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WCAG 2.2 Audits for Four Major Canadian International Airports

One airport rebuilt its entire website based on our audit findings. When we re-audited 20 months later, total accessibility issues had dropped from 199 to 94 \- a 53% reduction. Conformance score nearly doubled, rising from 27.50% to 54.76%.

Canadian International Airports accessibility case study presentation focused on inclusive airport experiences, accessibility improvements, and passenger accessibility solutions across Canada.

Project Overview

Accessibility Partners has conducted WCAG 2.2 Level AA audits for four major Canadian international airports. Airport websites are not discretionary digital products. Travellers with disabilities rely on them for gate information, accessibility services, parking, ground transportation, and terminal navigation. When those pages fail, the barrier begins before the passenger reaches the building.

Under the Accessible Canada Act and the Accessible Transportation for Persons with Disabilities Regulations (ATPDR), federally regulated transportation providers are required to identify, remove, and prevent accessibility barriers in their operations and services. Our airport engagements span initial conformance audits, remediation advisory, and re-audit verification. In our most documented engagement, our findings drove a complete website rebuild and we returned to measure the outcome.

The Conformance Challenge

Each airport came to us at a different point in its accessibility journey. Some needed a clear conformance baseline before committing to a remediation program. Others had already begun remediation and needed independent verification of their progress. All required testing that went beyond automated scanning – covering keyboard navigation, screen reader compatibility, colour contrast, form labelling, and the specific user flows a traveller with a disability depends on most.

For airports, the stakes are operational. A passenger who cannot access gate change information, request wheelchair assistance, or find accessible parking has encountered a barrier before reaching the terminal.

Our WCAG 2.2 Audit Approach

For each engagement, we tested against WCAG 2.2 Level AA across a representative sample of pages, prioritising high-traffic templates and critical user journeys. Testing combined automated tools with manual evaluation using NVDA, keyboard-only navigation, and colour contrast analysis. Each airport received a detailed audit report mapping every issue to its WCAG success criterion, with remediation guidance prioritised by impact and effort.

In our most documented engagement, we audited 62 pages in March–April 2024. The airport commissioned a full website rebuild based on our findings. In December 2025, we returned and re-audited the new site across 55 pages.

Project Snapshot

Location

Canada

Compliance Standard

Accessible Canada Act | ATPDR

Key Result

53% issue reduction · Score nearly doubled

Before and after - one airport engagement.

Before (Apr 2024)

Conformance score
27.50%
Total issues
199
Pages tested
62

After (Dec 2025)

Conformance score
54.76%
+27.26 points
Total issues
94
53% reduction
Pages tested
55 (rebuilt site)
Full rebuild

Across all four airport engagements:

WCAG 2.2 Level AA audits completed for four major Canadian international airports
Detailed remediation guidance delivered for each, prioritised by traveller impact
Re-audit verification completed where remediation programs were implemented
Findings used to inform vendor selection, internal development, and procurement language

Services Used

Canada-wide proven results icon

WCAG 2.2 Conformance Testing

Remediation Advisory

Two simple white figures on a red circular background, symbolizing connection or interaction between individuals, representing the concept of a "Manual Audit.

Re-Audit Verification

Talk to Us About Your Compliance Program

Every engagement we take on is led by a credentialed senior consultant – not delegated to junior staff after the proposal is signed. We hold Government of Canada Standing Offer #1 national ranking, $5M errors and omissions insurance, and twelve years of experience across federal, provincial, municipal, and private-sector clients.
If your organisation is managing a conformance deadline, responding to a complaint, or building a long-term accessibility program, we would welcome the conversation.
Contact Us

Frequently Asked Questions

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Do airport websites need to meet WCAG 2.2 or is WCAG 2.1 still acceptable?

Many airports still follow WCAG 2.1 AA, but WCAG 2.2 provides stronger accessibility coverage and is becoming the preferred standard for transportation websites.

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How many pages do you typically audit in an airport website engagement?

The number depends on the size of the website, but audits usually focus on key templates, high-traffic pages, and important traveller journeys.

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What is the difference between automated scanning and manual screen reader testing?

Automated tools find technical issues, while manual testing checks whether real users can successfully navigate and use the website with assistive technology.

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How long does a re-audit take after a full website rebuild?

Most re-audits are completed within a few weeks, depending on the size and complexity of the rebuilt website.

Get started with your Compliance Consultation

At Accessibility Innovations, we specialize in ensuring compliance with accessibility standards. Let us handle all your accessibility needs efficiently, so you can focus on your core business. Trust our expertise to keep your organization accessible to all.

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