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Prioritization

How to prioritize accessibility fixes

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The hardest part of accessibility work is often not finding issues. It is deciding what to fix first. Strong prioritization helps teams make progress faster and avoid getting stuck in long lists of unstructured problems.

Check your website before issues turn into risk

Run a free scan, understand what matters, and decide whether you need a deeper audit.

Start with business critical pages

Pages tied to lead generation, checkout, account flows, and support should usually come first. Accessibility issues there create the most direct user and business friction.

Fixing important pages first also makes progress easier to measure.

Look for issues that affect core tasks

Problems with readability, forms, buttons, and navigation usually deserve early attention because they affect how users actually move through the site.

These tend to matter more than low impact cosmetic issues.

Use a repeatable process

The goal is not to fix everything randomly. The goal is to build a repeatable sequence: scan, identify high impact issues, remediate, then recheck.

That approach helps teams move from reactive cleanup to more controlled accessibility improvement.

Related resources

Ready to see what is happening on your site?

Use the free scan for fast visibility, then move to a deeper audit if your team needs clearer remediation direction.