Accessibility statement
Accessibility statement generator for ecommerce stores
Create a clear accessibility statement draft for your online store. Explain your accessibility commitment, contact method, and ongoing improvement process.
This page provides a general draft structure only. It is not legal advice and does not guarantee ADA, EAA, or WCAG compliance.
Accessibility statement draft structure
✓ Accessibility commitment
State that your store is working to improve accessibility for all customers.
✓ Standards reference
Mention that your store reviews accessibility using WCAG-related guidance where applicable.
✓ Known limitations
Be honest about areas that may still need review, such as apps, popups, or third-party widgets.
✓ Contact method
Provide an email address or contact form where customers can report accessibility problems.
✓ Ongoing improvement
Explain that accessibility is reviewed over time as the store changes.
Sample accessibility statement wording
We are committed to making our ecommerce store accessible and usable for all customers. We review our website for common accessibility issues and work to improve the shopping experience across product pages, navigation, forms, buttons, images, and checkout-related content.
If you experience difficulty using our website or notice an accessibility issue, please contact us with the page URL and a description of the problem. We will review the issue and work to improve accessibility where possible.
Accessibility is an ongoing process, especially as products, themes, apps, and website content change.
Before publishing, edit this wording for your real business, contact email, country, and legal situation.
Scan first
Run a scan before writing your statement so you know what issues may need review.
Be honest
Do not claim perfect compliance unless you have completed proper review and remediation.
Monitor changes
Ecommerce stores change often, so accessibility statements should match an ongoing improvement process.
Run a free scan before publishing your statement
Check your store for common accessibility issues first, then use the results to create a more honest accessibility statement.