Accessibility & UX Audit Skill
Audit websites, web apps, landing pages, dashboards, forms, and UI flows for accessibility, usability, readability, keyboard navigation, contrast, mobile behavior, and user experience issues.
Accessibility & UX Audit Skill is a free, reviewed AI skill for testing & quality checks. Audit websites, web apps, landing pages, dashboards, forms, and UI flows for accessibility, usability, readability, keyboard navigation, contrast, mobile behavior, and user experience issues. It works with ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and is ready to use out of the box.
- • The skill cannot guarantee legal accessibility compliance, WCAG certification, ADA compliance, EU Accessibility Act compliance, or full conformance.
- • The skill cannot produce accurate findings without enough evidence such as screenshots, code, UI descriptions, task flows, or URLs.
- • AI-assisted audits should be verified with manual testing, automated tools, assistive technology testing, and expert review when compliance matters.
About this skill
The Accessibility & UX Audit Skill helps founders, designers, developers, vibe coders, no-code builders, agencies, QA testers, and product teams review digital products before or after launch. It inspects screenshots, UI descriptions, code snippets, page flows, forms, dashboards, and landing pages for accessibility and usability problems, then produces structured audit reports with severity ratings, clear explanations of user impact, developer-ready remediation steps, QA acceptance checks, and manual testing plans. It is WCAG-aware but never claims legal compliance, certification, or full conformance, and it never invents findings without evidence — asking for a URL, screenshot, code snippet, or description instead. This makes it a practical first pass for catching accessibility and usability issues early, while clearly pointing users toward manual testing and expert review for compliance-critical products.
What it does
This skill helps users audit websites, web apps, landing pages, dashboards, and forms for accessibility and usability issues by reviewing provided screenshots, code, or UI descriptions, then producing severity-rated issue lists, clear explanations of why each issue matters, developer-ready remediation steps, acceptance criteria, and manual testing plans, without inventing findings when no evidence is provided or claiming legal accessibility compliance or certification.
What is included
- SKILL.md — concise runtime instructions for the AI assistant
- workflow.md — step-by-step workflow for running accessibility and UX audits
- accessibility-audit-framework.md — framework for visual accessibility, keyboard navigation, screen reader basics, forms, motion, content, responsive behavior, severity levels, and audit limits
- ux-usability-checklist.md — checklist for first impression, navigation, content clarity, forms, visual hierarchy, mobile UX, trust, safety, and flow completion
- remediation-and-testing-guide.md — guide for developer-ready fixes, acceptance criteria, manual tests, testing prompts, and final reports
- output-templates.md — reusable formats for full audits, issue lists, screenshot reviews, form audits, landing page audits, developer fix prompts, and QA test plans
- examples.md — realistic input and output examples for accessibility and UX reviews
How to use it
1. Download the ZIP file for this skill. 2. Extract the files to a folder on your computer. 3. Open your AI assistant, coding assistant, design tool, QA tool, or documentation tool. 4. Upload or paste the skill files if your tool supports it. 5. Share the URL, screenshot, code snippet, UI description, target users, main task flow, and known issues. 6. Redact private data, customer data, credentials, screenshots, logs, and confidential product information before sharing. 7. Ask the assistant to apply the Accessibility & UX Audit Skill.
Examples
Please audit this signup form for accessibility and UX. Fields: name, email, password, company, role, and file upload. Users say the form feels confusing on mobile. I do not have code, but I can provide a screenshot and the form field list.
Audit summary: The signup form may have usability and accessibility risks around field clarity, mobile spacing, validation, and upload instructions. Because code and screenshots are not fully provided, the findings should be treated as likely issues to verify. Issue 1: File upload instructions may be unclear. Severity: Medium. Why it matters: Users need to know accepted file types, size limits, and whether upload is required. Recommended fix: Add helper text under the upload field explaining accepted formats, maximum size, and whether the field is optional. Acceptance check: A first-time user can understand upload requirements without submitting the form. Issue 2: Mobile form may feel too long. Severity: Medium. Recommended fix: Group related fields, keep labels visible, and ensure buttons remain easy to tap. Acceptance check: The form can be completed on a mobile screen without horizontal scrolling or hidden fields. Manual tests: Test with keyboard only, check visible focus states, submit empty form to review errors, test at mobile width, and run a contrast check.
Known limitations
- The skill cannot guarantee legal accessibility compliance, WCAG certification, ADA compliance, EU Accessibility Act compliance, or full conformance. - The skill cannot produce accurate findings without enough evidence such as screenshots, code, UI descriptions, task flows, or URLs. - AI-assisted audits should be verified with manual testing, automated tools, assistive technology testing, and expert review when compliance matters. - The skill should not invent design, code, analytics, user behavior, or accessibility results that were not provided. - Private data, customer information, credentials, and confidential product details should be redacted before sharing.
