UK Equality Act 2010 compliance for Webflow sites
The UK Equality Act 2010 applies to UK service providers; the duty to make 'reasonable adjustments' for disabled users is anticipatory, meaning it applies before anyone complains, and building on Webflow does not exempt you. It has been in force since 2010, with WCAG conformance treated as the practical benchmark by courts and the EHRC, and the technical benchmark is WCAG 2.1 AA (and 2.2 AA going forward) as referenced in UK government guidance.
Webflow gives you full markup control, which cuts both ways: you can build perfectly accessible sites, and you can also ship div-buttons with click interactions, custom dropdowns with no ARIA, and animations that ignore reduced-motion preferences. Webflow's audit panel catches some issues at design time.
What enforcement actually looks like
Discrimination claims in county court, EHRC enforcement, and reputational damage. Post-Brexit, UK-only traders still face the EAA for EU customers.
Fixing accessibility on Webflow
Use real semantic elements (button, nav, label) instead of styled divs with interactions, and scan the published site, since Webflow's designer-time checks don't cover everything the rendered page does.
Why one-time fixes don't hold
Webflow sites change constantly, theme updates, plugins/apps, and content edits can reintroduce violations at any time. A site that conformed last quarter can fail today without anyone touching code deliberately. Continuous scanning with a timestamped log is both the practical safeguard and the evidence trail that matters in enforcement.
Compliance checklist
- Scan your Webflow homepage, a key content/product page, and your checkout or lead form
- Fix critical and serious violations in your theme/templates, not with an overlay widget
- Re-scan after every Webflow theme, plugin, or app update
- Keep the dated scan history as compliance evidence
- Publish an accessibility statement with a contact route
Frequently asked questions
- Does the UK Equality Act 2010 apply to Webflow sites?
- Yes. The law applies based on who you serve, not what you build with. It covers UK service providers; the duty to make 'reasonable adjustments' for disabled users is anticipatory, meaning it applies before anyone complains. Webflow gives you the building blocks, but conformance depends on your theme, plugins, and content.
- Is Webflow accessible out of the box?
- Webflow gives you full markup control, which cuts both ways: you can build perfectly accessible sites, and you can also ship div-buttons with click interactions, custom dropdowns with no ARIA, and animations that ignore reduced-motion preferences. Webflow's audit panel catches some issues at design time.
- What should I fix first on Webflow?
- Use real semantic elements (button, nav, label) instead of styled divs with interactions, and scan the published site, since Webflow's designer-time checks don't cover everything the rendered page does.