Solutions
Pick the path that maps to your team.
By role and by industry. Each path stays grounded in the same IAAP-format audit output — just framed for the people who own that part of the work.
By role
For Engineering
CI-integrated audits, source-level remediation guidance, audit-as-code via API, axe-core inside.
For Compliance
IAAP-format ACR + VPAT 2.5 INT / EU. Cross-mapped findings for WCAG, ADA, EAA, Section 508.
For Design
Component-level audits, contrast measurement, Figma + design-system integration, AT-mapped review.
For Legal
Defensible audit evidence. Demand-letter response packs. Litigation-grade ACRs. EU market-surveillance ready.
Industry-specific audits
Built for the way your stack is regulated.
Every regulated industry layers different standards on top of WCAG. Pick yours.
E-commerce
E-commerce accessibility means designing online stores so that people with disabilities — including the 1.3 billion globally with significant disability — can browse, search, add to cart, and check out independently, using assistive technologies and adaptive inputs.
View E-commerce guide →
Healthcare
Healthcare accessibility ensures patient portals, telehealth platforms, appointment systems, and clinical content are usable by people with disabilities — a regulatory obligation under Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, the ADA, and HHS final rules implementing WCAG 2.1 AA for recipients of federal funding.
View Healthcare guide →
Finance & Banking
Financial-services accessibility requires online banking, mobile apps, investment platforms, insurance portals and payment products to be usable by customers with disabilities — a hard regulatory requirement under the EAA in Europe (28 June 2025 enforcement), the ADA in the US, and emerging CFPB guidance on equal access to credit.
View Finance & Banking guide →
Education
Education accessibility means that learning management systems, course materials, lecture video, assessment platforms and student-services portals are usable by students and faculty with disabilities — a binding requirement under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, Title II of the ADA, and the DOJ's April 2024 final rule mandating WCAG 2.1 AA for state/local government bodies.
View Education guide →
Government
Government accessibility — at federal, state, and local levels — is mandated in the US by Section 508 (federal) and the DOJ's April 2024 Title II rule (state/local, WCAG 2.1 AA), in the EU by the Web Accessibility Directive (EN 301 549), and in Canada by the Accessible Canada Act, making the public sector the most regulated digital surface globally.
View Government guide →
Media & Publishing
Media accessibility requires news sites, streaming platforms, audiobooks, and editorial content to be perceivable by users who are blind, have low vision, or are deaf or hard of hearing — through captions, audio descriptions, transcripts, navigable structure, and accessible video players that meet WCAG 2.1 AA and (for EU audiovisual services) the EAA-aligned AVMSD.
View Media & Publishing guide →
Travel & Hospitality
Travel and hospitality accessibility covers airline and hotel websites, booking platforms, loyalty portals, and travel apps — a regulatory must under the Air Carrier Access Act for US airlines, the EAA for EU passenger transport, the ADA for hotels and tour operators, and the DOT's 2024 final rule on airline website accessibility.
View Travel & Hospitality guide →
SaaS & Software
SaaS accessibility means that B2B and B2C software products — dashboards, admin consoles, embedded widgets, and APIs — meet WCAG 2.2 AA so that employees with disabilities and the customers they serve can use the product, which is increasingly a procurement requirement (VPAT/ACR) and an EAA obligation for consumer-facing SaaS in scope.
View SaaS & Software guide →
Real Estate
Real estate accessibility requires property listing sites, mortgage application portals, and brokerage dashboards to be usable by buyers, renters, and agents with disabilities — a Fair Housing Act requirement that DOJ and HUD enforce alongside ADA Title III, with the Fair Housing Act explicitly prohibiting accessibility-related discrimination in advertising and access.
View Real Estate guide →
Restaurants & Hospitality
Restaurant and hospitality accessibility — covering menus, online ordering, reservation platforms, and loyalty programmes — is enforced under ADA Title III in the US and EAA in the EU, with the highest-frequency failure being inaccessible PDF menus and click-to-call ordering flows that exclude users of assistive technology.
View Restaurants & Hospitality guide →
Non-profit
Non-profit accessibility ensures donation portals, volunteer signup, programme information, and grant applications are usable by donors, volunteers, and beneficiaries with disabilities — an obligation under the ADA, Section 504 (for federally funded non-profits), and the EAA for EU-facing non-profit services.
View Non-profit guide →
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