Scan your website against Georgia's new accessibility law. WCAG 2.1 Level AA compliance check. Deadline: September 2027
Georgia's new accessibility law was passed by parliament in March 2026, requiring all public and private sector websites to comply with WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards. The law applies to government bodies, private businesses, healthcare providers, banks, utilities, transport services, and retailers operating in Georgia. Deadline: September 1, 2027.
September 1, 2027: New web content must be fully accessible. Existing content must comply within a reasonable timeline.
Our free Georgia accessibility checker applies the same WCAG 2.1 Level AA criteria referenced in the new law. It scans your website for alt text, keyboard navigation, heading structure, color contrast, and ARIA labels — the same success criteria used by ADA and EAA.
The law explicitly requires government websites to lead by example. Our tool flags missing language attributes, improper skip navigation links, and form labeling issues.
Banks, utilities, retailers, and transport companies must ensure their booking systems and payment portals are fully keyboard accessible and screen reader compatible.
Use our free checker below to start your compliance journey — proactive audits help avoid rushed remediation when enforcement begins.
Now that you understand the basics of Georgia's accessibility checker, let's dive deeper into the Georgia accessibility law — what it covers, who must comply, key deadlines, and how to prepare for compliance.
On March 30, 2026, the Parliament of Georgia adopted legislative amendments to the Law on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities [citation:3]. These amendments establish, for the first time in Georgia's history, mandatory accessibility requirements for websites and mobile applications.
The law was passed with 80 votes in favor and 8 against, showing strong parliamentary support for digital inclusion [citation:3]. The Georgia disability rights law now explicitly covers digital accessibility, bringing Georgia in line with European and international standards.
The Georgia website accessibility requirements apply to both administrative bodies (government) and private legal entities in the following sectors [citation:3]:
Georgia accessibility deadline 2027 is the main milestone, but there are intermediate dates to track [citation:3][citation:5]:
Important: Technical editing of already published material is not considered an "informational update" [citation:3]. This means routine maintenance and minor edits will not trigger the compliance deadline.
The Georgia law WCAG 2.1 requires compliance with WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards [citation:5][citation:7]. This is the same standard used by the ADA (USA), EAA (European Union), and HHS Section 504 (healthcare).
WCAG 2.1 Level AA includes over 50 success criteria across four principles:
The Georgia accessibility law includes specific exemptions [citation:3]:
However, if a website exists and provides services to the public in covered sectors, it must comply by the applicable deadline.
The Georgia disability law explicitly states [citation:3]:
"Failure by administrative bodies or private legal entities to ensure accessibility of websites and applications will be considered discrimination."
While specific fine amounts are not yet published, discrimination under Georgian law can result in:
The law is part of Georgia's broader efforts to align with European standards as the country pursues EU integration.
Unlike many accessibility laws that only apply to government entities, Georgia private sector accessibility law covers a wide range of businesses [citation:3]:
This makes Georgia's law one of the most comprehensive in the Eastern European region for private sector digital accessibility.
The Georgia accessibility law is an amendment to the Law on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, passed in March 2026, requiring websites and mobile applications to be accessible to people with disabilities [citation:3].
September 1, 2027 is the main deadline for existing websites. New websites published after January 1, 2027 must comply immediately [citation:3][citation:5].
Georgia requires WCAG 2.1 Level AA compliance [citation:5][citation:7]. This is the same standard used by ADA, EAA, and HHS Section 504.
Yes. The Georgia private sector accessibility law applies to healthcare providers, banks, insurance companies, utilities, transport services, retailers, and educational institutions [citation:3].
Yes. Mobile applications are explicitly covered by the Georgia website and mobile app accessibility requirements [citation:3][citation:5].
Failure to comply is considered discrimination under Georgian law [citation:3]. Specific fine amounts will be published in implementing regulations due by October 31, 2026 [citation:5].
The Georgia disability rights law amendments were passed on March 30, 2026 with 80 votes in favor [citation:3].
Both. New websites must comply from January 1, 2027. Existing websites have until September 1, 2027 to comply, unless they receive no updates after that date [citation:3].
Websites published before September 1, 2027 with no informational updates after that date are exempt. Entities without websites are not required to create them [citation:3].
Use our free Georgia accessibility checker. Enter your website URL for an instant scan against WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards.
Yes. All administrative bodies (government entities) must ensure their websites and applications are accessible [citation:3].
The Georgia website accessibility standard is based on WCAG 2.1 Level AA, the international standard for web accessibility [citation:5][citation:7].
The Government of Georgia must endorse the technical regulations by October 31, 2026 [citation:5].
Yes. Platforms that aggregate third-party offers for concluding contracts with an indefinite group of persons (e-commerce) are covered [citation:3].
This is the primary Georgian law protecting the rights of people with disabilities. The March 2026 amendments added specific website and mobile application accessibility requirements [citation:3].
With the Georgia accessibility deadline September 2027 approaching, now is the time to start preparing. Scan your website now — it's free and takes less than 60 seconds.
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