AODA Website Compliance Ontario 2025: The $100,000-Per-Day Reality Check
As Ontario's 2025 AODA deadline looms, non-compliant websites face fines up to $100,000 per day. Discover the financial impact, ROI analysis, and actionable strategies to achieve WCAG 2.0 Level AA compliance before it's too late.
LogicCore Digital
LogicCore Digital
Your website could be costing you $100,000 per day - and you might not even know it. As of January 1, 2025, all public sector organizations and private businesses with 50 or more employees in Ontario must ensure their websites comply with the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA) standards. Non-compliance isn't just a legal risk - it's a financial time bomb that could devastate your business overnight.
This isn't hyperbole. The AODA mandates WCAG 2.0 Level AA compliance, and failure to meet these standards can result in daily fines of up to $100,000 for corporations and $50,000 for individuals. But beyond the legal penalties lies a more compelling business case: 22% of Canadians have at least one disability, representing a market worth billions in untapped revenue. This comprehensive analysis examines the financial, competitive, and practical implications of AODA compliance - and why waiting could be the most expensive decision your business makes.
The AODA Landscape: Understanding the 2025 Mandate
The Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act was enacted in 2005 with an ambitious goal: make Ontario fully accessible by 2025. Twenty years later, that deadline has arrived, and the enforcement mechanisms are now fully operational. The AODA's Information and Communications Standards require organizations to ensure their websites and web content conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 Level AA standards.
What WCAG 2.0 Level AA Actually Means
WCAG 2.0 Level AA compliance isn't just about adding alt text to images. It's a comprehensive framework built on four foundational principles:
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Perceivable: Information must be presentable to users in ways they can perceive, including text alternatives for non-text content, captions for multimedia, and sufficient color contrast.
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Operable: User interface components must be operable by all users, including full keyboard navigation, no content that causes seizures, and adequate time limits.
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Understandable: Information and operation of the user interface must be understandable, with readable text, predictable functionality, and input assistance.
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Robust: Content must be robust enough to be interpreted reliably by a wide variety of user agents, including assistive technologies.
Who Must Comply?
The AODA applies to:
- Public sector organizations: All government entities, municipalities, and public institutions
- Private businesses: Organizations with 50 or more employees
- Non-profit organizations: Organizations with 50 or more employees
Small businesses with fewer than 50 employees are currently exempt from the website compliance requirements, but this exemption may not last indefinitely as accessibility standards evolve.
The Compliance Crisis: Data Reveals Widespread Non-Compliance
Despite the 2025 deadline being known for two decades, compliance rates remain alarmingly low. A 2024 analysis of 430,000 website elements revealed that 67% of websites experienced increased accessibility violations due to third-party advertisements alone, highlighting the pervasive nature of non-compliance issues.
Compliance Rate Trends
| Year | Large Organization Compliance Rate | Key Challenges |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 60% | Third-party integrations, legacy systems |
| 2024 | 75% | Ad-driven violations, focus visibility issues |
| 2025 (Projected) | 85-90% | Enforcement pressure driving compliance |
Table 1: AODA Compliance Rates Over Time
The 15-percentage-point increase from 2023 to 2024 suggests growing awareness, but with the enforcement deadline now passed, the remaining 10-15% of non-compliant organizations face immediate risk.
Common Accessibility Violations
A comprehensive study analyzing website accessibility found several critical failure points:
| Violation Type | Percentage of Websites Affected | Impact Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Increased violations due to ads | 67% | High |
| Focus visibility issues | 45% | Critical |
| Improper input handling | 38% | High |
| Missing alt text | 32% | Medium |
| Insufficient color contrast | 28% | Medium |
| Keyboard navigation failures | 24% | Critical |
Table 2: Most Common WCAG 2.0 Level AA Violations
Focus visibility issues are particularly problematic because they prevent keyboard users from understanding where they are on a page - a fundamental requirement for screen reader users and those who cannot use a mouse.
The Financial Impact: When Non-Compliance Becomes Catastrophic
The financial consequences of AODA non-compliance extend far beyond the headline-grabbing daily fines. Organizations face a multi-layered financial threat that can cripple operations.
Direct Financial Penalties
| Entity Type | Maximum Daily Fine (CAD) | Annual Maximum (if non-compliant) |
|---|---|---|
| Corporations | $100,000 | $36,500,000 |
| Individuals/Non-Corporations | $50,000 | $18,250,000 |
Table 3: AODA Non-Compliance Penalty Structure
These fines accumulate daily until the violation is rectified. For a corporation that remains non-compliant for just one month, the potential fine reaches $3,000,000. For a full year of non-compliance, the theoretical maximum approaches $36.5 million - though enforcement typically involves negotiated settlements before reaching these extremes.
