Accessibility

Built to be read by every visitor.

The standards we work to, the gaps we know about, and the way to tell us about the ones we have missed. The page is short on purpose.

Last updated · 12 June 2026

The commitment

Everonia targets conformance with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) version 2.2 at level AA, in line with the European Accessibility Act and the Public Sector Bodies Accessibility Directive that frames it. The same target covers visitors in the United Kingdom, Australia, and elsewhere.

Where the site is today

The build runs automated accessibility checks on every pull request through Lighthouse and axe. Manual review covers keyboard navigation, screen-reader landmark structure, colour contrast against the brand palette, and motion-reduced rendering for the visitors whose system preferences ask for less motion.

Heading order, alt text on every image, focus-visible states on every interactive element, ARIA roles on the consent banner and the preferences modal, and a respect for prefers-reduced-motion are in place across the site.

What we have not yet fixed

Long-form blog and plan-your-trip articles rendered from MDX are not yet audited at the WCAG 2.2 AAA reading-level criterion; the prose register is conversational rather than technical, and that is a stylistic call we are not changing. The cinematic full-screen hero on the home page uses a Ken Burns slow-zoom that the reduced-motion media query already disables; if your browser does not advertise that preference and the motion bothers you, write and tell us.

If your assistive technology is reading any element on the site as something other than what it visibly is, that is a defect on our side, not yours.

Reporting an issue

Email hello@everonia.com with a short note about what you tried to do, what happened instead, the page you were on, and the assistive technology you were using. We answer within five business days and tell you when the fix will ship.

If anything is unclear

Write to us and we will rewrite it.

Plain language is the point. If a line on these pages does not read clearly, the right answer is to rewrite the line, not to ask you to read it again.

Accessibility | Everonia