In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re looking at a common usability issue: unexpected changes that occur when a user enters information into a field. When users interact with form controls, they expect the page to remain stable, but sometimes websites trigger automatic actions such as submitting a form, redirecting to a new page, or
WCAG Fix It: 2.1.2 No Keyboard Trap
In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re looking at a serious accessibility problem: keyboard traps. A keyboard trap occurs when a user navigates to an element using the keyboard but cannot move away from it using standard keyboard commands. When this happens, users can become stuck inside a component with no way to continue navigating
WCAG Fix It: 3.3.1 Error Identification
If your website includes forms, contact forms, checkout forms, login pages, or booking forms, WCAG 3.3.1 applies to you. In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re looking at a critical usability requirement: clearly identifying when an error occurs and explaining what needs to be corrected. Forms are where users complete important tasks, but if errors
WCAG Fix It: 2.4.3 Focus Order
In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re breaking down an important accessibility requirement: making sure keyboard focus moves through the page in a logical order. When users navigate with a keyboard, they move between interactive elements using the Tab key. But if focus jumps around unpredictably or skips content entirely, navigation becomes confusing and difficult
WCAG Fix It: 1.4.1 Use of Color
In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re looking at a common accessibility issue: relying on colour alone to communicate meaning. Colour can be a powerful design tool but if colour is the only way information is conveyed, many users may miss that information completely. Fixing this often requires small design adjustments rather than major redesign.
WCAG Fix It: 2.4.7 Focus Visible
In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re looking at a critical usability requirement: making sure users can clearly see which element currently has keyboard focus. When navigating with a keyboard, users move through interactive elements using the Tab key. But if the focused element isn’t visually highlighted, users quickly lose track of where they are
WCAG Fix It: 2.4.2 Page Titles
In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re breaking down one of the simplest but most important accessibility requirements: making sure every page has a descriptive title. It’s one short line in your code but without it, users can quickly become lost, especially when navigating with assistive technology, and fixing it is one of the fastest
WCAG Fix It: 1.3.1 Info and Relationships
If your website uses headings, lists, tables, or forms, WCAG 1.3.1 applies to you. In this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re breaking down one of the most important structural accessibility requirements: ensuring that information, structure, and relationships are programmatically defined. It sounds technical but it’s really about, If something looks structured visually, it must also
WCAG Fix It: 2.1.1 Keyboard
If your website requires a mouse to function properly, WCAG 2.1.1 applies to you. IIn this WCAG Fix It guide, we’re breaking down one of the most fundamental accessibility requirements: ensuring all functionality is available using only a keyboard. No mouse.No touchscreen.Just the keyboard. If a user cannot navigate your website without a mouse, your