Accessibility

A website that should be as usable as possible

TukForce AI wants the website to be accessible for people using a keyboard, screen reader, zoom, reduced-motion settings or older hardware.

Measures

What is already in place

Semantic structure

The site uses real HTML landmarks, headings, links and buttons so keyboard and screen reader use remains logical.

Keyboard and focus

Interactive elements are reachable by keyboard and have a visible focus style. A skip link leads directly to the main content.

Language and navigation

Pages use the correct language code and the main and footer navigation have accessible labels.

Reduced motion

Animations are subtle and respect prefers-reduced-motion for visitors who need less movement.

Calm technology

No autoplay, pop-ups, trackers or heavy scripts that unnecessarily burden assistive technology or older devices.

Forms

The contact form uses labels for fields and deliberately opens an email draft instead of silently sending data to a server.

Status

No final claim, active improvement

Automated checks such as Lighthouse are useful, but they do not replace manual testing with real assistive technology.

The site was recently tested with a Lighthouse Accessibility score of 100. That does not mean every use case is perfect; it does show that the technical baseline is strong.

Planned next steps: manual keyboard testing, screen reader checks with NVDA/Firefox and VoiceOver/Safari, and manual contrast checks per theme.

If you run into an issue, email info@tukforce.com.

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