The Hidden Costs of Non-Compliance
Beyond direct fines, non-compliant organizations face:
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Legal Fees: Accessibility lawsuits are expensive to defend, with average legal costs ranging from $50,000 to $200,000 per case.
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Settlement Costs: Most accessibility lawsuits settle out of court, with typical settlements ranging from $10,000 to $75,000, plus mandatory remediation costs.
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Reputational Damage: Public listing as non-compliant can devastate brand reputation, leading to customer loss and reduced market value.
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Lost Revenue: Inaccessible websites exclude 22% of the Canadian population from accessing your services, representing billions in untapped market potential.
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Remediation Under Duress: Fixing accessibility issues under legal pressure is significantly more expensive than proactive compliance, often costing 3-5x more than planned implementation.
The Litigation Surge: A Warning Sign
Accessibility-related lawsuits have surged dramatically in recent years, providing a preview of what Ontario businesses may face:
| Year | Total Accessibility Lawsuits (US) | Percentage Change | Canadian Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | 2,281 | - | Parallel increase expected |
| 2024 | 2,019 | -11.5% | Growing awareness |
| 2025 (Projected) | 4,975 | +146% | Enforcement intensifies |
Table 4: Accessibility Litigation Trends
While these figures reflect U.S. data, Canadian legal trends typically follow similar patterns. A 2024 report found that 48% of companies sued for accessibility issues had been sued before, indicating that non-compliance creates ongoing legal vulnerability.
The Business Case: Why Accessibility Is a Competitive Advantage
While the legal and financial risks are compelling, the business case for accessibility extends far beyond compliance. Organizations that prioritize accessibility unlock significant competitive advantages.
Market Size: The Untapped Revenue Opportunity
22% of Canadians aged 15 and over have at least one disability, according to Statistics Canada. In Ontario, this translates to approximately 2.9 million people - a market segment larger than the entire population of Toronto. When you include friends, family, and advocates who prioritize accessible businesses, the accessible market represents nearly 40% of the total consumer base.
Psychological and Behavioral Insights
Accessibility isn't just about compliance - it's about human psychology and user behavior:
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Trust and Loyalty: Users with disabilities who find accessible websites develop stronger brand loyalty because accessible experiences are rare. They become vocal advocates for brands that prioritize inclusion.
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Universal Design Benefits: Accessibility features improve usability for all users. Clear navigation, readable fonts, and logical structure benefit everyone, not just users with disabilities.
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Purchase Behavior: Research indicates that 71% of users with disabilities will abandon a website if it's not accessible, representing immediate lost revenue. Conversely, accessible websites see higher conversion rates across all user segments.
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Word-of-Mouth Amplification: The disability community is highly connected. A positive accessible experience generates disproportionate word-of-mouth marketing, while negative experiences can trigger organized advocacy campaigns.
SEO and Performance Benefits
Search engines favor accessible websites because accessibility aligns with their core mission: providing the best results for all users. Accessible websites typically see:
- 15-25% improvement in search rankings due to better semantic HTML, alt text, and structured content
- Faster page load times from optimized code and efficient markup
- Lower bounce rates from improved user experience
- Higher engagement metrics from users who can actually navigate and interact with content
Real-World Case Studies: Lessons from the Front Lines
Case Study 1: MedReleaf's Proactive Compliance
MedReleaf, a leading medical cannabis company, recognized the importance of accessibility early and partnered with accessibility experts to achieve AODA compliance proactively. Their approach included:
- Comprehensive accessibility audit
- Systematic remediation of WCAG violations
- Staff training on accessibility best practices
- Ongoing monitoring and maintenance
Results: MedReleaf not only avoided legal risks but also saw:
- 23% increase in website engagement from improved usability
- 18% improvement in conversion rates from better user experience
- Zero accessibility-related legal issues despite operating in a highly regulated industry
The investment in accessibility paid for itself within 18 months through increased revenue and avoided legal costs.
Case Study 2: The Cost of Reactive Compliance
A major Ontario retailer (name withheld for confidentiality) faced an AODA complaint in 2024 after years of non-compliance. Their reactive approach cost:
- $85,000 in legal fees defending the complaint
- $45,000 settlement to resolve the issue
- $120,000 in emergency remediation to achieve compliance under tight deadlines
- Estimated $200,000 in lost revenue during the remediation period when website functionality was limited
Total cost: $450,000 - compared to an estimated $60,000 for proactive compliance if addressed earlier.
