Our expert team at Squee conducts a thorough evaluation to pinpoint how your site can perform better.
Overall, the automated checks suggest there are a few areas worth addressing.
Your score is Needs work. There are a few areas that may be making the page harder to use for some visitors.
Based on around 80 individual visitors per month, we estimate 18 to 32 people may struggle with parts of this page. The points below explain what was picked up and why it matters.
Automated testing can only pick up part of what matters (often under half). If you’d like a deeper, manual review, you can request a full scorecard here: squee.design/scorecard
This is only a snapshot of your site’s accessibility. We use automated checks to highlight the biggest barriers your visitors may face and estimate how many people this could affect each month (this can only ever catch around 50% of issues). For transparency, here’s exactly how your score was calculated.
Text that’s hard to read (low colour contrast): Automated checks found 9 areas with very low colour contrast, which can make text hard to read.
this mainly affects people with low vision, colour blindness, or deteriorating vision. When the text colour is too close to the background colour, it can become really hard to read, especially on a phone or in bright light, and some people won’t be able to read it at all.
Links that don’t explain themselves: There are links that do not have clear text or are effectively empty, which can be confusing for assistive technology users.
this mainly affects people who use software that reads websites out loud, for example someone who is blind or has low vision. A common way they navigate is by pulling up a list of links on the page, and if links are blank, vague, or repeated (like lots of “Read more”), that list becomes meaningless, so it’s hard to tell which link goes where.
Keyboard navigation: A manual check suggests the page cannot be used fully with a keyboard, which can block key actions.
this mainly affects people who can’t use a mouse, for example someone with limited hand movement, pain from repetitive strain, or someone who is blind or has low vision. If the site can’t be used properly with the keyboard (for example Tab, Enter, and Space), people can get stuck on menus, buttons, or forms and be unable to complete key actions like making an enquiry.
Page sections that don’t follow a clear order (headings): Headings are present, but some levels are skipped. A more consistent heading structure would make the page easier to scan.
this mainly affects people who use software that reads websites out loud, for example someone who is blind or has low vision. Headings act like a contents list, so people can jump between sections quickly, and if the heading levels jump around it becomes harder to understand the page structure and find sections like services, pricing, or contact details.
Text is a readable size: No very small text was flagged by the automated checks.
this mainly affects people with low vision or deteriorating vision. If text is too small, people have to zoom in and scroll more, which makes the page feel like hard work and makes key information easier to miss.
Forms without clear field labels: No forms were detected on this page, so form labels are not relevant here.
this mainly affects people who use software that reads websites out loud, for example someone who is blind or has low vision, and people who need very clear instructions, for example someone with a learning disability. A label is the text that tells you what a box is for, like “Email address”, and if it’s missing, unclear, or disappears when you type, it’s easy to forget what each box means and make mistakes.
Image descriptions (alt text): Images include alternative text and no missing-alt issues were flagged by the automated checks.
this mainly affects people who use software that reads websites out loud, for example someone who is blind or has low vision. If an image has no description, the device may just say “image”, so they miss what the picture is showing or what an image button does, and if important words are inside the image they may miss that information completely.
Form questions that aren’t grouped clearly: No automated grouping issues were flagged for form questions.
this mainly affects people who find long forms tiring or confusing, for example someone with ADHD, a learning disability, or memory difficulties. When related questions aren’t grouped, the form can feel like one long list, which makes it harder to follow and easier to miss something important.
Video and audio alternatives (captions/transcripts): No HTML5 video or audio elements were flagged by the automated checks.
this mainly affects people who are Deaf or have hearing loss, and anyone who can’t have sound on. Without captions or a written alternative, important information in a video or audio clip can be missed.
Page regions are clearly defined (landmarks): The page exposes landmarks or regions, which helps assistive technology users jump around the page.
this mainly affects people who use software that reads websites out loud, for example someone who is blind or has low vision. These tools use page regions like navigation, main content, and footer as jump points, so without them people may have to listen through lots of content to reach what they need.
Hidden labels and instructions for controls (ARIA): ARIA attributes are present. Automated checks do not show specific ARIA errors here.
this mainly affects people who use assistive technology, for example someone who is blind or has low vision. Buttons, icons, and menus often need hidden labels so these tools can explain what they do, and if those labels are missing or wrong, the page can sound confusing or misleading even if it looks fine.
Page language is set: A language has been set for the page, which helps screen readers choose the right voice.
this mainly affects people who use software that reads websites out loud, for example someone who is blind or has low vision. If the page language isn’t set, the voice can use the wrong pronunciation rules, which makes the content harder to follow.