Improve ADA Website Accessibility
ADA website accessibility starts with understanding where users face barriers. A site can look polished while still blocking users who rely on screen readers, keyboard navigation, or visual adjustments.
- Built for WordPress
- No coding required
- Accessibility score included
- Auto-fix engine available
What ADA Accessibility Means
The ADA is a U.S. civil rights law preventing discrimination against people with disabilities. Online, it means users should access content, services, and interactions without unnecessary barriers.
ADA Accessibility Is About User Access
Accessibility focuses on whether users can actually use online content — including those who navigate by keyboard, use screen readers, enlarge text, or rely on strong contrast.
ADA Accessibility Is Not One Button
A widget alone does not make a website accessible. Accessibility also depends on page structure, labels, links, images, contrast, and how content is built.
EaseAccess Supports Improvement Workflows
EaseAccess combines scanning, supported frontend fixes, visitor tools, and accessibility statement generation in one WordPress plugin.
Understand Your Website
Accessibility Score
EaseAccess includes an accessibility score giving a quick snapshot based on plugin configuration, auto-fix settings, and scan results. It helps teams move from guessing to reviewing — showing whether key features are active and common issues detected.
Plugin Configuration
The score reflects whether key accessibility features and settings are enabled.
Auto-Fix Settings
The score considers which supported auto-fix options are active in the plugin.
Scan-Related Results
The score may reflect accessibility findings and issues detected during scanning.
How WCAG Fits Into
ADA Website Accessibility
The ADA doesn't provide a single technical checklist for every website. However, ADA.gov notes that standards like WCAG and Section 508 can provide helpful guidance. WCAG — Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, developed by W3C — focuses on making content perceivable, operable, understandable, and robust.
Perceivable
Users should access content in ways they can perceive — including image alternatives, readable contrast, and adaptable content.
Operable
Users should navigate and interact using different input methods, including keyboard navigation.
Understandable
Content, forms, and interface behavior should be clear and predictable.
Robust
Content should work with modern browsers and assistive technologies.
How EaseAccess Helps Improve ADA Website Accessibility
EaseAccess supports a structured workflow: scan the site, review the score, apply supported fixes, provide visitor tools, and publish an accessibility statement.
Start Accessibility CheckScan Your Website
Surface common frontend issues across your site's pages.
Review Your Accessibility Score
See where you stand based on settings and scan results.
Apply the Auto-Fix Engine
Enable supported automated improvements with one click.
Enable Visitor Accessibility Tools
Give visitors controls to adjust the interface to their needs.
Generate an Accessibility Statement
Publish a clear statement of your accessibility efforts.
Supported Automatic Accessibility Fixes
Page Structure & Landmarks
Links, Buttons & Forms
Visual & Interaction
Media & Embedded Content
Accessibility Tools for Visitors
EaseAccess includes a visitor-facing widget with controls that help users adjust the interface based on their needs.
- Bigger text and adjustable line height
- Letter spacing and text alignment
- Contrast and grayscale modes
- Highlight links and titles
- Reading guide and big cursor
- Landmark shortcuts and voice commands
Create an Accessibility Statement for Your Website
An accessibility statement communicates your efforts, known limitations, and how users can report barriers. EaseAccess includes a statement generator to create and manage one directly from the plugin.
What the Statement Can Support
- Transparency about accessibility efforts
- Clear communication with users
- A feedback path for accessibility concerns
- Documentation of ongoing improvement work
What It Should Not Claim
- Do not claim full ADA compliance unless verified by qualified experts
- Describe efforts accurately
- Include a way for users to report barriers
Built for WordPress Teams That Need a Practical Accessibility Workflow
Small Businesses
Improve your customer-facing site without hiring a full accessibility team.
Agencies
Add a consistent accessibility workflow across every client site you build.
eCommerce Stores
Help shoppers using assistive tech complete product, cart, and checkout flows.
Service Providers
Make sure prospects can read about your services and book through your site.
Nonprofits
Reach more supporters by removing common barriers across your site.
Public-Facing Organizations
Support open access to information across constituents and audiences.
Still have questions?
The most common questions site owners ask before getting started. Don't see yours below?
What is ADA website accessibility?
Does EaseAccess make my website ADA compliant?
Can EaseAccess prevent ADA lawsuits?
Does the ADA apply to websites?
Is WCAG required for ADA compliance?
What does the EaseAccess accessibility score mean?
What types of ADA-related issues can EaseAccess help identify?
What does the auto-fix engine do?
Can EaseAccess fix all ADA accessibility issues automatically?
Does EaseAccess replace manual accessibility audits?
What is an accessibility statement?
How often should I review website accessibility?
Does EaseAccess work with any WordPress theme?
Start Improving ADA Website Accessibility Today
EaseAccess helps WordPress site owners scan for issues, understand their accessibility score, apply supported fixes, add visitor tools, and generate an accessibility statement. Accessibility improvement starts with visibility.