These nifty accessibility bookmarklets perform various accessibility audit functions & will come in handy during an accessibility automation evaluation. They can also be deployed on mobile browsers to test responsive design.

WAI-ARIA usage

Add the WAI-ARIA usage bookmarklet to evaluate document conformance requirements for use of ARIA attributes in HTML and allowed ARIA roles, states, and properties.

Sa11y – accessibility quality assurance

Sa11y works as a simple in-page checker that is designed to be easily customized and integrated into any content management system (CMS) to facilitate good accessibility practices. Sa11y works best in a templated CMS environment, although can also work as a bookmarklet. Sa11y is not a comprehensive code analysis tool.

1.4.12 Text Spacing Bookmarklet by DylanDarrell

I wrote a bookmarklet for testing WCAG 2.1 S.C. 1.4.12 Text Spacing because the existing ones don’t always work well with CSS as JS

Document Active Element Bookmarklet

Document Active Element (DAE) is a JavaScript bookmarklet intended to help you more easily identify where the activeElement is on your screen.

LogFocus – handy Bookmarklet for Keyboard Accessibility testing

Offering usability for Users without Mouse is one of the biggest and most important Steps when building accessible Websites. While testing for Keyboard Accessibility you might find yourself very often in Situations like “Where is my Cursor?” or “What Element has the Focus right now?”. Especially when Elements get moved offscreen things might end up confusing.

h123 – An bookmarklet that shows headings like a screenreader

See the headings like a screenreader!

ASLint –Accessibility testing tool Verify accessibility of your content in real-time, including Single Page Applications.

Review results and determine the impact on the business.

Does not send content or data externally, so can be used for internal-only purposes.

Tests can be run asynchronously (without blocking the UI) or synchronously.

Provides code snippet to add to build pipeline (e.g. for automation tests) or developer console, or can run as a bookmarklet.

Easy locating issues on the page from the results using element detector or XPath

Color contrast recommendations

a11y checker

Identifies accessibility issues in HTML markup.

Deque Bookmarklet that allows you to validate the full DOM HTML

This bookmarklet uses the W3C HTML Validator service, with several advantages (and one noteworthy disadvantage; see “important note” below) over the W3C’s online form. The bookmarklet: Allows you to validate the page you’re currently on from within your browser

Allows you to validate password-protected pages

Allows you to validate local files and localhost files

Captures the full DOM, after JavaScript is applied, not just the raw source code (especially useful for single-page apps and dynamic content)

Allows you to validate different states of a web page (with modals activated or not, with form error messages on the screen or not, with regions expanded or not, with custom controls activated or not, etc.). To do this, get the page to the state you want, and validate with the bookmarklet, and repeat on the same page as many times as necessary to validate all the states. Important note: This bookmarklet will NOT check the raw HTML. This is both a feature and a “bug.” It’s a feature in the sense that we do need to check the end result after JavaScript is applied, which this bookmarklet does. It’s a bug in the sense that it can’t evaluate the HTML before the browser applies basic DOM fixes. Ideally, you would validate both the final DOM with the bookmarklet (for dynamic content), and the HTML from the raw source code with the W3C online tool (for pre-DOM content).

Safari VoiceOver Helper Bookmarklet

This bookmarklet hides the content of the page, and shows a quick guide to using VoiceOver. This does not replace a professional accessibility audit, or user research with people who have access needs. It’s designed to help you learn how to use the basics of VoiceOver, which can help you design and build your service to better meet the needs of screen-reader users.

Reading Order Bookmarklet by Adrian Roselli

3 Simple Design Bookmarklets by Thomas Park

Grayscale to gauge contrast between light and dark, rather than by colors…Blurry to examine the composition of colors…Upside-down to get a fresh perspective on composition and balance…” Try using the Gray one to check for instances of color alone.

Contrast analysis widget By Ada Rose Edwards

The Screen Curtain Bookmarklet

The Screen Curtain Bookmarklet allows engineers, testers, educators, and students to temporarily obscure web technologies while using screen readers in order to simulate the experience of using such technologies without sight. This is analogous to the Screen Curtain mode provided on iPhone and iPad devices when using VoiceOver to experience the same. This bookmarklet should be used in combination with JAWS or NVDA on Windows when testing the non-sighted experience of typical screen reader users.

