So we built something better.
Here's something the accessibility industry doesn't like to say out loud: Most of the tools being sold as "accessibility solutions" don't work.
Not our opinion — the numbers. Blind users report that the most popular widgets conflict with their screen readers, forcing them to abandon their own assistive technology to navigate a site. Some people now install browser extensions whose only job is to block accessibility widgets from loading.
Think about that for a second. A tool sold as an accessibility solution — actively blocked by the people it's supposed to help.
of users with disabilities rate accessibility overlays as ineffective.
OpenAccess Pro exists because digital accessibility deserves to be taken seriously.
Not as a legal checkbox. Not as a marketing claim. As a real engineering problem, solved properly, by people who understand what's actually at stake.
When a person who is blind can't complete a checkout flow, that's not a compliance gap. That's a person being told they're not welcome.
Most accessibility tools are built backwards — designed to look impressive in a demo, then deployed with no real understanding of actual assistive technology.
"Our widget runs inside a Shadow DOM. It cannot interfere with your JAWS, NVDA, or VoiceOver. The tools you rely on every day to use the internet will keep working exactly as they should."
Built to work together as a unified platform, covering every dimension of digital accessibility.
87 features across 9 profiles
Broken component detection
Automated developer tickets
Accessible PDFs & Word docs
Adaptive user learning
Salesforce, Jira, ServiceNow
Audit-ready, always
Inclusive Immersive Tech
We work with organizations where accessibility isn't optional — financial services, healthcare providers, government agencies, and global retailers.
"They come to us because they want something that actually works — for the people visiting their digital properties."
Accessible products work better. They're easier to navigate, clearer to understand, and faster to use. Design discipline that makes a site work for a screen reader makes it work better for everyone.
We don't cut corners. In this space, cutting corners doesn't just mean bugs — it means people can't use the internet. We're building something that lasts. Something the industry actually needs.