Legal
Accessibility
Last updated May 13, 2026. This page describes how we think about accessibility on this site — honestly, not as a box to check.
What we believe
Everyone deserves a usable web — including people who rely on keyboards, screen readers, captions, or other assistive technology. We are not finished, and we do not pretend to be. We are working to make this site clearer, easier to navigate, and more inclusive over time, and we treat accessibility as part of how we build — not an afterthought.
What we are doing
We aim for sensible defaults: semantic structure, readable type, sufficient contrast in our core UI, visible focus for keyboard users, and meaningful text alternatives where images carry information. When we ship new pages or components, we try to catch obvious barriers early — and we keep refining as we learn.
Where we are still improving
Like many small teams, we balance speed, craft, and compliance. Some third-party tools we embed (for example scheduling or analytics) are controlled by their vendors; we choose them with care, but we cannot fully control their accessibility. If something does not work for you, tell us — we will look for a fix, a workaround, or a different way to deliver the same outcome.
Feedback
If you run into a barrier on this site — or have a suggestion that would make your experience better — we want to hear from you. Email hello@causehouse.co with “Accessibility” in the subject line if you can, and describe what you were trying to do and what got in the way. We will read it and follow up as quickly as we can.
A note on standards
We look to widely used guidance (including WCAG) as a reference point, not as a guarantee of formal certification. This statement is our good-faith description of how we work — not a legal promise of perfect conformance in every situation.