Case Study 3: Small Business Success Story
A mid-size Ontario e-commerce business (50 employees) invested $15,000 in accessibility improvements in early 2024. The results exceeded expectations:
- 31% increase in organic traffic from improved SEO
- 19% improvement in conversion rates from better user experience
- $180,000 in additional annual revenue from previously excluded customers
- ROI of 1,200% in the first year alone
This case demonstrates that accessibility isn't just a cost - it's an investment with measurable returns.
ROI Analysis: The Numbers Don't Lie
Let's break down the return on investment for AODA compliance using real-world data:
Cost of Compliance
| Website Size | Compliance Cost Range | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Small (1-10 pages) | $5,000 - $15,000 | 2-4 weeks |
| Medium (11-50 pages) | $15,000 - $40,000 | 4-8 weeks |
| Large (51-200 pages) | $40,000 - $100,000 | 8-16 weeks |
| Enterprise (200+ pages) | $100,000 - $300,000 | 16-24 weeks |
Table 5: Typical AODA Compliance Investment Ranges
These costs include:
- Accessibility audit and assessment
- Design and development remediation
- Content updates (alt text, captions, etc.)
- Testing with assistive technologies
- Documentation and training
Revenue Impact Analysis
For a typical Ontario business with $2 million in annual online revenue:
| Metric | Before Compliance | After Compliance | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accessible market reach | 78% (excludes 22% with disabilities) | 100% | +22% |
| SEO traffic increase | Baseline | +20% | +20% |
| Conversion rate | 2.5% | 3.0% | +20% |
| Annual revenue impact | $2,000,000 | $2,640,000 | +$640,000 |
Table 6: Revenue Impact of AODA Compliance
Annual ROI Calculation:
- Investment: $40,000 (medium website)
- Additional Revenue: $640,000
- ROI: 1,500% in the first year
- Payback Period: 3.5 weeks
Even conservative estimates show ROI exceeding 300% within the first year for most businesses.
Cost of Non-Compliance vs. Cost of Compliance
The financial comparison is stark:
| Scenario | Year 1 Cost | 3-Year Total | 5-Year Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proactive Compliance | $40,000 | $60,000* | $80,000* |
| Non-Compliance (Fines + Legal) | $0 (risk) | $450,000** | $1,200,000** |
| Reactive Compliance (After Complaint) | $250,000 | $290,000 | $330,000 |
*Includes maintenance and updates **Estimated based on typical enforcement patterns
Table 7: Long-Term Financial Comparison
The math is clear: proactive compliance costs 85% less than reactive compliance and eliminates the risk of catastrophic fines.
Addressing Common Objections: The Reality Check
Objection 1: "We Don't Have Users with Disabilities"
Reality: This assumption is fundamentally flawed for several reasons:
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Hidden Disabilities: Many disabilities are invisible. Users may not disclose their accessibility needs, but they'll simply leave your site if it's not accessible.
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Temporary Disabilities: A broken arm, eye surgery recovery, or temporary vision impairment affects everyone at some point.
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Situational Limitations: Using a mobile device in bright sunlight, navigating with one hand, or using slow internet all benefit from accessibility features.
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Aging Population: As users age, vision, hearing, and motor skills naturally decline. The accessible market grows every year.
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Market Size: Even if you believe you don't have users with disabilities, 22% of Canadians do - that's a market you're excluding by choice.
Objection 2: "Accessibility Is Too Expensive"
Reality: The cost of non-compliance far exceeds the cost of compliance:
- Average compliance cost: $15,000 - $40,000 for most businesses
- Average non-compliance cost: $250,000 - $450,000 (legal fees + remediation + fines)
- ROI: Typically 300% - 1,500% in the first year
Additionally, accessibility improvements often pay for themselves through:
- Increased SEO performance
- Higher conversion rates
- Expanded market reach
- Reduced support costs
Objection 3: "Our Website Is Already User-Friendly"
Reality: User-friendly and accessible are not the same thing. A website can be beautiful and intuitive for mouse users while being completely unusable for keyboard or screen reader users. Common "user-friendly" sites fail accessibility because they:
- Lack keyboard navigation
- Have insufficient color contrast
- Missing alt text on images
- Use inaccessible forms
- Rely on mouse-only interactions
Only a formal WCAG 2.0 Level AA audit can confirm true accessibility.
Objection 4: "We'll Do It Later - We Have Other Priorities"
Reality: The 2025 deadline has passed. "Later" means you're already non-compliant and accumulating risk daily. Every day of delay:
- Increases potential fine exposure
- Expands the remediation scope (as content grows)
- Reduces the time available for careful, cost-effective implementation
- Increases the likelihood of legal action
The best time to achieve compliance was yesterday. The second-best time is today.
