A website that works
for everyone
Accessibility is no longer a nice-to-have: the European Accessibility Act sets requirements for more and more websites. We build accessible by default and can meet the strictest requirements too.
Required, sensible and simply decent
Since June 2025 the European Accessibility Act applies to online stores and consumer services, among others. But law aside: roughly one in four people has an impairment that makes using websites harder. An accessible website reaches more people, ranks better in Google and is more pleasant for everyone. We keep this in mind on every website we build, and can demonstrably meet WCAG where required.
How we build accessible
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Built in by default
Semantic HTML, proper colour contrast, clear focus states and a logical heading structure are part of every site we build.
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Works with the keyboard
Every feature works without a mouse: navigation, forms, search and menus.
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Screen reader friendly
Meaningful alt texts, correct labels and ARIA where needed, so assistive software understands your site.
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Calm where it should be
Animations respect the system setting for reduced motion. If you prefer no movement, you get none.
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WCAG 2.2 on request
Strict requirements from legislation or a tender? We build and test demonstrably to WCAG 2.2 level AA.
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Improving an existing site
We make existing websites more accessible too. We map the issues and fix them step by step.
Frequently asked questions
Since June 2025 the act applies to online stores, banks and transport providers serving consumers, among others. Small businesses with fewer than ten employees and limited turnover are partly exempt. We are happy to find out what applies to your situation.
WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) is the international standard for accessible websites. The guidelines have levels A, AA and AAA. Legislation almost always refers to level AA.
No. Our own site has animations, an interactive hero and a distinctive design, while respecting contrast requirements, keyboard operation and the reduced motion preference. Accessible and attractive go together just fine.
That depends on its current state. We start with an audit that maps the issues, after which you know exactly where you stand.