June 3, 2026
The right IAAP certification depends on the work you do. CPACC is the entry credential covering accessibility concepts, disability awareness, standards, and universal design at a broad level. WAS is the technical credential for people...
Continue Reading: How to Choose Between IAAP Certifications →
June 3, 2026
Finding accessibility audit work as a freelancer comes down to positioning, outreach, and proof. Most paying clients fall into three buckets: businesses responding to a legal demand letter, SaaS companies that need an ACR to...
Continue Reading: How to Find Accessibility Audit Work as a Freelancer →
June 1, 2026
The IAAP Web Accessibility Specialist (WAS) certification covers the technical skills needed to evaluate and remediate web content against WCAG. The exam targets practitioners who work directly with code, audit reports, and assistive technology behavior....
Continue Reading: What the IAAP WAS Certification Covers →
May 29, 2026
Before you hire a VPAT service provider, the methodology behind their work matters more than the price tag on the engagement. A credible provider conducts a fully manual accessibility audit against the WCAG version and...
Continue Reading: Questions to Ask a VPAT Provider About Methodology →
May 27, 2026
Specializing in mobile app accessibility means building deep expertise in native iOS and Android development patterns, platform-specific assistive technologies, and how WCAG 2.1 AA maps to mobile environments. The path starts with learning VoiceOver on...
Continue Reading: How to Specialize in Mobile App Accessibility →
May 27, 2026
Freelance accessibility auditors typically charge between $1,500 and $8,000 for a website audit, with most projects landing in the $2,500 to $5,000 range. Pricing depends on page count, complexity, the standard being evaluated (WCAG 2.1...
Continue Reading: How Much to Charge for an Accessibility Audit as a Freelancer →
May 25, 2026
A provider that actually reviews scan output will explain which flagged items are real issues, which are noise, and what a human evaluator would catch that the scan missed. A provider that does not review...
Continue Reading: How to Tell if a Provider Actually Reviews Their Scan Output →
May 24, 2026
An accessibility report tells you almost everything you need to know about the person who wrote it. Before hiring an auditor, request a sample report and read it the way a client would read it....
Continue Reading: How to Evaluate an Accessibility Report Before Hiring →
May 24, 2026
A strong accessibility services proposal as a freelancer does three things: it defines the scope precisely, sets expectations around deliverables, and prices the work transparently. Most freelancers lose deals not because their rate is too...
Continue Reading: How to Write an Accessibility Services Proposal as a Freelancer →
May 22, 2026
The accessibility industry in 2026 is shaped by three forces: ADA Title II web compliance deadlines hitting state and local government bodies, a surge in VPAT and ACR requests driven by procurement teams, and a...
Continue Reading: What’s Happening in the Accessibility Industry in 2026 →