Demand letter just landed?
You have a deadline. Get the evidence before you call a lawyer.
A demand letter names your website and starts a clock — but it doesn’t tell you whether the claim is even true. Before you spend $400 an hour on an attorney who’ll ask exactly that, find out yourself. Ten minutes, free. Then, if you need it, generate the dated, signed proof that answers the other side.
Here’s the cruel part: the letter doesn’t say what’s actually wrong. It names a number and a date and leaves you to panic. And it’s not rare — EcomBack counted 3,948 ADA website lawsuits in 2025 alone. Nearly one in four hit sites that had already bolted on an accessibility overlay (983 of them; 424 were accessiBe’s own customers — the vendor the FTC ordered to pay $1 million in 2025).
So a widget was never going to defend you. What does: finding the WCAG failures these suits are actually built on, fixing them, and keeping proof you did — on a date you can show. That’s the whole job, and most of it is free in wcagcheckr.
This isn’t hypothetical — ask Domino’s
A blind customer sued Domino’s because he couldn’t order from its website or app with a screen reader. In 2019 a federal appeals court — the Ninth Circuit — held that the ADA covers a business’s website and app when they connect customers to its physical stores. The Supreme Court declined to hear Domino’s appeal, leaving that ruling in force across the Ninth Circuit. Domino’s, with effectively unlimited legal resources, fought for six years and then settled. For a small business, the math is simpler: find the problems and fix them before the letter arrives.
Robles v. Domino’s Pizza, LLC, 913 F.3d 898 (9th Cir. 2019); cert. denied (U.S. Oct. 7, 2019); case settled 2022.
Sources: Ninth Circuit opinion (PDF) · U.S. Supreme Court docket (cert. denied)
Start free — find out where you stand
Install the extension and run it on your real site. No card, no account.
- Your lawsuit-target safety grade, A to F — exactly what the demand-letter scanners look at
- A risk dashboard across every page you check
- The prioritized fix list, in plain language — “open your image’s alt-text field,” not “set aria-label”
- A plain-language owner report you can keep on file
- A local, tamper-evident log of every audit you run
When you’re ready — the evidence that defends you
Unlock inside the app — $99/mo, or the $149 single month built for exactly this moment.
- Court-grade forensic anchoring — an RFC-3161 timestamp + ed25519 receipt anyone can verify
- A litigation-ready defense bundle
- A forensic-anchored deposition packet, chain-of-custody included
- A pre-litigation report — the multi-audit summary your attorney hands the other side
Why this holds up
Every audit can be sealed with an RFC-3161 trusted timestamp and an ed25519 receipt — third-party-verifiable proof that you audited on this date, with this result. It’s not a marketing claim or an empty pledge. It’s a record, and anyone (including opposing counsel) can verify it independently.
Got a demand letter? Get the evidence that defends you — before you call a lawyer.
No checkout here — on purpose. Install free, run it on your real site, and unlock the rest inside the app when the evidence is worth it to you.
General information, not legal advice. The cases and figures here are real and cited, but every situation differs — consult a qualified attorney about your own exposure. wcagcheckr is an accessibility auditing tool, not a law firm, and installing it is not a guarantee against any lawsuit.
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