ADA Defense KitFree Exposure Snapshot See the full kit
Free · Private · No signup

How exposed is your site? Get an honest snapshot in 30 seconds.

Paste a page's HTML and this checker flags the high-risk, machine-detectable WCAG barriers that show up most often in ADA web-accessibility demand letters. It runs entirely in your browser — your page is never uploaded, and there's no account or tracking.

100% in-browser Nothing uploaded No email required
exposure-snapshot · paste page HTML

Your exposure snapshot

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This snapshot finds the obvious ones. The demand letters are about the rest.

An automated check like this one catches only a portion of the accessibility picture. It can't run the keyboard, focus, contrast, reflow, and alt-text-quality tests that actually decide whether your site is usable. And it gives you no dated record that you did the work.

The full ADA Web-Accessibility Defense Kit closes all three gaps:

  • A prioritised developer report — every finding with the exact element, the problem, the fix, and the official WCAG link
  • A guided manual-test workbench for what automation can't judge (keyboard, focus, contrast, reflow, captions)
  • A dated, good-faith Defense File, an honest accessibility statement, and a VPAT-style summary for your attorney and developer
$149 $199 Founding price
Get the full Defense Kit

30-day money-back guarantee · one-time payment · runs in your browser, nothing uploaded

What this free checker does — and honestly doesn't

No tool can tell you whether your site is "ADA compliant." Here's exactly what this snapshot covers, so you can trust the number.

What does the snapshot actually check?
It runs a small set of conservative, well-established, machine-detectable checks against your pasted page: images missing alternative text (WCAG 1.1.1), buttons and links with no accessible name (4.1.2), form fields without labels (3.3.2 / 1.3.1), a missing page-language attribute (3.1.1), a missing page title (2.4.2), and vague link text like "click here" (2.4.4). These are among the most common barriers cited in web-accessibility demand letters — and they're exactly the kind a screen-reader user hits first.
Is a clean snapshot the same as being compliant?
No. Automated checks catch only a portion of WCAG. A "clean" result here means none of these specific machine-detectable issues were found on this one page — it says nothing about keyboard operability, visible focus, colour contrast, reflow, video captions, or the dozens of other criteria that require human judgement, nor about the rest of your site. Treat a clean snapshot as a starting point, not a verdict.
Is my page data sent anywhere?
No. Everything runs in your browser using your device's own HTML parser. There are no network calls, no analytics, no cookies, and no account. Your pasted HTML never leaves this page, and we never receive it. You can disconnect from the internet and it still works.
I already got a demand letter. What should I do?
Consult a qualified attorney before doing anything else — including before running checkers or publishing statements. This tool is a self-assessment aid, not legal advice, and it can't represent you. Once you have counsel, a documented, dated good-faith remediation effort (exactly what the full kit helps you build) is generally part of a credible response, but your attorney should guide the specifics.