Screen Reader Support
Some patients use software that reads a website out loud. Your site needs to be built so that software can understand the page, the buttons, the forms, and the order of the content.
Free Audit
Dental website compliance
You got into dentistry to care for patients. Not to worry about demand letters, accessibility lawsuits, or whether your website quietly puts your practice at risk. In 2026, ADA web compliance has become one of the biggest legal blind spots facing dental offices.
Predatory law firms and serial filers are actively scanning business websites for accessibility violations. Dental practices are not being skipped.
When they find problems, the next step is often a demand letter. It may ask for a settlement, legal fees, and proof that the website will be fixed.
This is not a scare tactic. It is a real and growing trend. But it also does not have to become a panic project. The right response is simple: know where your site stands, fix what needs fixing, and keep it maintained.
A lot of dental websites were built years ago, when ADA website compliance was not treated as a normal part of the project. The site may still look good. It may still bring in patients. That does not mean it is accessible.
This is not about blame. The industry changed fast. Lawsuits and demand letters have surged recently, and many practices are only now discovering that their website was never built with accessibility in mind.
Dental website accessibility is now part of protecting the practice. Just like HIPAA, patient communication, and online reviews, it is something owners and office managers can no longer ignore.
Some patients use software that reads a website out loud. Your site needs to be built so that software can understand the page, the buttons, the forms, and the order of the content.
Not everyone uses a mouse. Patients should be able to move through your website, open menus, click links, and submit forms with a keyboard.
Text needs enough contrast against the background so people with low vision can read it. This includes buttons, forms, navigation, and important patient information.
Forms and buttons need simple behind-the-scenes labels. That helps assistive tools explain what each field does, like name, phone, insurance question, or appointment request.
In practice, WCAG compliance for dental practices means building toward recognized accessibility standards and keeping the site clean as content changes over time.
n8core builds ADA compliant dental websites with accessibility planned from day one. Not patched in later. Not handed off to a plugin. Not hidden behind a badge that claims everything is fixed.
If your current site is exposed, we can rebuild it with the right structure, navigation, labels, contrast, performance, and maintenance process in place.
You will not be passed around. You will talk to the person building the thing. We move quickly, but carefully. We explain what matters, skip the noise, and protect the site like it belongs to someone we know.
We rebuild the site around accessibility, speed, patient trust, and clear appointment paths. The goal is a better site, not just a safer one.
We stay with the site after launch. Updates, checks, and routine care are part of the plan, not a surprise retainer.
New provider bio, changed hours, new insurance note, updated service page. Send it over and we handle it.
We run regular accessibility checks so small issues do not sit unnoticed. This helps keep your dental website lawsuit protection active, not theoretical.
No hidden costs. No surprise retainers. No pretending a one-time scan solves an ongoing responsibility.
Peace of mind
You worked hard to build your practice. The last thing you should lose sleep over is a lawsuit from a website you had no idea was putting you at risk.
Let us take a look. We will tell you what we see in plain English. If the site is in good shape, we will say that. If it needs work, we will show you what matters first.
This is practical website guidance, not legal advice. No website can honestly be promised as lawsuit-proof. The point is to reduce risk, improve access, and keep the site cared for.