This accessibility statement covers the MoonSauce website, which targets WCAG 2.2 Level AA compliance and is tested throughout development, not bolted on at the end. We build with semantic HTML, full keyboard operability, visible focus states, and color contrast that clears AA. If you hit a barrier, email admin@moonsauceagency.com with the page and the issue, and we will respond and prioritize a fix.
Our target: WCAG 2.2 Level AA
We aim to meet the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2 at Level AA, the same bar most accessibility laws and procurement standards point to. In plain terms, Level AA means the site should work for people using screen readers, keyboard-only navigation, magnification, voice control, and reduced-motion settings, without anyone needing a workaround.
A few things AA requires, so this is not just a logo on a page:
- Text and meaningful UI elements meet a 4.5:1 contrast ratio (3:1 for large text), so low-vision and bright-sunlight readers can still read it.
- Every interactive element is reachable and operable by keyboard alone, in a logical order, with a focus indicator you can see.
- Content does not rely on color alone to convey meaning, since roughly 1 in 12 men has some form of color vision deficiency.
- Images carry alt text, form fields carry labels, and the page structure makes sense when read top to bottom by assistive tech.
We treat AA as a baseline, not a ceiling, and we hold the same standard on the websites we build for clients. Accessibility and good technical SEO pull in the same direction: clean semantic markup, sensible heading order, and descriptive alt text help screen readers and search crawlers read a page the same way.
How we test
Accessibility is not a one-time audit you frame and forget. We test as we build, on the theory that catching a missing label in a component is cheap and retrofitting one across forty pages is not.
- Keyboard pass. We tab through every page and confirm nothing is unreachable, nothing is trapped, and the focus order matches the visual order.
- Screen reader checks. We review pages against common screen reader behavior to confirm headings, links, and form fields announce something useful, not "button button button."
- Contrast and color. We check color pairings against the AA ratios above and confirm nothing depends on color alone to make sense.
- Reduced motion. We respect the operating-system reduced-motion preference, so animations calm down for anyone who needs them to.
- Automated scans plus human review. Automated tooling catches the obvious misses; a human catches the ones tooling cannot, like alt text that technically exists but says "image123.jpg."
Honest caveat: targeting WCAG 2.2 AA is not the same as a third-party certified audit, and no site is ever permanently "done." Browsers, assistive tech, and our own pages all change. That is exactly why we keep a reporting channel open instead of declaring victory.
Found a barrier this accessibility statement missed? Tell us.
If anything here is hard to use, we want to hear it, and we would rather you flag it than quietly leave. Email admin@moonsauceagency.com with the URL of the page and a short description of the problem (what you were trying to do, what got in the way, and what you were using to do it, if you know). You can also reach us through our contact page.
We acknowledge reports, look into them, and prioritize a fix based on how much it blocks. There is no form to wrestle with and no ticket portal; a plain email gets to a human who can act on it. This is the same straight-with-you posture we take across the rest of the business, which you can read more about in what to expect when you work with us.