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WCAG audit tool for agencies
If you found this page searching "WCAG audit tool for agencies," you're probably one of three people: a web agency owner who just got an EAA or ADA letter forwarded from a client, a freelance developer maintaining a dozen client sites who wants to get ahead of that letter, or an accessibility consultant tired of writing the same remediation report by hand every time.
What most "WCAG audit tools" actually give you
A single-site scan, a pass/fail score, and a PDF. Useful for one site, once. None of that helps when you maintain 15 client sites, when a client asks "can you prove we're taking this seriously," or when a fix you shipped last month quietly regresses because someone reverted a component.
What an agency actually needs
- Multi-client, multi-site by default. One workspace, every client site, not one report per purchase.
- A workflow, not a score. Findings move through
open → in progress → fixed, pending verification → verified fixed, with an audit trail of who did what and when. - Verification, not self-reporting. A rescan — not a checkbox — confirms a fix actually landed, and catches regressions automatically.
- Evidence you can hand to a client or, if it comes to it, a lawyer. Remediation reports, an accessibility statement, and a VPAT draft, generated from the same audit trail — not written from scratch under deadline pressure.
That's the shape Gangway is built around: scan → prioritized findings → fix workflow → rescan verification → documents. $29–199/mo, flat, no per-client seats, three-tier plan built for agency headcount, not enterprise procurement.
What Gangway does not do
It does not certify your site as "compliant," and neither does any other automated tool — automated testing reliably catches roughly 30–40% of WCAG success criteria; the rest need a human pass (keyboard walkthroughs, screen-reader testing, plain-language review). Gangway documents a good-faith remediation effort. That's a deliberate, permanent line — see what Gangway is not on the homepage, and the FTC's 2023 action against accessiBe for exactly the opposite claim.
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