At Access by Audit, we help organisations deliver accessible online services by starting with one key step: digital accessibility testing. This is how you uncover real barriers, protect against legal risk, and create a platform everyone can use with confidence. It is not just a process—it is a mindset, rooted in respect, inclusion, and progress.
In a world that is online-first, digital testing for accessibility is more important than ever. Whether people are booking appointments, applying for jobs, or accessing services, your website must be usable by all. That means designing for everyone from the beginning and continually reviewing what works and what does not.
Many organisations start by talking about accessibility in broad terms. However, true inclusion begins when you understand how real people interact with your platform.
When you invest in accessible online services, you unlock serious benefits:
Accessible services tell every visitor: you matter.
Effective testing goes beyond checklists. It includes:
These features form the foundation of accessible online services and can be evaluated through manual and automated testing.
To make your platform inclusive, you need a plan. An accessibility strategy should include:
No tool can replace the lived experience of disabled users. Our audits always include manual testing by people who use assistive tech every day. They reveal barriers you may never notice otherwise—because they live with those barriers themselves.
You can learn more about our audit process and how we test for real-world accessibility.
Regulations like the Equality Act and the EAA now require accessible services. Failing to implement digital testing can lead to:
You can reduce risk by publishing an accessibility statement that documents your testing and ongoing progress.
When you commit to accessible online services, you see practical business benefits:
Inclusion is not just the right thing to do—it also drives measurable outcomes.
Here are three simple steps to begin:
Digital testing is not optional anymore. If you want to deliver accessible online services, you need to treat accessibility with the same care you apply to design, performance, or security.
This is your chance to lead. Not just to comply, but to show every user they are welcome.
UK government accessibility requirements
WCAG accessibility guidelines from W3C
Whether you are planning a new website, reviewing an existing platform or trying to understand your accessibility obligations, we would love to help.
Please get in touch to discuss your project, accessibility goals or digital challenges.