Accessibility Statement
Last reviewed: April 2026
Our standard
This site was built for the autistic community. Accessibility is not a compliance exercise here. It is the brief. We are committed to meeting WCAG 2.1 AA guidelines across all pages, resources, and downloadable content including the toolkit and all campaign materials.
We know that accessibility means different things to different people. Autistic people, people with sensory sensitivities, people using screen readers, people on low bandwidth, people accessing this site in a second language, and people with cognitive, physical, or neurological differences are all part of this community. All of them should be able to use this site without barriers.
Visual and motor accessibility
We have designed this site with clear visual hierarchy, consistent navigation, and sufficient colour contrast meeting AA standards. All images have alt text. The site is navigable by keyboard. PDFs are formatted for screen reader compatibility.
Cognitive accessibility
We write in plain language throughout. We avoid jargon. We use clear headings, short paragraphs, and consistent page structures so that navigation is predictable. We do not use autoplay media, flashing content, or design patterns that create unnecessary cognitive load. Where content is complex we provide summaries.
The toolkit and downloadable resources
All toolkit resources are designed to meet accessibility standards. Templates are built with sufficient contrast, readable fonts, and alt text fields. If you find a resource that does not meet this standard, tell us and we will fix it.
Third party content
Some pages on this site include embedded content from external platforms including YouTube, social media, and third party tools. We cannot guarantee that third party content meets our accessibility standard. Where we are aware of a gap we will note it alongside the content.
What we are still working on
We are not perfect. Some older content may not yet meet our full standard. We are working through it systematically and we welcome being told when something does not work.
If you encounter a barrier
Contact us at hello@autisticprideday.org and tell us what you were trying to do and what got in the way. We will respond within five business days and prioritise the fix.
You do not need to justify your request or explain your disability. You encountered a barrier. That is enough.
Accountability
This statement is reviewed annually or following any significant change to the site. The campaign director holds accountability for accessibility standards across all digital properties. If you raise an issue and we have not resolved it to your satisfaction, come back to us. We would rather hear from you again than have you give up on the site.