Legal
Accessibility Statement
Last updated: May 23, 2026
BridgeReview.AI is committed to providing a digital service that is accessible to people with disabilities. This statement is published pursuant to the European Accessibility Act (Directive (EU) 2019/882) and the corresponding Austrian implementation (Barrierefreiheitsgesetz), in force since 28 June 2026.
1. Compliance status
BridgeReview.AI is partially compliant with the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1 Level AA due to the non-conformances listed below. We are actively working to close the remaining gaps.
2. Conformance highlights
- Skip-to-main-content link on every page (1.3.1, 2.4.1).
- Per-request CSP nonce and HSTS-only delivery (security baseline).
- Visible focus indicators on every interactive element (2.4.7).
- Forms with associated labels and zod-validated error surfacing (3.3.1, 3.3.2).
- All decorative icons marked
aria-hidden="true"and announced text alternatives present (1.1.1). - Honor of
prefers-reduced-motionin every marketing motion primitive (2.3.3). - Keyboard-navigable dialogs with focus trap (Radix UI primitives, 2.1.1, 2.4.3).
3. Known limitations
- Some secondary-text instances (color token
--ink-400on cream canvas) currently fall below WCAG AA contrast (4.5:1). A token sweep is scheduled before public launch. - The non-modal cookie banner does not yet bind to the Escape key for dismissal. Workaround: use the "Essential only" button or the "Cookie settings" link in the footer.
- The command palette (Cmd-K) does not restore focus to the opener on close. Use Tab to return to the previous control.
4. Assessment method
Self-evaluation against WCAG 2.1 AA using a combination of automated tooling (Lighthouse, axe-core via Playwright e2e), manual keyboard navigation testing, and component-level review of every Radix and shadcn/ui primitive in use.
5. Feedback and contact
If you encounter accessibility barriers using BridgeReview.AI, please email accessibility@bridgereview.ai. We aim to respond within 5 business days and to provide alternative access to the information or function affected.
6. Enforcement procedure
If we fail to respond satisfactorily, EU/EEA users may contact the relevant national accessibility enforcement body. For Austrian users this is the Sozialministeriumservice (Bundesweiter Behindertenanwalt).