Accessibility Statement
Last updated: 2026-05-14
WordyLab wants its word tools, puzzle-help pages, word lists, guides, and legal pages to be usable by as many people as possible. That includes visitors who use keyboards, screen readers, browser zoom, voice control, high-contrast settings, reduced-motion settings, or other assistive technologies.
Our accessibility goal is to follow the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2 at Level AA where those guidelines apply to WordyLab's content and features. WCAG is a widely used accessibility standard for making web content more perceivable, operable, understandable, and robust.
Current status
WordyLab has not completed a formal third-party accessibility audit. Based on current site review, the site includes several accessibility supports, and we are continuing to improve areas where interactive tools, dynamic results, and puzzle-style interfaces can create barriers.
Accessibility can depend on the page, device, browser, assistive technology, and the exact tool state being used. A page may be readable in its default state but still need improvement after filters, result lists, menus, or game-like controls are changed.
What WordyLab supports
- A skip link that lets keyboard users move directly to the main page content.
- Page structure built around headings, navigation, main content, and footer landmarks.
- Keyboard access for navigation, dropdown menus, tool controls, links, and buttons.
- Visible focus styles for interactive controls so the current keyboard position is easier to track.
- Responsive layouts that are intended to work across desktop, tablet, and mobile screen sizes.
- Text and interface contrast targets intended to keep ordinary reading and tool use comfortable.
- Labels, names, or supporting text for many inputs, buttons, forms, and icon-style controls.
- Status messaging on newsletter forms and many tool result areas where dynamic updates occur.
- Reduced-motion handling in many animated sections for visitors who prefer less motion.
Areas we are still improving
WordyLab includes interactive tools and puzzle-help pages that can change after a visitor types letters, applies filters, opens menus, or reveals answers. Those states need careful testing because the accessibility issue may not appear until the page is used in a specific way.
- Some generated results may need clearer announcements for screen reader users.
- Some game-like tiles, answer reveals, or animated elements may need stronger reduced-motion behavior.
- Some long result lists may need improved navigation, grouping, or summary text.
- Some older pages may need heading, spacing, label, or focus-order cleanup as they are refreshed.
- Some external links may lead to websites or services that WordyLab does not control.
Compatibility notes
WordyLab is designed for current versions of major browsers and common assistive technologies. Older browsers, unusual browser settings, blocked scripts, blocked fonts, aggressive content blockers, or unsupported devices may affect how some pages appear or behave.
If a tool does not work well with your assistive technology, please report the exact page and what happened. Reports about real use are often the fastest way to find issues that automated checks miss.
How to report an accessibility barrier
If you have trouble using WordyLab because of an accessibility barrier, email accessibilitywordylabcom or use the WordyLab contact page. We aim to review accessibility reports within 2 business days.
Accessibility reports are treated as product issues, not general feedback, especially when a barrier blocks someone from reading a page, using a tool, submitting a form, opening a menu, or reaching contact information.
What to include in a report
A clear report helps us reproduce the issue faster. If you can, please include:
- The page URL where the issue happened.
- The tool, section, button, link, form, or result area involved.
- What you expected to happen and what happened instead.
- Your browser, device type, and assistive technology, if relevant.
- Whether the issue happens every time or only after a specific action.
Ongoing review
WordyLab reviews accessibility as pages, tools, templates, and navigation change. We use a mix of code review, browser testing, keyboard checks, visual review, and issue reports to find problems.
When a page is updated, the goal is to preserve useful structure, readable contrast, keyboard access, understandable labels, and predictable interaction. Accessibility fixes may be released alongside content updates, design improvements, or tool maintenance.
Third-party links and content
WordyLab may link to external websites, puzzle publishers, dictionaries, app stores, merchants, or other resources. WordyLab does not control the accessibility of external websites after you leave WordyLab.
If a WordyLab page links to an external resource that creates a serious accessibility problem, you can still tell us. We may be able to clarify the link, add context, or point visitors to a better resource.
Contact
Accessibility questions and reports can be sent to accessibilitywordylabcom or through the WordyLab contact page.