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Your website has users who can't use it.We find and fix the violations that put you at legal risk.

26% of Americans live with a disability. Screen readers, keyboard navigation, and assistive technology are how millions of people use the web every day. AccessBridge scans your site for WCAG violations — then shows you exactly what to fix, in plain English, with a step-by-step guide anyone can follow.

No account required. Takes 30 seconds.

A man wearing headphones and dark glasses uses a braille display at a computer — illustrating how blind users rely on assistive technology to access the web

4,000+ADA website lawsuits filed in 2025 — restaurants, SaaS, e-commerce, and B2B alike.Most businesses find out when the demand letter arrives.

Your website has a problem your customers can't tell you about.

It's invisible to you.

Accessibility violations don't show up in a browser. They only appear when someone using a screen reader, keyboard, or other assistive tool tries — and fails.

It's a legal exposure.

ADA website lawsuits have been filed against restaurants, SaaS companies, hospitals, and banks alike. Your industry is not exempt.

Other tools don't catch everything.

Most scanners test static HTML. We run a real browser session — JavaScript rendered, dynamic content loaded, every interactive element tested.

Find every barrier. Fix every one.

Most accessibility tools find violations and stop there. AccessBridge finds them, explains each one in plain English — who it locks out and why — then gives you a step-by-step fix guide written for your industry. No accessibility expertise required.

Real scanning

We catch what other tools miss — JavaScript menus, interactive components, forms, image galleries, and every page on your site. If a user can't access it, we find it.

Plain-English report

Written for owners, not developers — organised by severity and who it affects. Enter your email and we unlock your full report instantly. No jargon. No guesswork.

$27 fix guide

Our Claude skill file gives you step-by-step instructions for every issue in your report — written for your industry. Drop it into Claude and walk through each fix.

Know where you stand

See your accessibility score, every violation, who it affects, and which WCAG rule it breaks — before a lawyer finds it for you.

Typical accessibility score improvement after addressing critical issues

The lawsuit is the expensive part. The fix isn't.

ADA website lawsuits typically settle for $5,000 to $75,000 — plus attorney fees, plus the cost of fixing the site anyway. Most businesses that get sued had no idea their site had issues. A demand letter is not the moment to find out.

745%

Increase in Illinois ADA website lawsuits in H1 2025

$5K–$75K

Typical settlement range, plus attorney fees

22%

Of sued businesses already had an accessibility "widget" installed

Source: EcomBack Mid-Year ADA Lawsuit Report, 2025

From scan to fix plan in three steps.

  1. Scan your site — free

    Enter your URL. Our browser-based scanner tests every page against current ADA and WCAG 2.2 standards — including JavaScript-rendered content. Results in 60 seconds.

  2. Unlock your full report

    Enter your email and we reveal every violation — sorted by severity, explained in plain English, with exactly who it locks out and why. No jargon.

  3. Fix it with the guide

    Our $27 Claude skill file gives you step-by-step instructions for every issue in your report. Drop it into Claude and fix your site — no developer required for most issues.

Start free. Fix it for $27.

Scan your site free — no account needed, results in 60 seconds. When you're ready to fix what we find, get the Claude skill file for $27. Step-by-step instructions for every issue in your report. One-time purchase. Instant download.

Scan my site free

No account required · Results in 60 seconds

Your free report takes 30 seconds to generate.

See exactly what's broken on your site — and what it would take to fix it. No sign-up required.

Scan my website free
  • No account required
  • Results in under 10 minutes
  • Plain English — not developer jargon
  • WCAG 2.1 + 2.2 standards