Accessibility — Clearance London Overview
Clearance London Accessibility Commitment
Accessibility Statement for Clearance London
Clearance London is committed to making our online presence and services accessible to as many people as possible, including those with disabilities. This statement describes our approach to accessibility, the standards we aim to meet, and the features we provide to support people who use assistive technologies. We recognise that accessibility is an ongoing process and remain dedicated to continuous improvement across clearance in London operations and content.
We design and update content with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 at the AA level in mind. Where full conformance is not immediately achievable, we document known limitations and prioritise fixes. Our work on London clearance services focuses on practical accessibility: semantic HTML, correct heading structure, and clear navigation to help everyone find information quickly.
To support screen-reader users, pages are structured with proper landmarks, descriptive headings, and ARIA where appropriate. We test with popular screen readers and include clear alternative text for non-decorative images. For complex controls, we provide accessible labels and instructions so assistive technologies can present content meaningfully for people using screen readers and other assistive devices.
Keyboard navigation is a priority for Clearance London. All interactive elements are reachable and operable by keyboard alone, including navigation menus, form fields, and modal dialogs. We implement visible focus states and skip links to allow users to bypass repetitive content, which is essential for efficient clearance in London browsing and task completion.
Our pages are tested for colour contrast and scalable text to support people with low vision. We adopt responsive design so layouts adapt to different devices and zoom levels without loss of functionality. Where documents or third-party tools are used, we strive to ensure they meet similar accessibility standards or provide accessible alternatives.
Interactive forms used for clearance requests are built with accessible labels, instructions, and error handling. We use clear language throughout our content and supply captions or transcripts for multimedia where possible. Strong internal testing and user testing with people with disabilities inform our priorities and remediation plans.
What we do: we maintain an accessibility roadmap, conduct automated and manual audits, and follow best practices for performance and accessibility. Our teams collaborate to reduce barriers in clearance services across London, focusing on inclusive design, accessible document formats, and progressive enhancement so content remains usable in a range of contexts.
To help users navigate and interact with our site we provide:
- WCAG 2.1 AA aligned pages and components
- Screen-reader support via semantic markup and ARIA usage
- Full keyboard navigation with clear focus styles
- High contrast and resizable text options
- Captions, transcripts, and accessible documents where available
We welcome accessibility requests and reasonable adjustments related to Clearance London content and services. If you need information in an alternative format, require assistance to access content, or want to report an accessibility barrier, please contact our accessibility team through the standard organisational contact channels. When reaching out, please describe the issue and your preferred format for receiving information so we can respond effectively and promptly.
Ongoing improvements and accountability
Accessibility is embedded in our design, development, and procurement practices. We train staff on inclusive practices, track accessibility issues, and prioritise remediation in our project plans. Periodic reviews help ensure alignment with evolving standards and best practices for London clearance operations. We monitor progress and update this statement as improvements are made.