Accessibility Statement

Last updated: 22 April 2026

Our Commitment

Good.You is committed to ensuring digital accessibility for people with disabilities. We believe that wellness information and tools should be accessible to everyone, regardless of ability, technology, or circumstance. We continually work to improve the user experience for all visitors.

Accessibility is not a checkbox — it is an ongoing design principle. If something does not work for you, we want to know and we will act on it.

Standards We Follow

We aim to conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA. WCAG is the internationally recognised standard for web accessibility, developed by the W3C.

Perceivable

Information and UI components must be presentable to users in ways they can perceive — including via screen readers and audio descriptions.

Operable

UI components and navigation must be operable — all functionality must be available from a keyboard, not just a mouse.

Understandable

Information and operation of the UI must be understandable — readable, predictable, and with clear error messages.

Robust

Content must be robust enough to be interpreted reliably by a wide variety of assistive technologies.

Measures We've Taken

The following accessibility features are implemented across Good.You:

Area What We've Done Status
Colour contrast All body text meets WCAG 4.5:1 minimum contrast ratio against its background Implemented
Keyboard navigation All interactive elements (links, buttons, forms) are reachable and operable via keyboard Implemented
Focus indicators Visible focus rings on all focusable elements for keyboard users Implemented
Semantic HTML Proper heading hierarchy (h1 → h6), landmark regions, and list structures throughout Implemented
ARIA labels Navigation, icons, and interactive widgets use appropriate ARIA roles and labels Implemented
Alt text All meaningful images include descriptive alt text; decorative images use empty alt Implemented
Responsive design All pages adapt correctly from 320px to 1920px screen width Implemented
Form error messages All form validation errors are described in text, not colour alone Implemented
Skip navigation A skip-to-main-content link is provided for keyboard and screen reader users In progress
Dark mode support Respecting prefers-color-scheme for users who prefer reduced brightness Planned

Conformance Status

Good.You is partially conformant with WCAG 2.1 Level AA. Partially conformant means that some parts of the content do not yet fully conform to the accessibility standard.

35+

Criteria met

3

In progress

2

Planned

Known Limitations

We are transparent about areas where we are still improving:

  • ! Some legacy content pages may not include skip-to-main-content links — we are rolling these out across all templates.
  • ! Chart.js data visualisations (used in some tool pages) include text summaries and data tables as alternatives, but the charts themselves may not be fully accessible to screen reader users. We are investigating accessible chart libraries.
  • ! Some third-party embedded content (e.g. newsletter subscription widgets) may not fully conform to our accessibility standards, as their accessibility is outside our direct control.

Assistive Technology Compatibility

Good.You is designed to be compatible with the following assistive technologies:

Screen readers

NVDA (Windows), JAWS (Windows), VoiceOver (macOS/iOS), TalkBack (Android)

Keyboard-only navigation

Full site navigation and form submission via keyboard alone

Browser zoom

Content reflows correctly up to 400% zoom without horizontal scrolling

High contrast mode

Compatible with Windows High Contrast mode and browser accessibility settings

Accessibility Feedback

If you experience any accessibility barriers on Good.You, please contact us. We take all accessibility reports seriously and aim to respond within 5 business days.

If you are not satisfied with our response, you may wish to contact your national accessibility authority (e.g. the Equality and Human Rights Commission in the UK, or the Access Board in the US).

Report an Accessibility Issue →