Readability Bookmarklet by Greg Kraus.

“This tool will show you how readable selected text is on a page. The readability guidelines are based on WCAG 2 Level AAA Conformance. Note, there is no readability requirement for WCAG 2, Level AA Conformance. The results are based on six tests…”.

Focus Order Favlet by Level Access

ANDI – Accessibility Testing Tool

ANDI is a “favelet” or “bookmarklet” that will: Provide automated detection of accessibility issues

Reveal what a screen reader should say for interactive elements

Give practical suggestions to improve accessibility and check 508 compliance ANDI is like having an accessibility expert at your side, helping you make your web pages more accessible.Use it during development or testing.Whether your knowledge of accessibility is vast or you’re just getting started,you, your product, your end users will benefit from the guidance ANDI provides.

What has focus? by Scott Vinkle.

“When something recieves keyboard focus via Tab key, the current element will be logged to the JavaScript console so you can determine which element currently has focus! This will come in handy when debugging accessibility issues with somebody else’s code or a third-party library.”.

Accessibility Bookmarklets by The Paciello Group

A couple of Accessibility bookmarklets developed & shared by “The Paciello Group”

REVENGE.CSS

Revenge.css is a CSS bookmarklet that reports bad html using pseudo content. If the page you use it with has malformed links, deprecated attributes, s inside inline elements, inaccessible buttons, badly nested sections or other errors, you’ll see some ugly, pink errors written in nobody’s favourite font: Comic Sans.

text spacing bookmarklet by Steve Faulkner

WCAG 2.0 Parsing Validation Tools by Dotjay

NerdeFocus Bookmarklet

NerdeFocus is a quick way to debug focus problems when testing a page for accessibility issues. When activated, it will animate and accentuate the focus ring and display the CSS selector of the currently focused item. NerdeFocus will alert you when there is a focus reset, and when the focus indicator is hidden or off-screen.

HTML_CodeSniffer by Squiz

Checks a HTML document and detects violations of a defined coding standard. Comes with standards that cover the three conformance levels of WCAG 2.0 and the U.S. Section 508 legislation. An auditor interface is provided by a bookmarklet to let you try out these accessibility checks on any web page.

Accessibility Bookmarklets by Pixo & Disability Resources and Educational Services

Accessibility of web pages can be hard to observe. These bookmarklets help web developers and designers see the “big picture” regarding web accessibility.

The bookmarklets do this by: Making otherwise hidden accessibility features on web pages (like ARIA landmarks, roles, labels and descriptions and alternative text for non-text objects) more visible

Showing whether HTML markup (like lists, headings, label elements, and appropriate landmark roles) is used with proper semantics for accessibility

Flagging elements or regions on web pages where information that could improve accessibility (like elements not contained in landmarks, image alt text or long descriptions, list accessible names.

LogFocus – handy Bookmarklet for Keyboard Accessibility testing

Offering usability for Users without Mouse is one of the biggest and most important Steps when building accessible Websites. While testing for Keyboard Accessibility you might find yourself very often in Situations like “Where is my Cursor?” or “What Element has the Focus right now?”. Especially when Elements get moved offscreen things might end up confusing. To install the Bookmarklet simply drag the following Link into your Bookmarks.

here you can run it on every Page by simply clicking on it.

Firefocus

Firefocus is a simple Firebug extension that tracks the element that currently has focus. Its primary purpose is to assist the debugging of advanced keyboard implementations without having to rely on platform specific tools such as MSAA Inspect.

