Get Your City Audit-Ready Before April 24
Scan your government website for ADA and WCAG 2.1 AA violations. Get a professional compliance report your council can act on — with plain-English fix instructions for your web vendor.
See exactly what the DOJ will find — before they do.
The problem
You Need Something to Show Your Council
The DOJ deadline applies to every state and local government website. When it passes, your entity is exposed to ADA complaints and litigation. But the real problem? You need a document your city manager can sign off on and your board can vote on.
What enterprise compliance tools charge — and they require months of procurement approval.
What a consultant charges for an accessibility audit. They diagnose the problem but won't fix it for you.
Average ADA web accessibility settlement — plus mandatory remediation and legal fees.
Or: $49–$99, one payment.
A compliance report you can present to your council this week. No subscription. No contract.
See PlansHow it works
A Compliance Report Your Council Can Act On
We Scan Your Site
Enter your URL. We run a full WCAG 2.1 AA scan using axe-core — the same engine the US federal government uses for Section 508 compliance. Takes under 30 seconds.
We Translate to Plain English
Instead of “WCAG 1.4.3 color contrast failure,” you get: “Your navigation text is too light to read. Here's the exact change your developer needs to make.”
Present to Your Board
Get a professional compliance report with an executive summary, prioritized issue list, and fix instructions — ready to attach to a council agenda or share with your IT team.
Want to see what you'll get?
Preview a real compliance report — with plain-English explanations and code fixes — before you buy.
View Sample ReportCan't Fix Everything by April 24? A Report Still Protects You.
Courts consistently view documented good-faith effort favorably in ADA cases. A dated compliance report showing what was found, what needs fixing, and a remediation timeline demonstrates you're taking action — even if you're not 100% compliant by the deadline.
When your council asks if the website is ADA compliant, will you have documentation ready?
Start Documenting NowPricing
No Annual Contract. No Sales Call. Pay Once.
Both plans fall under the government micro-purchase threshold — your department head can approve this with a credit card today. No procurement process required.
Free Scan
$0
See what's wrong
Scan Free- Scan 1 page
- Issue count by severity
- WCAG criteria flagged
- Compliance score
- AI fix suggestions
- PDF compliance report
- Multi-page scanning
Single-Page Report
$49one-time
Compliance report for one page
Get Report- Full page scan
- AI-powered fix suggestions
- Plain-English explanations
- Code fix examples
- PDF compliance report
- WCAG 2.1 AA criterion mapping
- Priority-ranked remediation plan
Multi-Page Report
$99one-time
Compliance report across multiple pages
Get Multi-Page Report- Up to 10 pages scanned
- Everything in Single-Page
- Consolidated multi-page compliance report
- Cross-page issue patterns
- Prioritized remediation roadmap
- Cross-page duplicate detection
Why AccessScan
A Compliance Report, Not a Widget. A Fix Plan, Not a Band-Aid.
Some tools sell you a JavaScript widget you paste into your site that claims to fix accessibility automatically. Courts have repeatedly ruled these widgets do not constitute ADA compliance. The DOJ's own guidance states that automated overlays are insufficient.
AccessScan scans your actual HTML, identifies specific WCAG failures, and shows your developer or vendor exactly what to change — the kind of remediation that holds up to scrutiny.
Built on axe-core — the open-source accessibility engine used by the US Department of Veterans Affairs, Google Chrome DevTools, and Microsoft.
FAQ
Common Questions
Does this deadline apply to my municipality?
Yes. The DOJ's April 24, 2026 deadline applies to all state and local government entities — cities, counties, school districts, libraries, public universities, and special districts. If you're a Title II entity under the ADA, you're covered.
What do I get in the paid report?
A professional compliance report with: an executive summary of your compliance status, every WCAG 2.1 AA violation ranked by severity, plain-English explanations of each issue, specific code fixes your developer can implement, estimated remediation time, and WCAG criterion mapping. Designed to be handed to your IT team or attached to a council agenda.
I got the report. Now what? Who fixes the issues?
The report tells your existing web developer or vendor exactly what to fix. Each issue includes before/after code examples. Most government websites are maintained by a CMS vendor or contracted developer — forward them the report and they implement the changes. Simple issues like missing alt text can often be handled by your team directly.
Will this report protect us legally?
This report is a technical compliance report, not legal advice. However, having a documented report and active remediation plan demonstrates good faith — which courts consistently view favorably in ADA cases. Consult your legal counsel about your specific obligations.
Can I pay by purchase order?
Both plans fall under the federal micro-purchase threshold, so most government entities can pay by credit card without formal procurement. If you need a PO or invoice, contact support@doaccessscan.com.
Our website changes regularly. Do we need to scan again?
We recommend re-scanning after significant content changes or redesigns. Each report is a point-in-time assessment. New pages, uploaded PDFs, or design changes should be verified for compliance.
How is this different from free tools like WAVE?
Free tools give you a technical error list designed for developers. AccessScan gives you a professional compliance report designed for government decision-makers — with plain-English explanations, prioritized remediation, and a format suitable for council presentations. Think of it as the difference between raw lab results and a doctor's report.
AccessScan was built because we saw small government entities getting quoted $5,000+ for the same compliance reports that enterprise tools generate automatically. Every municipality deserves affordable access to accessibility compliance — not just the ones with six-figure IT budgets.
— The AccessScan Team