Free tool
Free accessibility statement generator.
Fill in the form and copy a ready-to-publish accessibility statement for your website. It targets WCAG 2.1 Level AA and uses honest wording that does not claim certification or guaranteed compliance. Everything runs in your browser. No signup.
Your statement
Accessibility Statement for Your Organization Your Organization is committed to making your website accessible to the widest possible audience, regardless of ability or technology. We aim to conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA, the technical standard referenced by the Americans with Disabilities Act and comparable accessibility laws. Measures we take We test your website for accessibility on an ongoing basis and work to fix the issues we find. We treat accessibility as a continuous effort rather than a one-time project, and we review the site as it changes. Conformance status WCAG 2.1 Level AA defines requirements that improve accessibility for people with disabilities. We are actively working toward conformance with these guidelines. This statement does not claim full conformance, and it is not a certification. No official ADA accessibility certification exists in the United States. Feedback We welcome your feedback on the accessibility of your website. If you encounter a barrier, please contact us: - Email: accessibility@example.com We aim to respond to accessibility feedback within 5 business days. Date This statement was created on 2026-07-01 and is reviewed as the site changes.
About this tool
What a good accessibility statement says.
An accessibility statement is a public page where you tell visitors that you take accessibility seriously, which technical standard you aim for, and how to reach you if something does not work. It is short, it is honest, and it is one of the first things an accessibility-minded user or a plaintiff's attorney looks for.
The statement this tool generates includes the four parts that matter: a commitment, the measures you take, an honest conformance status, and a working feedback channel. It names WCAG 2.1 Level AA, the standard US courts reference when they interpret the Americans with Disabilities Act for websites. You can read more about that standard in our guide to the WCAG 2.1 AA criteria that actually matter.
One thing this generator will not do is let you claim you are fully compliant or certified. There is no ADA certification in the United States, and overclaiming is its own legal risk. The vendors that promised guaranteed compliance have been pushed back on by disability advocates and, in April 2025, by the Federal Trade Commission. Saying you are working toward WCAG conformance is both accurate and defensible.
The honest part
A statement is a promise, not a fix.
Publishing a statement that says you test on an ongoing basis only helps you if you actually do. A statement on top of an inaccessible site can make things worse, because it documents a commitment you are not keeping. The statement and the remediation work together.
If you want to see where your site stands right now, run a free WCAG 2.1 AA scan before you publish anything. And if you want the ongoing testing your statement promises, that is what Invoset monitoring does: weekly or monthly scans, diff alerts, and a dated record of the effort.
Common questions
Accessibility statement FAQ.
What is an accessibility statement?
An accessibility statement is a short page on your website that explains your commitment to accessibility, which standard you aim for (usually WCAG 2.1 Level AA), and how a visitor can report a barrier. It is one of the things courts and plaintiffs look for as evidence of good-faith effort.
Is an accessibility statement legally required?
No US law requires the statement itself, but it is widely treated as a sign of good-faith effort and it gives users a clear way to report problems. It is not a substitute for actually fixing accessibility issues; it works alongside real remediation.
Why does this generator avoid the word compliant?
Because no automated tool or template can make your site fully compliant, and no official ADA certification exists in the United States. Vendors that promised guaranteed compliance have been challenged by advocates and regulators. Our wording says you are working toward WCAG conformance, which is both honest and defensible.
Where do I put the statement on my site?
Publish it on its own page (for example /accessibility) and link to it from your footer so it is reachable from every page. Keep the contact method current, because an unmonitored accessibility inbox is worse than none.
How often should I update it?
Review it whenever your site changes meaningfully, and at least once a year. The statement should reflect what you actually do; if you say you test on an ongoing basis, make sure you do.
Back up the promise
Your statement says you test. Invoset is how you do it.
Invoset scans your site against WCAG 2.1 AA on a schedule, emails you when something new breaks, and keeps a dated audit-trail PDF. Every new account runs its first full scan free, no card required.