Government Website WCAG Compliance Checklist: What to Fix Before April 2027

By Accessalyze | April 30, 2026 | ADA Title II compliance for state and local government

Deadline update: The DOJ extended the ADA Title II web accessibility compliance deadline for large public entities from April 24, 2026 to April 26, 2027 (IFR 2026-07663). You have 12 months. Our scan of 38 government websites shows the average score is 76/100 — with significant gaps to close. Use this checklist to know exactly what to fix.

Whether you're a state webmaster, IT director, or accessibility coordinator at a county or city government, you now have until April 2027 to bring your website into compliance with WCAG 2.1 AA under the DOJ's ADA Title II rule. That's 12 months — but based on our scan data, many government sites need significant work.

This checklist covers the violations we find most often in government websites, ranked by severity. It's based on our scan of 38 federal and state sites using axe-core, the same detection engine used by Chrome DevTools, Microsoft Accessibility Insights, and Deque's enterprise tools.

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Where Government Websites Stand Right Now

We scanned 38 federal and state government websites for WCAG 2.1 AA compliance in April 2026. Here's the breakdown:

SiteScoreADA Status
ms.gov (Mississippi)15/100Failing
senate.gov30/100Failing
ri.gov (Rhode Island)40/100Failing
boston.gov40/100Failing
wa.gov (Washington)40/100Failing
michigan.gov45/100Failing
whitehouse.gov65/100Partial
Average (38 sites)76/100Partial
illinois.gov, mass.gov, delaware.gov100/100Passing

Even sites with scores in the 70s–80s likely have WCAG violations that automated scanning can't catch — keyboard navigation issues, missing captions on video, cognitive accessibility gaps. A score of 76/100 means there are known, detectable violations still present.

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The WCAG 2.1 AA Government Compliance Checklist

This checklist is organized by the WCAG 2.1 AA principles: Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, Robust. Work through each section with your development team. Most items can be addressed by a developer in hours — not weeks.

1. Perceivable: Content Must Be Available to All Senses

1.1 — Text Alternatives (WCAG 1.1.1)

Most common government failure: Navigation icons and social media links without alt text or aria-label. Found on: ri.gov, ms.gov, many county sites. Fix: add aria-label="Follow us on Twitter" to icon-only links.

1.2 — Time-Based Media (WCAG 1.2)

1.3 — Adaptable Content (WCAG 1.3)

1.4 — Distinguishable Content (WCAG 1.4)

Quick check — viewport tag: Search your HTML for user-scalable=no or maximum-scale=1. If found, remove these attributes. They prevent users from zooming — a WCAG 1.4.4 violation. Many older government CMS themes include this by default.

2. Operable: Users Must Be Able to Navigate

2.1 — Keyboard Accessible (WCAG 2.1)

2.2 — Enough Time (WCAG 2.2)

2.4 — Navigable (WCAG 2.4)

Most common government failure: Links with non-descriptive text. "Click here," "Learn more," and "Read more" links are WCAG 2.4.4 violations — screen reader users can't tell where they go. Fix: rewrite link text to describe the destination ("Download the 2025 Annual Report PDF").

3. Understandable: Content and Operation Must Be Clear

3.1 — Readable (WCAG 3.1)

3.2 — Predictable (WCAG 3.2)

3.3 — Input Assistance (WCAG 3.3)

4. Robust: Content Must Work with Assistive Technologies

4.1 — Compatible (WCAG 4.1)

The Most Common Violations Found in .Gov Sites

Based on our April 2026 scan of 38 government websites, these are the violations that appear most frequently — ranked by how often we encounter them:

ViolationWCAG CriterionFrequencyDifficulty to Fix
Links without discernible text (icon-only links)2.4.4 / 4.1.2Very commonLow
Images missing alt text1.1.1Very commonLow
Color contrast failures (text on backgrounds)1.4.3Very commonMedium
Missing or duplicate page titles2.4.2CommonLow
Form inputs without visible labels1.3.1 / 4.1.2CommonLow
Missing HTML lang attribute3.1.1CommonVery low
ARIA role ownership violations1.3.1CommonMedium
Missing skip navigation link2.4.1ModerateLow
Viewport scaling restricted1.4.4ModerateVery low
Keyboard focus not visible2.4.7ModerateLow
The good news: The most common violations are also the easiest to fix. Missing alt text, missing lang attributes, and viewport scaling restrictions are one-line HTML changes. Most government sites can improve their score significantly with a focused one-week remediation sprint.

How to Prioritize Your Remediation

With 12 months to the April 2027 deadline, the right approach is:

  1. Scan first — run an automated scan to understand your current score and violation list (accessalyze.com or axe browser extension)
  2. Fix critical violations in sprint 1 — missing alt text, missing lang attribute, viewport scaling, broken ARIA roles. These take hours, not weeks.
  3. Address color contrast in sprint 2 — requires design review but has high impact
  4. Keyboard and focus audit in sprint 3 — manual testing; can't be fully automated
  5. User testing with assistive technology — screen reader testing is required for full WCAG compliance
  6. Document your compliance — maintain an Accessibility Statement and remediation log

What the April 2027 Deadline Actually Requires

The DOJ's ADA Title II web accessibility rule (extended via IFR 2026-07663) requires WCAG 2.1 Level AA compliance for:

There are limited exceptions for archived web content, third-party content, content that is not under your control, and preexisting conventional electronic documents (pre-rule PDFs) if there's a hardship exemption. Your legal team should assess which exceptions apply to your specific situation.

Key distinction: WCAG 2.1 AA is the standard, but meeting it through automated scanning alone isn't sufficient. The DOJ expects a good-faith remediation effort that includes manual testing. A 100/100 automated score is a strong starting point, not a legal certification.

Preparing Your Compliance Documentation

Government entities should maintain:

Our $19 accessibility report generates a compliance summary document that includes your site's violation list, severity ratings, fix recommendations, and methodology documentation — suitable for your compliance file or for sharing with your IT oversight team.

Resources

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