Real scanning. Real reports. Real fixes.
Most accessibility tools run a quick check and give you a list of codes. We scan your site the way a real customer uses it — then tell you what to do about it in plain English.
We use a real browser. Not a shortcut.
Many accessibility scanners only look at the raw HTML of your page — which is like judging a restaurant by its health permit, not by eating the food. Modern websites are built with JavaScript, interactive menus, booking forms, and image carousels that don't exist in the raw code. They only appear when someone actually uses the site.
We test your site the way it's actually built — including your online ordering system, your reservation widget, your photo gallery, and every page your customers might visit. That means we catch the issues that a simple HTML scan would completely miss.

Six things we check on every scan.
Alt text on images
Every image on your site should have a text description so screen readers can announce it. Your menu photos, team photos, location images — all of it. We check every one.
Form accessibility
Reservation forms, contact forms, email sign-ups — every field needs a label that screen readers can read. We test every input on your site.
Keyboard navigation
Many users with motor disabilities navigate entirely by keyboard, with no mouse. We simulate a keyboard-only user tabbing through your entire site and flag anything they can't reach or use.
Colour contrast
Low contrast between text and background makes your site unreadable for people with low vision. We test every text element against WCAG contrast standards.
Interactive elements
Dropdowns, accordions, modal windows, image sliders — we test each state for violations.
Page structure
Screen readers navigate by headings and landmarks. We check that your page structure makes sense to someone who can't see the layout.
A report written for you. Not your developer.
Your AccessBridge report is organised three ways:
- By severity
- Critical issues first, then serious, moderate, minor. Fix the critical ones and you resolve most of your legal exposure.
- By who it affects
- Which issues affect blind users. Which affect people with low vision. Which affect users with motor disabilities. So you understand who you're serving, not just what you're fixing.
- By fix effort
- We flag which issues are quick wins (an hour of developer time) and which need more planning. So you can start making progress today.
accessbridge.app
Accessibility Report — Bella Cucina Restaurant
2
Critical
2
Serious
1
Moderate
0
Minor
Menu photos have no text description. A blind customer using a screen reader hears nothing when they open your food photos.
Affects: Blind users · Screen reader users
Reservation form fields have no labels. Keyboard and screen reader users cannot tell what information goes in each box.
Affects: Blind users · Motor disability users
Menu item prices are light grey on white. Users with low vision cannot read them — they look invisible.
Affects: Low vision users · Older customers
The booking widget cannot be reached or used by keyboard alone. Customers with motor disabilities cannot make a reservation.
Affects: Motor disability users · Power users
Pages have no main heading. Screen reader users cannot quickly understand what each page is about.
Affects: Blind users · Cognitive disability users
One fix isn't enough. Websites change.
Your developer fixes the issues from your first report. Great. Then three weeks later they update your menu page and accidentally break the image descriptions. You'd never know — until a customer notices, or a lawyer does.
AccessBridge re-scans your site automatically on your chosen schedule. Every scan compares to the previous one. If something new breaks, you'll see it in your next report — before anyone else does. That's the protection that a one-time audit can never give you.
