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Web Accessibility: The Digital Tide that Lifts All Boats

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Web Accessibility: The Digital Tide that Lifts All Boats

February 9, 2026

When I was in elementary school, I fractured my right elbow on the playground. With my dominant hand out of commission for weeks, I was forced to work on my ambidexterity — and to struggle through a world clearly designed for right-handers. My school desk wasn’t shaped to support my left arm, left-handed scissors were hard to come by and I was often colliding with my dining companions’ elbows.

The Social Model of Disability states that disability is a mismatched human-to-environment interaction, shifting the burden of adaptation from the person to the products they interact with. While being left-handed is not a disability, left-handed people make up approximately 10 percent of the global population, and yet many products aren’t designed for them.

Web-Impacting Disabilities

Imagine alienating 10 percent of your audience. Imagine 20 percent28 percent — the approximate global percentages of people with auditory and visual limitations, respectively. These are the two most common categories of web-impacting disabilities. Is your website designed for them?

Now Is the Time to Update Your Website

If it’s been a while since you’ve looked at your website through an accessibility lens, you’re not alone. Most organizations mean to revisit it — then life (and work) gets in the way. A few things worth knowing as you plan:

  • Nearly 98% of websites don’t pass Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, which are updated every few years, making an annual accessibility audit a smart best practice
  • There can be legal implications tied to inaccessible websites (something many organizations are becoming aware of — some of our government clients have until spring 2026 to become compliant)
  • Accessibility isn’t just the right thing to do, it’s good for business, improving SEO, usability and ultimately revenue
  • In the United States, half of all internet users use voice search daily, which makes voice-friendly design and alt text more important

Your organization’s goals matter — as does avoiding a lawsuit! The good news? Accessibility improvements don’t have to be overwhelming, and small changes can make a meaningful difference.

Designing for One Benefits All: Accessibility in Real Life

A well-designed school desk would be one that any student can use, right- or left-handed, whether by nature or circumstance. Microsoft Inclusive Design methodology holds that designing for a permanent disability also benefits those with temporary and situational limitations.

 Source: Inclusive Design Toolkit

Think of a sidewalk curb cut. Originally designed to make walkways accessible to someone using a wheelchair, these affordances also benefit someone on crutches or pushing a stroller. In the digital space, think of high-contrast color combinations. These are more easily perceived both by someone with colorblindness and by someone looking at a phone screen in bright sunlight.

Even a person without a permanent disability will experience temporary or situational impairments throughout life. There is no such thing as a “normal” human. Let’s design the web to be usable by everyone.

A Necessity, not a Feature

If disability is a disparity between a human and a product, it’s the responsibility of the product to bridge the gap. At JayRay, we treat accessibility as a necessity, not a feature — designed for real people. It’s baked into our web design process. It’s part of a website’s structure, supporting each decision layer by layer — not frosting to slap on at the end.

Sure, an accessible website checks a legal box. But more importantly, it reaches your audience. Amplifies your message. Supports your mission. Builds trust in your brand. And contributes to a World Wide Web where everyone is welcome.

Get in touch to see if your website is accessible. You don’t have to guess. We’ll take a look. Our accessibility check identifies key issues and outlines realistic next steps, so you can move forward with confidence, without overhauling everything at once.

Julia White

About the Author

Julia White is a senior art director at JayRay. With a background in User Experience Design, she leads JayRay’s inclusive design and accessibility efforts.

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