
Over 1 in 4 American adults has a disability. If your website isn't accessible, you're excluding real customers, exposing your organization to legal risk, and leaving revenue on the table. We audit, fix, and monitor your site so it meets WCAG standards and works for every visitor.
Is your website shutting people out?
Most websites are built without accessibility in mind. The result is pages that screen readers can't parse, forms that keyboard users can't complete, and content that people with low vision can't read. Beyond the ethical problem, inaccessible websites are now a serious legal liability.
- ADA-related web accessibility lawsuits have increased every year since 2018, with over 4,000 filed in the US annually. Small and mid-size businesses are increasingly the target.
- Overlay widgets and one-click compliance tools don't actually fix the underlying code. Many have been specifically called out in lawsuits as insufficient and can make accessibility worse.
Accessible by design, not by shortcut
We take a code-level approach to accessibility, not band-aid overlays. Every fix is made in the actual HTML, CSS, and JavaScript so your site is genuinely usable by people who rely on assistive technology. The result is a site that passes automated testing, survives manual review, and actually works for real people.
Accessibility audit
A comprehensive review of your entire site against WCAG 2.2 AA standards, combining automated scanning with manual testing by real users of assistive technology. You get a prioritized report with every issue, its severity, and exactly how to fix it.
Code-level remediation
Our developers fix accessibility issues directly in your codebase: semantic HTML, ARIA labels, keyboard navigation, focus management, color contrast, alt text, form labeling, and everything else required for genuine compliance.
Compliance documentation
A detailed accessibility statement, a Voluntary Product Accessibility Template (VPAT), and documentation of all remediation work, giving you a defensible record if your accessibility is ever questioned.
Ongoing monitoring
Accessibility isn't a one-time project. We provide continuous monitoring that catches new issues as content changes, features are added, or third-party integrations update, so your site stays compliant without constant manual review.
What you get
"Revision Road has been an exceptional partner and addition to our team. Before partnering with Revision Road our web strategy, site performance and technical expertise were limited. They have come to the rescue to help us manage our website, hosting and technical support. Highly recommend the Revision Road team if you're looking for a top notch web agency. They know their stuff!"
Sean Farnan
Development Director, SPCA of Northern Nevada
Frequently asked questions
WCAG 2.2 is the current version of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, the international standard for making web content accessible to people with disabilities. It matters because it's the benchmark courts and regulators use to evaluate whether a website is ADA-compliant. Meeting WCAG 2.2 AA (the middle conformance level) is considered the standard for most organizations and is what the DOJ has referenced in enforcement actions.
If you operate a business that serves the public, the answer is almost certainly yes. The Department of Justice has consistently taken the position that the ADA applies to websites, and federal courts have agreed. In April 2024, the DOJ published a final rule requiring state and local government websites to meet WCAG 2.2 AA. Private businesses face the same expectations under Title III of the ADA, and the volume of lawsuits targeting inaccessible websites has grown every year.
No. Overlay widgets (the toolbar plugins that promise one-click compliance) don't fix the underlying code. They add a JavaScript layer on top of a broken page, which screen readers often can't use correctly. Multiple lawsuits have specifically named overlay products as insufficient, and accessibility advocacy organizations like the National Federation of the Blind have publicly opposed them. We fix your actual code instead.
A typical audit takes one to two weeks. Remediation depends on the size of your site and the severity of the issues, but most sites can be brought to WCAG 2.2 AA compliance within four to eight weeks after the audit is complete. We prioritize the highest-impact fixes first so your risk drops quickly even while work is ongoing.
In most cases, the visual changes are minimal and actually improve the design. Better color contrast makes text easier to read for everyone. Clearer focus indicators help all users navigate. Properly labeled forms reduce confusion. The goal is a site that looks great and works for the widest possible audience, not one that looks different.
For most small to mid-size websites (10 to 50 pages), a full audit and remediation project typically falls between $3,000 and $15,000 depending on the complexity of the site and the number of issues found. Ongoing monitoring plans start at a few hundred dollars per month. We provide a detailed quote after the initial audit so you know exactly what to expect before any remediation work begins.
If you've already received a demand letter or lawsuit, contact an attorney first. Then reach out to us. We can perform an expedited audit and begin remediation immediately, and the documentation we provide (audit report, remediation log, accessibility statement, VPAT) gives your legal team a strong record of good-faith efforts to comply. The faster you move, the better your position.
Yes. Automated tools catch roughly 30 to 40 percent of accessibility issues. The rest require manual testing with screen readers, keyboard-only navigation, and other assistive technologies. Our audits include both automated and manual testing to ensure your site works in real-world conditions, not just in a scanner report.
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