Clickworthy

Website Accessibility Services for Canadian Businesses

AODA compliance isn’t optional for Ontario businesses. Clickworthy audits your site against WCAG 2.0 AA standards, fixes what’s broken, and documents your compliance — so you’re protected and more people can actually use your site.

Most GTA Websites Fail Basic Accessibility Tests

Over 1 in 4 Canadians live with a disability that affects how they use the web. Under the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA), businesses with 20 or more employees are legally required to meet WCAG 2.0 Level AA standards. Websites that don’t comply risk fines of up to $100,000 per day.

But here’s the bigger issue: inaccessible websites don’t just create legal exposure — they actively turn away customers. Broken screen reader support, missing alt text, and poor colour contrast aren’t just compliance failures. They’re conversion failures.

What Is AODA - and What Does
It Mean for Your Website?

AODA (Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act) is Ontario provincial legislation requiring organisations to remove barriers for people with disabilities. The web standard it mandates is WCAG 2.0 Level AA — a set of technical guidelines covering:

Perceivable

Content must be visible/hearable to all users (alt text, captions, sufficient colour contrast)

Operable

All functionality must be keyboard-navigable (no mouse-only interactions)

Understandable

Content and interface must be clear (readable labels, error messages, consistent navigation)

Robust

Code must work with current and future assistive technologies (semantic HTML, ARIA roles)
Ontario’s compliance deadlines have already passed for most private-sector businesses. If your site was built without these standards, it is likely non-compliant today.

How We Audit and Fix Your Website

Our process is collaborative, creative, and driven by strategy. From discovery to delivery, here’s how we work on websites accessibility.

STEP 1

Discovery Call

(Day 1)

Kumar reviews your site type, size, and current tech stack. We agree on scope and set a timeline.

STEP 2

Automated + Manual Audit

(Days 2–5)

We run WAVE, Axe, and Lighthouse scans, then layer in manual keyboard and screen reader testing. Automated tools catch ~30% of issues; manual testing catches the rest.

STEP 3

Report Delivery

(Day 7)

You receive a plain-language report in plain PDF. No jargon. Every issue has a location, severity, and a recommended fix.

STEP 4

Remediation Sprint

(Days 8–21)

Our team implements fixes directly in your CMS or codebase. We document every change.

STEP 5

Verification & Sign-Off

(Day 22–28)

We re-audit the remediated site and deliver a compliance verification summary you can share with stakeholders or legal counsel.

Why Clickworthy for Accessibility

Not a Generic Compliance Tool

Clickworthy treats accessibility the way we treat SEO: as a technical foundation, not a checkbox. Because your accessibility score and your search score are built on the same signals — semantic code, clean structure, fast performance, and content that communicates clearly.

Kumar has integrated AODA accessibility audits into Clickworthy’s Sprint 3 CRO process since 2024. Every client who builds with us gets WCAG-aligned code from day one.

Manual + Automated

We use both. Automated tools catch ~30% of issues. Human testing catches the rest.

SEO-Accessibility Overlap

Every fix that helps screen readers also helps Google. You get two wins for one investment.

Local Ontario Expertise

We know AODA, not just WCAG in the abstract. We know what Ontario businesses are actually liable for.
Kumar Vaibhav Tanwar, Founder of Clickworthy

What GTA Clients Say

Don’t take our word for it. Here’s what clients we’ve worked with say about our services.

Common Questions About AODA & Web Accessibility

Find answers to the most common questions about accessibility, costs, timelines, and more.

If your Ontario business has 20 or more employees and has a public-facing website, WCAG 2.0 Level AA compliance is legally required. Businesses with fewer than 20 employees must still meet WCAG 2.0 Level A. If you’re unsure, we’ll tell you exactly where you stand in a free audit call.

WCAG 2.0 is the standard mandated by AODA for Ontario businesses. WCAG 2.2 (released 2023) adds new success criteria and is considered best practice. Clickworthy audits against 2.0 AA for compliance, and recommends 2.2 upgrades where practical.

Free tools like WAVE or Google Lighthouse test for roughly 30–40% of WCAG success criteria — the ones that can be checked programmatically. Keyboard navigation, logical focus order, screen reader compatibility, and meaningful link labels all require manual testing. A passing scanner score does not mean compliance.

A typical small-to-mid-size website (under 30 pages) audit takes 5–7 business days. Remediation depends on the number and complexity of issues found, but most sites are remediated within 3–4 weeks.

Almost never. Most WCAG failures are invisible to sighted users — missing alt text, insufficient colour contrast ratios, unlabelled form fields. In the rare cases where design choices create accessibility barriers, we work with you to find solutions that preserve the visual brand.

Yes. New content, plugin updates, and site changes can introduce new failures. Our monthly accessibility monitoring keeps your compliance status current — integrated with our Performance Monitoring service.

Find Out if Your Site Is AODA Compliant
Before Someone Else Does

This isn’t a sales call. It’s a 20-minute session where Kumar personally walks you through your site’s accessibility exposure – what’s broken, what’s liable, and what it would realistically take to fix it.

No automated PDF. No pitch deck. Just Kumar, your site, and an honest assessment.

Spots limited to 5 per week. Genuinely. · No long-term contracts required. · GTA businesses served since 2021.