Include five things
- Your organization and website.
- Your accessibility goal or target standard.
- Your current status.
- Known limitations or work in progress.
- 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.
Review accessibility statement examples before publishing so the wording stays cautious, current, and useful.
Run the website accessibility checker before publishing a statement.