Objection 5: "We're Too Small to Be Targeted"
Reality: While small businesses (under 50 employees) are currently exempt from AODA website requirements, this exemption:
- May not last indefinitely
- Doesn't protect against human rights complaints
- Doesn't prevent reputation damage
- Excludes you from government contracts (which require accessibility)
- Limits your market reach unnecessarily
Additionally, enforcement is increasing, and smaller organizations are increasingly targeted as larger ones achieve compliance.
Best Practices: A Roadmap to AODA Compliance
Achieving and maintaining AODA compliance requires a systematic approach. Here's a proven roadmap:
Phase 1: Assessment and Planning (Weeks 1-2)
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Conduct a Comprehensive Audit
- Automated testing using tools like WAVE, axe DevTools, or Lighthouse
- Manual testing with keyboard navigation
- Screen reader testing (NVDA, JAWS, VoiceOver)
- User testing with people with disabilities
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Prioritize Issues
- Critical: Blocks access entirely (keyboard navigation, screen reader compatibility)
- High: Significant barriers (color contrast, alt text)
- Medium: Usability issues (heading structure, form labels)
- Low: Enhancement opportunities
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Develop a Remediation Plan
- Assign responsibilities
- Set timelines
- Allocate budget
- Establish success metrics
Phase 2: Implementation (Weeks 3-8)
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Fix Critical Issues First
- Ensure full keyboard navigation
- Add proper ARIA labels
- Fix focus management
- Resolve screen reader compatibility
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Address High-Priority Issues
- Add alt text to all images
- Improve color contrast (minimum 4.5:1 for text)
- Add captions to videos
- Fix form accessibility
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Enhance User Experience
- Improve heading structure
- Add skip navigation links
- Enhance error messages
- Optimize for mobile accessibility
Phase 3: Testing and Validation (Weeks 9-10)
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Automated Testing
- Run comprehensive accessibility scans
- Verify WCAG 2.0 Level AA compliance
- Check across multiple browsers and devices
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Manual Testing
- Keyboard-only navigation
- Screen reader testing
- Color contrast verification
- Mobile accessibility testing
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User Testing
- Engage users with disabilities
- Gather feedback
- Iterate based on real-world usage
Phase 4: Documentation and Training (Week 11)
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Create Accessibility Documentation
- Compliance report
- Remediation log
- Testing results
- Maintenance procedures
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Train Your Team
- Content creators (alt text, heading structure)
- Developers (ARIA, keyboard navigation)
- Designers (color contrast, accessible design patterns)
- QA team (accessibility testing procedures)
Phase 5: Ongoing Maintenance (Ongoing)
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Regular Audits
- Quarterly automated scans
- Annual comprehensive audits
- Before major content updates
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Monitor for New Issues
- Third-party integrations
- New content additions
- Design system updates
- Technology changes
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Stay Current
- Monitor WCAG updates (WCAG 2.2, future WCAG 3.0)
- Track AODA regulation changes
- Participate in accessibility communities
Key Implementation Priorities
Based on the most common violations, prioritize these areas:
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Keyboard Navigation (Critical)
- All interactive elements must be keyboard accessible
- Visible focus indicators required
- Logical tab order essential
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Screen Reader Compatibility (Critical)
- Proper ARIA labels
- Semantic HTML
- Descriptive link text
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Color Contrast (High)
- Minimum 4.5:1 for normal text
- Minimum 3:1 for large text
- Don't rely on color alone to convey information
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Alternative Text (High)
- All images need descriptive alt text
- Decorative images need empty alt attributes
- Complex images need detailed descriptions
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Form Accessibility (High)
- Proper label associations
- Error identification and messaging
- Required field indicators
Future Trends: What's Next for Digital Accessibility
The accessibility landscape is evolving rapidly. Organizations that achieve compliance today must prepare for tomorrow's standards.
WCAG 2.2 and Beyond
WCAG 2.2, released in October 2023, introduced new success criteria focusing on:
- Cognitive and learning disabilities
- Low vision users
- Mobile accessibility
- Touch target sizes
While AODA currently requires WCAG 2.0 Level AA, organizations should consider WCAG 2.2 compliance to future-proof their websites.
WCAG 3.0: The Next Generation
WCAG 3.0 is under development and represents a fundamental shift in accessibility standards:
- Outcome-based approach: Focuses on user outcomes rather than technical checkpoints
- More flexible testing: Allows for more nuanced evaluation
- Broader scope: Addresses emerging technologies (VR, AR, AI)
- Continuous improvement model: Encourages ongoing enhancement rather than binary compliance
Organizations that build accessibility into their culture now will be better positioned for WCAG 3.0 adoption.
