Definition
A structured review of whether a website or app works for users with disabilities.
In practical UX and product design work, accessibility audit matters when it helps a team make a clearer decision, improve a measurable behaviour or explain an experience without ambiguity.
Origin
The term became common in UX and product design because teams needed a shared way to describe accessibility audit and decide who owns it. At Makreate, the useful version of the term is the one tied to a real page, product, campaign, brand asset or customer journey.
How it works
- Define the user or buyer behaviour affected by accessibility audit.
- Find where that behaviour shows up in the page, product, campaign or brand system.
- Measure the current baseline before changing the experience.
- Improve one high-impact element, then compare results against the baseline.
When to use it
Use it when
- Use accessibility audit when it clarifies a real decision in strategy, design, development or growth.
- Use it when the team needs a shared name for a repeated pattern, risk or metric.
- Use it when improving the experience can be measured through behaviour or feedback.
Skip it when
- Skip it when the term is being used only to make a simple idea sound more complex.
- Skip it when there is no owner, no decision and no measurable change attached to it.
- Skip it when a plain customer-facing explanation would be clearer for the audience.
Key metrics
- Task success rate
- Conversion rate
- Time on task
- Drop-off rate
- Customer feedback
Examples
- A UX and product design team may audit accessibility audit before changing a page, product flow or campaign.
- Accessibility Audit can affect conversion, trust, usability, lead quality or brand recognition depending on where it appears.
- Good accessibility audit work makes the next decision clearer for both the customer and the team shipping the experience.
In practice at Makreate
Makreate treats accessibility audit as a working concept, not a glossary label. We connect it to the service, page, product, campaign or brand decision where it can improve measurable outcomes.
UX Design →Common mistakes
- Using accessibility audit as a label without defining the business or user outcome it should improve.
- Optimising the visible surface while ignoring the journey, context or measurement around it.
- Changing too many variables at once, making it hard to know what actually worked.
Frequently asked
What does Accessibility Audit mean?
Accessibility Audit means a structured review of whether a website or app works for users with disabilities. In practice, it is useful when the team can connect it to a page, product, campaign or brand decision.
Why does Accessibility Audit matter?
Accessibility Audit matters because it can change how quickly people understand an offer, complete a task, trust a brand or move through a funnel.
How does Makreate use accessibility audit?
Makreate uses accessibility audit inside ux design work to turn terminology into practical decisions, measurable improvements and cleaner execution.