Digital
Accessibility audit
Formal definition
In digital, Accessibility audit refers to an assurance process used for securing technical compliance, content governance, and robust data hygiene across digital applications.
What this actually means for you
Use Accessibility audit to guide live decisions: run automated and manual compliance checks, clean duplicate databases, and verify consent history, with ownership and reporting agreed before launches, integrations, and platform changes.
Example: In a live quarterly cycle, Accessibility audit is applied like this: the digital lead reviews accessibility compliance logs and resolves database validation warnings before routine audit schedules. The team then records the decision trail in evidence logs, findings summaries, and remediation actions.
Related guides and whitepapers
Read deeper guidance and implementation detail connected to this term.

A practical guide to UK charity website redesigns that move the dial: scope, governance, content, architecture and the decisions that avoid common regrets.

The practical digital basics every UK charity shop should have by 2026: EPOS, gift aid capture, stock visibility, online resale and reporting that holds up.

A practical guide to planning, shooting and editing charity video with a modern phone, free editing tools and a clear story spine. No production company required.

Structural choices, copy patterns and form decisions that lift conversion on charity appeal landing pages without losing the voice supporters came for.