Accessibility Statement
Financial tools have a bad habit of being hard to use for people with disabilities — tiny tap targets, low-contrast text, screens that fall apart with a screen reader. We're trying to do better, and this page is an honest account of where we are.
1. Our standard
We aim for WCAG 2.1 Level AA conformance across this website and our mobile apps. That's the standard we test against when we build new screens.
2. What works today
- Full keyboard navigation on the website, including a "skip to content" link and visible focus indicators
- Semantic HTML with proper landmarks, headings and ARIA labels for assistive technology
- Color contrast tuned for our dark theme; amounts also use symbols (+/−) and labels, never color alone
- The site respects your reduced motion setting — animations switch off automatically
- Text scales with your browser or OS font-size settings without breaking layouts
- The mobile apps support VoiceOver (iOS) and TalkBack (Android) on core flows: adding expenses, viewing balances and recording SpenzaBook entries
3. Known gaps we're working on
Being honest about the rough edges:
- Some charts in the app describe their totals but not yet every data point to screen readers — we're adding data tables as an alternative view
- A few older screens in the app have touch targets slightly under the 44px recommendation
- PDF reports exported from SpenzaBook are not yet tagged for screen readers
4. Tell us when something blocks you
If any part of Spenzaa is difficult or impossible for you to use, that's a bug — and we'd genuinely like to hear about it. Email help@spenzaa.com with "Accessibility" in the subject line. We reply within 2 business days and prioritize accessibility fixes in our release cycle.
5. Reviews
This statement is reviewed twice a year alongside an internal accessibility audit. Last review: June 2026.