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Accessibility is often treated as a checkbox—something tacked on at the end to avoid legal trouble. But let’s be clear: accessible design is good design. Full stop.

Roughly 1 in 4 adults in the U.S. live with a disability. That’s not a niche—it’s millions of people. And accessibility doesn’t only benefit them. Closed captions help people in noisy environments. High-contrast colors help everyone in sunlight. Keyboard nav is faster for power users.

When we design with inclusion in mind, everyone wins.

Simple ways to start:

  • Use semantic HTML and ARIA roles

  • Provide clear focus states and tab order

  • Ensure color contrast meets WCAG standards

  • Label your form inputs properly

  • Write alt text that actually describes content

Accessibility isn’t one person’s job. It’s a team mindset—from content creators and designers to devs and QA. If we all think about inclusion from the start, we’ll stop treating accessibility like a burden and start seeing it for what it is: the right thing to do.