This website is run by Citizens Advice. We want as many
people as possible to be able to use this website. You
should be able to:
-
easily understand our content
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view images and multimedia - including videos,
animations and audio
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read text with good colour contrast
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skip to main content using a keyboard
How accessible this website is
We know parts of this website aren’t fully accessible, for
example:
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some pages have poor colour contrast
-
some labels and error messages aren’t clear what they
relate to
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some buttons aren’t correctly identified
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some pages and forms don’t work well when zoomed in
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some pages and forms can’t be accessed or navigated with
a keyboard
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some links don’t have useful text or you can only tell
they’re links because of what colour they are
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navigation isn’t consistent
Feedback and contact information
Enforcement procedure
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) is
responsible for enforcing the Public Sector Bodies (Websites
and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility Regulations
2018 (the ‘accessibility regulations’). If you’re not happy
with how we respond to your complaint, contact
the Equality Advisory and Support Service (EASS).
Contacting us by phone or visiting us in person
We provide a textphone service for people who can’t hear or
speak on the phone. You can find
out more about textphone on the Relay UK
website.
You can check if we can arrange a British Sign
Language (BSL) interpreter before your visit.
Technical information about this website’s accessibility
Citizens Advice is committed to making its website
accessible, in accordance with the Public Sector Bodies
(Websites and Mobile Applications) (No. 2) Accessibility
Regulations 2018.
Compliance status
This website is partially compliant with the Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines version 2.1 AA
standard, due to the non-compliances listed below.
Non-accessible content
The content listed in this section is non-accessible for the
following reasons.
Non-compliance with the accessibility regulations
Colour
We fail guideline ‘1.4 Distinguishable’ of the WCAG 2.1 AA
standard because:
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this website doesn’t meet the contrast requirement of
3:1 against a white background for interactive elements
or form controls
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some pages use colour to show what they mean
We’re redesigning our website and will be utilizing these in
the new design
Forms
We fail guidelines ‘1.3 Adaptable’, ‘2.1 Keyboard
accessible’, ‘2.4 Navigable’ and ‘3.3 Input assistance’ of
the WCAG 2.1 AA standards because:
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many of the forms can’t be used with just a keyboard or
keyboard interface
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some form fields are missing labels which can make it
difficult to tell which field to complete
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dynamic content isn’t properly marked up so assistive
technology users won’t know the content has changed
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error messages don’t tell people using assistive
technology if there’s an error
In 2022, we’ll start to review how all forms and interactive
elements are implemented.
We’re redesigning our website and will start to use these
designs in early 2022
Navigation
We fail guideline ‘1.4 Distinguishable’ of the WCAG 2.1 AA
standards because:
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the navigation bar text reflows when zooming in on text
on old pages, but the blue bar doesn’t get bigger and
makes the text unreadable
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The menu doesn't adapt to being seen on different screen
sizes
We’ll use new navigation by mid 2022
Keyboard access
We fail guidelines ‘2.1 Keyboard accessible’ and ‘2.4
Navigable’ of the WCAG 2.1 AA standards because:
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several of the tools can’t be accessed or navigated with
the keyboard
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some pages have buttons with incorrect markup that
affects how they work with assistive technology
We’ll make the navigation and buttons accessible by mid 2022
1. Accessibility checks for all development releases
We’ll check all new content, designs and development meets
accessibility standards.
2. Regular quality assurance (QA) testing with an
accessibility focus
As we design, build and update the site, we will regularly
do audits and QA testing to make sure we don’t add new
barriers.
3. Including disabled people and people with long term
health conditions in every round of research
During the early stages of development, we’ll make sure
people with access needs are included in the research.
We’ll run usability testing with advisers and volunteers who
work for Citizens Advice and we’ll use our Disability
Network Group to recruit participants.
When we recruit external participants for usability testing,
we’ll make sure people with access needs are included in
this.