The first starting point for many people and organizations when building a website is drag-and-drop or templated site builders like Wix, Squarespace, and Weebly. Although these tools often provide templates that take care of the visual design and functional aspects of building a site, they often don’t consider other business requirements, like accessibility.

If you’re looking to launch an improved website in 2022, now’s the time to investigate platform options and find the right website builder for your organization, without sacrificing accessibility, and the market growth and content engagement benefits that come with a more accessible website.


Our comparison

We looked at each of the major website builders along with other popular website and content management platforms to compare them across a range of accessibility factors needed for meeting standards like WCAG 2.X, and ranked them against each other to see which ones made it the easiest to build an accessible website effectively.

Accessibility scoring legend

  • Overall score 1 out of 5
    does not support most accessibility considerations
  • Overall score 2 out of 5
    supports some accessibility considerations
  • Overall score 3 out of 5
    accessibility considerations can be met, but it will take work
  • Overall score 4 out of 5
    almost out-of-the-box accessibility

Squarespace accessibility

Squarespace accessibility has an overall score of 4 out of 5
Squarespace requires a moderate degree of custom code, depending on the template.

  • Headings Yes

  • Landmarks Partial

  • Skip navigation Yes

  • Tab index Yes

  • Visible focus ring Yes

  • ARIA labels Partial

  • Alt tags Yes

 

Wix accessibility

Wix accessibility has an overall score of 3.5 out of 5
Wix requires custom code and some setting changes.

  • Headings Yes

  • Landmarks Yes

  • Skip navigation Yes

  • Tab index Yes

  • Visible focus ring Yes

  • ARIA labels Partial

  • Alt tags Yes


GoDaddy accessibility

GoDaddy accessibility has an overall score of 2 out of 5
GoDaddy’s template maker does not provide accessibility settings and does not allow for custom code.

  • Headings Yes

  • Landmarks Yes

  • Skip navigation No

  • Tab index Partial

  • Visible focus ring Yes

  • ARIA labels No

  • Alt tags Yes


EditorX accessibility

EditorX accessibility has an overall score of 2 out of 5
Accessibility is not fully possible within the current EditorX system.

  • Headings Yes

  • Landmarks Partial

  • Skip navigation No

  • Tab index Partial

  • Visible focus ring Yes

  • ARIA labels No

  • Alt tags Yes

 

Weebly accessibility

Weebly accessibility has an overall score of 3 out of 5
Weebly requires a high degree of custom code.

  • Headings Partial

  • Landmarks Custom

  • Skip navigation Custom

  • Tab index Partial

  • Visible focus ring Yes

  • ARIA labels Custom

  • Alt tags Yes

 

Webflow accessibility

Webflow accessibility has an overall score of 4 out of 5
Implementation with Webflow is straightforward, but requires some code knowledge.

  • Headings Yes

  • Landmarks Yes

  • Skip navigation Custom

  • Tab index Yes

  • Visible focus ring Yes

  • ARIA labels Yes

  • Alt tags Yes

 

WordPress accessibility

WordPress accessibility has an overall score of 3 out of 5
Wordpress requires extensive custom code, but all of the required items for accessibility are possible.

  • Headings Custom

  • Landmarks Custom

  • Skip navigation Custom

  • Tab index Custom

  • Visible focus ring Custom

  • ARIA labels Custom

  • Alt tags Custom

Drupal accessibility

Drupal accessibility has an overall score of 3 out of 5
Like WordPress, Drupal requires extensive custom code, but all of the required items for accessibility are possible.

  • Headings Custom

  • Landmarks Custom

  • Skip navigation Custom

  • Tab index Custom

  • Visible focus ring Custom

  • ARIA labels Custom

  • Alt tags Custom

Joomla accessibility

Joomla accessibility has an overall score of 3 out of 5
Like WordPress/Drupal, Joomla requires extensive custom code, but all of the required items for accessibility are possible.

  • Headings Custom

  • Landmarks Custom

  • Skip navigation Custom

  • Tab index Custom

  • Visible focus ring Custom

  • ARIA labels Custom

  • Alt tags Custom

Headless CMS accessibility

Headless CMS accessibility has an overall score of 3.5 out of 5
A Headless CMS requires extensive custom code, but all of the required items for accessibility are possible and the system is easier to use for advanced accessibility items.

  • Headings Custom

  • Landmarks Custom

  • Skip navigation Custom

  • Tab index Custom

  • Visible focus ring Custom

  • ARIA labels Custom

  • Alt tags Custom


The winners

Squarespace for business owners

Squarespace is the most out-of-the-box accessibility-ready platform, and unlike competitors, does not require a lot of extra work on the part of someone setting up a site to enable accessibility features. These factors make it a great fit for business owners who want to get started with an accessible website without as much design or development time required.

We’d like to acknowledge Squarespace’s improvement in the last year, going from missing many features to being a solid platform for accessible templates. We’re pleased to be able to recommend Squarespace as a platform option for the first time.

Webflow for designers

Webflow is the best we tested out of all no-code website builders, with ease of use, built-in accessibility features, and customizability all at your disposal when creating a more accessible website.

Headless CMS for developers

A headless CMS such as Contentful, Ghost, Netlify, Sanity, Storyblok, or Strapi is an excellent choice in cases where you are working with a capable developer. A headless CMS offers advanced customizability for any and all accessibility needs, and is a blank slate full of possibilities for usability, design, and accessibility across your website.


An as-is template isn’t necessarily enough to be accessible

Although several of these platforms have taken the time to enhance their platforms’ accessibility, it’s typically more complicated to ensure your site is compliant when using one of these platforms.

For example, to make content on your site accessible, you’ll want to make sure that you have features like a skip navigation link, landmarks on the page for screen readers, and appropriate ARIA labels when needed.

Some of these features are not available on these platforms. When they are available, it may take some manual work to set them up, and your development team may not have all the answers.

If you need help navigating these standards in order to deliver an accessible website that opens up access to market and improves content engagement for all of your customers, get in touch.


Our accessibility-focused approach

By focusing on making your site accessible across content, design, and development requirements right from the start, and providing resources to your team to continue these efforts longer term, our approach helps save your team from costly rework and retrofitting your site later while guiding you towards maintaining your accessibility objectives with every content update.

When a site is built with this approach, you can focus on maintaining your site’s accessibility and continually improving other areas of your website without needing to spend time fixing larger accessibility issues across your whole website.


Looking for additional support on making a more usable, accessible, and inclusive website?

Get started with our Essential Website Audit to uncover issues with your current website, or get in touch to learn more about our accessible website design services.

Get in touch