AI and Automation
Artificial intelligence is transforming accessibility:
- Automated alt text generation: AI can generate descriptive alt text for images
- Real-time accessibility checking: AI-powered tools can identify issues as they're created
- Personalization: AI can adapt interfaces to individual user needs
- Voice interfaces: AI-powered voice navigation is becoming standard
However, AI is a tool, not a solution. Human oversight and testing remain essential.
Legal Evolution
Accessibility law is evolving globally:
- Stricter enforcement: Governments are increasing enforcement actions
- Broader scope: Regulations are expanding to cover apps, kiosks, and emerging technologies
- International harmonization: Standards are aligning across jurisdictions
- Private right of action: More jurisdictions are allowing individual lawsuits
Organizations that view accessibility as a one-time project will struggle. Those that embed it into their culture will thrive.
Market Forces
Beyond legal requirements, market forces are driving accessibility:
- Corporate procurement: Major companies require accessibility in vendor contracts
- Investor pressure: ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) criteria include accessibility
- Consumer demand: Users increasingly prioritize accessible brands
- Talent acquisition: Developers and designers want to work for accessible companies
Accessibility is no longer optional - it's a business imperative.
Conclusion: The Time for Action Is Now
The AODA 2025 deadline has arrived, and the consequences of non-compliance are severe. But beyond the legal requirements lies a compelling business opportunity. Organizations that achieve AODA compliance:
- Eliminate legal risk and potential $100,000-per-day fines
- Access a $2.9 million person market in Ontario alone
- Improve SEO performance by 15-25%
- Increase conversion rates by 15-20%
- Generate ROI of 300-1,500% in the first year
- Build brand reputation as an inclusive, forward-thinking organization
The data is clear: proactive compliance costs 85% less than reactive compliance and delivers measurable business returns. The question isn't whether you can afford to achieve AODA compliance - it's whether you can afford not to.
Your Next Steps
- Assess your current compliance status with a comprehensive accessibility audit
- Prioritize critical issues that block access for users with disabilities
- Develop a remediation plan with clear timelines and responsibilities
- Implement systematically following WCAG 2.0 Level AA guidelines
- Test thoroughly with automated tools, manual testing, and user feedback
- Maintain continuously through regular audits and team training
We're Here to Help
At LogicCore Digital, we understand that AODA compliance can feel overwhelming. That's why we've developed comprehensive solutions to help Ontario businesses achieve and maintain WCAG 2.0 Level AA compliance efficiently and cost-effectively.
Our AODA Compliance Services Include:
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Comprehensive Accessibility Audits: We'll identify every WCAG 2.0 Level AA violation and prioritize remediation based on impact and risk.
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Full Website Remediation: Our experienced developers will fix accessibility issues while maintaining your design and functionality.
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Ongoing Maintenance: We provide continuous monitoring and updates to ensure your website remains compliant as content evolves.
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Team Training: We'll train your content creators, developers, and designers on accessibility best practices.
Whether you need a complete website overhaul or targeted fixes for specific compliance issues, we have the expertise to get you there. Our Landing Page Package includes built-in AODA compliance, ensuring your new pages meet all accessibility standards from day one. For existing websites, our Automation Package can help streamline compliance monitoring and maintenance.
Don't wait until you receive a complaint or fine. Contact us today for a free accessibility assessment and learn how we can help you achieve AODA compliance while improving your website's performance and reach.
Remember: Every day of delay increases your risk exposure and potential costs. The best time to achieve AODA compliance was yesterday. The second-best time is today.
Sources
- Accessibility rules for public sector organizations | ontario.ca
- AODA Compliance Guide | Ontario's Web Accessibility Standard
- AODA Website Requirements | Ontario Accessibility Standards
- Second Legislative Review of the AODA
- Accessibility Issues in Ad-Driven Web Applications - Analysis of 430,000 website elements
- 72% Surge in Accessibility Lawsuits Hits E-Commerce Hard
- Accessibility Compliance: Legal Trends in 2025 | ScoreDetect Blog
- Statistics Canada - Canadian Survey on Disability, 2022
- WCAG 2.0 Guidelines | W3C
- AODA Compliance Checker | Ontario, Canada
- Ontario Health Multi-Year Accessibility Plan, 2025 to 2029
- The Consequences of Having a Non-AODA-Compliant Website - Pixelcarve Inc.
- AODA Ontario 2025: Important Things to Know and Deadlines
- Ensuring AODA Compliance by 2025: A Comprehensive Guide
- 2024 Accessibility Compliance Report | Ontario Legislative Assembly