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00Free tool · WCAG

We read your page HTML against WCAG accessibility criteria and show you what to fix. No sign-up — instant results.

Analysis runs on the page HTML. Some criteria (e.g. colour contrast) cannot be checked automatically — we list those separately.

01What we check

Automated checks against the WCAG 2.1 criteria that can be verified from markup alone.

01

Alt text

Whether images carry meaningful alternative text for screen-reader users.

02

Form labels

Whether every input is paired with a programmatic label or accessible name.

03

Heading structure

A single, logical heading order — no skipped levels, exactly one H1.

04

ARIA & roles

Valid ARIA attributes, landmark roles and a declared page language.

Why accessibility matters
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WCAG criteria mapped
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Of users have a disability
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Cost to scan
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Alt text.Form labels.Headings.ARIA.Landmarks.Language.Link names.Contrast.
02How it works

01

Enter your address

Paste any website URL. No login, no card — results appear straight away.

02

We parse the HTML

We fetch the page and test it against the WCAG criteria detectable from markup.

03

Fix what matters

Issues grouped by severity, each with a plain-language fix you can apply today.

03The legal side

EU and Lithuanian law require many websites to meet WCAG 2.1 AA. Here is who is affected, what the rules are, and what you actually need.

Since 28 June 2025, the European Accessibility Act (EAA) extends accessibility obligations to the private sector. Non-compliance can trigger corrective orders and fines from market-surveillance authorities.

The rules that apply

  • WCAG 2.1 AA· Technical standard

    W3C guidelines for making content perceivable, operable, understandable and robust. The AA level is the practical bar that legislation points to.

  • EN 301 549· EU harmonised standard

    The European standard that adopts WCAG 2.1 AA. EU law references it to define the concrete technical requirements.

  • Directive (EU) 2016/2102· Public sector

    Public-sector websites and mobile apps must meet WCAG 2.1 AA and publish an accessibility statement. In force in Lithuania since 2020.

  • Directive (EU) 2019/882 — EAA· Private sector

    From 28 June 2025, accessibility requirements also apply to private companies offering certain consumer products and services.

Who must comply

  • Public-sector bodies

    State and municipal institutions — their websites, mobile apps and documents.

  • Consumer-facing digital services

    E-commerce shops, banking, transport ticketing and booking, telecoms, e-books and audiovisual services.

  • Microenterprise exemption

    Service providers with fewer than 10 employees and up to €2M annual turnover are exempt from the EAA service obligations — though accessibility still helps SEO and users.

What you need

  • A website that meets WCAG 2.1 AA (per EN 301 549).
  • An accessibility statement — this tool drafts one for you automatically.
  • A feedback channel so users can report barriers they hit.

This information is general and is not legal advice. For the exact obligations that apply to your organisation, consult a qualified lawyer.

04FAQ

WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) are international W3C guidelines for making websites accessible to people with disabilities. There are three conformance levels: A (minimum), AA (the standard required by legislation) and AAA (highest). The practical and legal target in Lithuania and the EU is WCAG 2.1 AA.
The EAA (Directive (EU) 2019/882) applies to private companies offering certain consumer products and services: e-commerce shops, banking, transport ticketing and booking, telecoms, e-books and more. Microenterprises (fewer than 10 employees and up to €2M turnover) providing services may be exempt from some obligations.
The European Accessibility Act requirements for the private sector apply from 28 June 2025. Public-sector websites and apps have been required to be accessible even earlier — under Directive (EU) 2016/2102, in force in Lithuania since 2020.
An accessibility statement is a public declaration of how a website meets WCAG 2.1 AA, what known issues exist and how to report barriers. It is mandatory for the public sector and recommended good practice for private businesses. Our tool drafts one for you automatically based on the audit results.
No. An automated audit checks many criteria from the page HTML (alt text, form labels, heading structure, ARIA and more), but some things — colour contrast, keyboard operation, meaningful sequence — cannot be reliably assessed automatically. We recommend complementing the automated audit with a manual review.
Checking with our tool is free and requires no sign-up. If you need to fix the issues found or reach full WCAG 2.1 AA conformance, we provide a clear action plan and price based on your website size — start with a free consultation.

Want the full performance picture?

Our website audit measures speed, SEO and Core Web Vitals alongside accessibility — a complete health check in one scan.

Open the website audit