Favelets For The Validator

Favelets are small snippets of JavaScript embedded in a Bookmark URL that allow Bookmarks in browsers to do various advanced things. More Favelets can be found at Favelets.com

Diagnostic.css Bookmarklet

What it Tests For Deprecated elements

Deprecated and/ or presentational attributes

Inline frames without title attributes

Server-side image maps

Images without alt attributes

.Image buttons without alt attributes

Image Map area elements without alt attributes

Items with an img role without aria labels

Images without a valid src attribute

Links without a valid hypertext reference

Fieldsets without legends

Label elements without for attributes

Invalid dir attribute values

Empty TITLE elements

Implicit headings

Meta refresh

Missing lang attribute on the HTML element

Use of accesskey attributes

Empty table header cells

Web Evaluation Tools Bookmarklet by NC State University

This set of tools allows you to check for several aspects of Web accessibility that other tools do not. It is not designed to replace any other tools, but rather to supplement them. This set of tools will allow you to: View page headings, including hidden label text

View ARIA Landmarks, plus any accompanying aria-label or aria-labelledby text

View internal links, both their source and their target ◦If the target link does not have an explicit tabindex value set, an asterisk will appear next to the link count and the target link will indicate it as well

View any tabindex values

View any ARIA roles (other than landmarks) and ARIA attributes

Force the visual keyboard focus to always be seen (useful for keyboard testing.

View any language attributes and what parts of the page they apply to.

Nu Markup Validation Service Bookmarklets by The Paciello Group

This is the basic “Validate Page” Bookmarklet. It simply submits the URL for the currently viewed page to the Nu Markup Validation Service for processing. Results appear in the same window.Validate Page (New Window)Like the last Bookmarklet, this also submits the URL of the current page to the Nu Markup Validation Service for processing, but this version will show the results in a new window (tab).Validate Page…Puts up a dialog with a text entry field where you can type in the URL of a page you would like to Validate. The results appear in the current window.Validate Page… (New Window)Same as above but shows results in a new window (tab).

Bookmarklets for accessibility testing by Zomigi

Zomigi created two simple bookmarklets to reveal whether CSS background images are being used in an inaccessible way on a page. Use them yourself, or help me learn how to improve them.

Paul J Adam Bookmarklets

Paul J Adam accessibility Evangelist has created a set of bookmarklets that will help identify few accessibility bugs easily. These bookmarklets also work great on mobile web with both Chrome & Firefox.

tota11y – an accessibility visualization toolkit

The process of testing for accessibility (a11y) is often tedious and confusing. In many cases, developers must have some prior accessibility knowledge in order to make sense of the results.

Instead, tota11y aims to reduce this barrier of entry by helping visualize accessibility violations (and successes), while educating on best practices.

a11y.css

Pronounced « Alix ». Because it’s fun.

This CSS file intends to warn developers about possible risks and mistakes that exist in HTML code. It can also be used to roughly evaluate a site’s quality by simply including it as an external stylesheet.If you want to get involved in this project, be sure to take a look at its wiki.

Find aria-hidden with this bookmarklet by Ted Drake

CSS Bookmarklets by Adrian Roselli

ATBAR

ATbar has been created as an open-source, cross-browser toolbar to help users customise the way they view and interact with web pages. The concept behind ATbar is simple: One toolbar to provide all of the functionality you would usually achieve through the use of different settings or products.

ARIA Label Bookmarklet

I love simple bookmarklets that visualize coding patterns. I was working on a project today and wanted to verify that aria-labels were sufficiently descriptive. So I put together this quick bookmarklet.

Neutered Link Bookmarklet

This bookmarklet will place a big red border around links that do not include an href attribute. Simply drag the link to your browser’s bookmark bar and then click it when you want to test a page. It will draw a red border around any links that do not have an href attribute.

Accessibility Bookmarklets

A curated list of accessibility bookmarklets by Ted Drake

Complex Table Inspector

Developers are encouraged to use summary, headers, axis, scope, and abbr for complex data tables to aid usability and accessibility. To help developers determine if they’ve used those features correctly, I’ve created a complex table inspector bookmark that reveals the hidden information.

Touch Bookmarklet

Simulate touch events (swipe, rotate, pinch) with a mouse, for fun and profit.

44×44 Pixel Cursor Bookmarklet

Drag the following link to your Bookmarks bar to create a bookmarklet to change your cursor to 44×44 pixels square for testing WCAG Target Size and Pointer Target Spacing requirements Target Size and 2.5.5