Include five things

  1. Your organization and website.
  2. Your accessibility goal or target standard.
  3. Your current status.
  4. Known limitations or work in progress.
  5. A clear contact method for accessibility feedback.

Avoid these mistakes

  • Do not claim full conformance unless you have evidence.
  • Do not bury the contact method.
  • Do not ignore old PDFs, third-party widgets, and forms that still need review.
  • Do not write legal-sounding filler that says nothing useful.

Use it with real review notes

Run a first-pass scan, check the page manually, and keep known limitations honest. A clear statement is more credible when it matches the work actually underway.

Generate a draft statement

Review accessibility statement examples before publishing so the wording stays cautious, current, and useful.

Run the website accessibility checker before publishing a statement.