Universal Web Agency
WCAG 2.1 AADenver, Colorado
$3,000 - $50,000
Find top-rated WCAG remediation agencies and ADA-compliant web design firms serving Denver, Colorado. All listed agencies are verified for WCAG expertise. Denver businesses operate under both the federal ADA and Colorado's HB21-1110 — one of the first state laws in the nation to explicitly mandate WCAG standards for digital content.
Colorado's HB21-1110 (2021) positioned the state as a national leader in explicit digital accessibility legislation. The law requires state agencies and their technology vendors to meet WCAG 2.1 AA, creating a clear legal standard that courts can reference. For private Denver businesses, federal ADA Title III enforcement in the District of Colorado remains the primary litigation risk — and that risk is growing year-over-year. Denver's tech sector, outdoor recreation industry, and expanding e-commerce businesses face increasing scrutiny from accessibility advocates. Proactive WCAG 2.1 AA compliance before a demand letter arrives is substantially cheaper than reactive litigation response.
Denver, Colorado
$3,000 - $50,000
Colorado HB21-1110, passed in 2021, was one of the first state laws to explicitly address digital accessibility. It mandates that state agencies and their technology vendors meet WCAG 2.1 AA standards. While it directly applies to state entities, it establishes a clear public benchmark that courts and compliance advocates reference in private-sector disputes. Denver businesses providing digital services to Colorado state agencies must meet WCAG 2.1 AA as a contractual requirement.
HB21-1110 primarily governs state entities and technology vendors. However, it sets an explicit state-law accessibility standard that plaintiff firms can reference in civil claims under the federal ADA. Denver businesses cannot rely solely on the HB21-1110 state-entity carve-out for protection — federal ADA Title III applies independently to all public-facing businesses.
The District of Colorado (Denver) sees meaningful ADA Title III website case activity, though at lower volumes than California or New York. The trend has been increasing year-over-year since 2019. Denver's growing tech sector and outdoor recreation businesses — both of which operate consumer-facing websites — are increasingly targeted.
WCAG 2.1 Level AA is the minimum for ADA compliance and the standard Colorado HB21-1110 references for state entities. WCAG 2.2 AA, published in October 2023, is recommended for new builds. Denver agencies specializing in accessibility typically audit against both versions and identify gaps between them.
Denver's outdoor recreation, technology, healthcare, and e-commerce sectors face the greatest digital accessibility exposure. Outdoor recreation businesses — ski resorts, tour operators, equipment retailers — often have complex booking flows that are difficult to make accessible and attract claims from users with motor disabilities who rely on keyboard navigation.
Yes. Section 44 of the Internal Revenue Code provides a tax credit of up to $5,000 per year for eligible small businesses that incur accessibility-related expenses, including WCAG remediation. Businesses with 30 or fewer full-time employees and $1 million or less in gross receipts in the prior year qualify. Denver businesses should consult a tax professional and their accessibility agency about documenting expenses to claim this credit.