Digital accessibility is sometimes treated like a “big company” problem. In practice, small businesses benefit just as much from accessible websites, forms, and documents, and you can start without a large budget.
An accessibility audit is one of the most practical first steps. It helps you identify barriers that prevent customers with disabilities from using your digital content, and it provides a prioritized plan for improvements.
Note: This guide is written for small businesses with customers in the United States. Accessibility obligations can vary by country, state, and industry. This article is educational, not legal advice.
An accessibility audit is a structured review of your digital content (web pages, online forms, PDFs, videos, and app-like features) to see how well it meets accessibility best practices.
Most audits use the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2 as a benchmark. WCAG is organized around four principles: perceivable, operable, understandable, and robust (POUR). WCAG requirements are also grouped into conformance levels (A, AA, and AAA). Many organizations aim for Level AA because it covers a wide range of common barriers without being as restrictive as AAA.
Accessible design supports people who use assistive technologies such as screen readers, captions, keyboard navigation, and voice input. It can also improve general usability, especially on mobile devices and in low-bandwidth or high-glare situations.
In the U.S., the Department of Justice (DOJ) states that the ADA applies to businesses that are open to the public and that website barriers can prevent equal access. The ADA’s business provisions are often referred to as Title III.
Lawsuits related to digital accessibility have also been filed against businesses of many sizes. For example, UsableNet’s ADA website lawsuit tracker reports thousands of digital accessibility lawsuits filed each year. (These are third-party counts, not an official government tally.)
You do not need to audit everything at once. Start with the pages and tasks that matter most to customers and bring the most business value.
Good first targets for most small businesses include:
If you are unsure where to start, use analytics to identify your top pages and top conversion paths.
Automated tools can quickly flag issues such as missing alternative text, low color contrast, missing form labels, or problems with heading structure.
A good place to explore options is the W3C list of web accessibility evaluation tools.
Important limitation: Tools do not catch everything. The W3C notes that some accessibility checks cannot be automated and require human judgment.
Practical tips for small teams
Manual checks often uncover the barriers that lead to real user failures, especially in navigation, forms, and interactive components.
Using only your keyboard:
Review each key page for:
If you can, test one key flow using a screen reader (for example, NVDA on Windows or VoiceOver on Apple devices). You are not trying to become an expert overnight. You are listening for obvious problems, such as unlabeled buttons, confusing navigation order, or form fields that are not announced clearly.
A simple, consistent issue log is enough to start. For each issue, capture:
Fixing “Priority 1” issues first usually delivers the greatest impact in the least time.
After remediation, retest the same pages:
When you find a fix that works (for example, a properly labeled form field pattern), document it and reuse it across your site.
Many small businesses can resolve basic issues internally, especially if their sites use standard templates. Consider an accessibility professional if:
If you want a more formal approach to evaluating conformance, the W3C provides the WCAG Evaluation Methodology (WCAG-EM).
Accessibility is easiest when it is part of routine work.
Build an “accessibility habit” with steps like:
Some small businesses may be eligible for a federal tax credit for certain accessibility-related expenses. The IRS describes the Disabled Access Credit and eligibility criteria. Talk with a qualified tax professional to understand what applies to your situation.