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Is Your Website Breaking the Law? Most Are — And Most Owners Don't Know It.
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Most business websites aren't accessible to people with disabilities. That's a legal risk — and it could be costing you money you didn't know you could get back. Get a free scan and find out where you stand.
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Small Businesses Get Sued Too
Small businesses are a common target, not despite being small but because of it — their sites usually have more problems, and they're more likely to settle than fight.
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Thousands of these lawsuits get filed every year, and the number keeps growing
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There's no small business exception
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It usually starts with a letter asking for $5,000-$25,000 to settle, before you even pay a lawyer
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The person suing doesn't have to be your customer — just show your site was hard to use
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There's no warning. It just shows up one day
The businesses that avoid this trouble checked their website before someone else did.
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WHAT "ADA COMPLIANT" MEANS
What Does "Accessible Website" Actually Mean?
Courts use a rulebook called WCAG to judge this. In short, your site needs to work for people who use a screen reader, navigate by keyboard only, have low vision, are deaf or hard of hearing, or have trouble with cluttered pages.
The problems we see most: images with no description, text too light to read, unlabeled form fields, and pages that trap keyboard-only users.
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THE WIDGET SECTION
A Widget Alone Won't Protect You
Bolting on a quick widget and calling it done doesn't fix what's actually wrong with your site — it just covers it up. About 1 in 5 ADA lawsuits in 2025 hit sites that already had a widget installed.
We fix the real problems first. A widget comes after, if it's genuinely useful — not instead of the work.
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WHAT WE DO SECTION
How We Help
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Free Scan — We check your site and tell you exactly what's wrong. No cost, no pressure.
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A Clear Plan — What's wrong, and what to fix first.
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Real Fixes — We go into your Wix or WordPress site and fix the actual code.
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A Widget, If You Want One — Added after the real fixes, not instead of them.
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Ongoing Checks — New pages and posts can introduce new problems. We keep watch.
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Paper Trail — Documentation of your remediation, which helps if a letter ever does arrive.
TAX BENEFITS SECTION
The Government Will Help Pay for This
Most business owners have no idea the IRS offers tax breaks specifically for accessibility work. Two are worth knowing about:
Disabled Access Credit. If your business made $1 million or less, or had 30 or fewer full-time employees, last year, you can claim a tax credit equal to 50% of your accessibility costs between $250 and $10,250 — worth up to $5,000 back, dollar-for-dollar off your tax bill, every year you spend money on it. It's filed on IRS Form 8826.
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Barrier Removal Deduction. Any business, any size, can also deduct up to $15,000 a year for accessibility-related costs. If you qualify for both, you can use them together in the same year.
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In plain terms: accessibility work isn't just a legal safety net — a real chunk of what you spend on it can come back to you at tax time. (Talk to your accountant to confirm what applies to your specific situation.)
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WHY THIS IS GOOD FOR BUSINESS TOO
This Isn't Just About Avoiding a Lawsuit
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More customers. About 1 in 4 U.S. adults has some kind of disability. A hard-to-use site turns real customers away.
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Better Google visibility. The fixes that make your site accessible — labeled images, clean structure — are things Google rewards too.
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Cheaper than the alternative. A checkup and some fixes cost far less than a settlement and a lawyer, and some of it comes back at tax time.
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Find Out Where You Stand
Don't wait for a letter to find out your website has a problem. Click the button below to get a free scan today.

