Accessibility
· 24 checks — Landmarks, headings, alt text, forms, and link quality rolled into one auditable list.DLandmark StructureActionNo landmarksFIX
No landmarks detected
Screen reader users have no way to navigate by region.
Screen reader users cannot quickly navigate to the primary content. Wrap your main content in <main>.
Without a <main> landmark, screen-reader users can't skip past the navigation to the page content — every page starts with re-reading the menu.
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The <main> element marks the page's primary content area. Assistive tech offers a 'jump to main' shortcut — but only if <main> exists. Without it, every page navigation forces re-reading the header. Wrap your primary content in a single <main>.
Source: WAI-ARIA / WCAG 2.4.1
Add a skip link as the first focusable element so keyboard users can bypass repeated navigation.
Without a skip-nav link, keyboard users tab through every nav item before reaching content — every page, every visit.
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WCAG 2.4.1 (Bypass Blocks) requires a mechanism to skip past repeated content. The standard implementation is a 'Skip to main content' link that's the first focusable element, visually hidden until focused. Three lines of HTML + four of CSS.
Source: WCAG 2.1 SC 2.4.1
F404 Error PageActionSoft 404 detectedFIX
The server returned HTTP 200 for a non-existent path. Search engines will index this page as real content. Configure your server to return HTTP 404 for missing pages.
DDark Mode SupportActionTheme color onlyFIX
Detection limited to meta tags and inline styles.
DPrint StylesheetActionNo print stylesFIX
BHeading HierarchyNo headingsREVIEW
No headings found
Headings create the document outline for screen reader navigation.
Headings (H1-H6) create the document outline for screen reader navigation.
A page with zero headings is unnavigable by assistive tech and reads as one undifferentiated wall of text.
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Screen reader users navigate by jumping between H1-H6 elements. A page with no headings has no skip targets — users have to read every word linearly. Adding a heading hierarchy (one H1, then H2 sections, optional H3 subsections) makes the page skimmable for both AT and human readers.
Source: WCAG 1.3.1 / W3C WAI
CColor Contrast (Screenshot)Action1 text elements analyzed, 1 fail WCAG AAREVIEW
Analyzes text contrast against the actual rendered page, including background images, gradients, and overlays that CSS-based tools cannot detect.
Show all checked elements (1)
| Element | Ratio | Required | FG | BG | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| title B-Town Tours | 1.06:1 | 4.5:1 | #000000 | #09090B | Fail |
Methodology: The top 20 text elements by font size were checked. Background color was sampled from the desktop screenshot using a 5-point pattern. WCAG 2.1 AA requires 4.5:1 for normal text and 3:1 for large text.
A+Heading Text QualityNo headings to evaluate -- check is N/APASS
A+Alt Text QualityNo imagesPASS
A+Form AccessibilityNo form controlsPASS
A+Link & Button QualityNo links or buttonsPASS
A+Form Input TypesNo form controls on this pagePASS
A+Form Input QualityNo form controls on this pagePASS
A+Mobile Keyboard & AutofillNo form controls -- mobile keyboard check is N/APASS
A+Document LanguageLang attribute set to "en"PASS
A+Tabindex Anti-PatternsNo explicit tabindex attributes foundPASS
A+Iframe AccessibilityNo iframes on this pagePASS
A+Tap Target AdequacyAll tap targets meet WCAG 2.5.5/2.5.8 sizingPASS
A+Mobile-Readable Font SizesAll 32 visible text node(s) render at >= 12 CSS pixelsPASS
AFavicon & Branding8 icon(s) detectedPASS
A+Web ManifestPWA-readyPASS
A+PWA Depth1 PWA signal(s) surfacedPASS
A+Mobile UX Depth1 mobile-depth signal(s) detectedPASS
A+Lighthouse Accessibility AuditsScore 100/100 — 0 failing, 24 passedPASS
Accessibility
These checks highlight opportunities to improve the accessibility of your web app. Automatic detection can only detect a subset of issues and does not guarantee the accessibility of your web app, so manual testing is also encouraged.