Accessibility report for rackroomshoes.com
Based on an automated WCAG 2.1 Level AA scan on June 9, 2026.
Under the ADA in the U.S. — and the European Accessibility Act in the EU — business websites must be accessible. rackroomshoes.com was checked against WCAG 2.1 Level AA, and 4 types of barrier were flagged.
On this page, the most frequent barrier is "This page's title (in the browser tab) is missing or generic" — found on 1 element. In total the scan flagged 4 issues across 4 categories of WCAG 2.1 Level AA.
WCAG 2.1 Level AA is the standard U.S. courts apply under the ADA, and the law across the EU under the European Accessibility Act. These barriers block screen-reader, keyboard-only, and low-vision users — and every one of them is fixable. Here's how.
The barriers on this page — and the fixes
This page's title (in the browser tab) is missing or generic.
WCAG 2.4.2 (Level A) EN 301 549 Affects screen-reader users
Why it matters: Tab titles help users who have many tabs open know which one is which. Screen readers also announce the page title when the page loads.
How to fix it: In your platform's page settings or SEO panel, find the 'Page title' field and set it to something descriptive ('Contact Us — YourBusiness', not 'Untitled' or just your business name).
The page doesn't declare what language it's in.
WCAG 3.1.1 (Level A) EN 301 549 Affects screen-reader users
Why it matters: Screen readers use this to pick the right voice and pronunciation rules. Without it, English content might be read with a French accent (or vice versa).
How to fix it: In your platform's site settings, find a 'Site language' option and set it (English = en, Spanish = es, etc.). Most modern platforms do this automatically — if it's missing, ask your developer to add lang='en' to the html element.
Fix these to meet the legal standard — at no cost
The free wcagcheckr browser extension finds every one of these issues on your own pages and gives you the fix recipe for each — at no cost. Run it, fix what it finds, and re-check this page anytime.
Own this site? Fix the issues, then re-scan — this report updates automatically, and comes down entirely once you pass.
This page has no 'main content' region marked.
Affects screen-reader users
Why it matters: Screen-reader users press a single shortcut to jump to the main content, skipping menus and headers. Without a marked main region, they have to tab through everything.
How to fix it: Most modern platforms add this automatically. If yours doesn't, ask your developer to wrap the main content in a <main> element.
This page is missing a main heading (H1).
Affects screen-reader users
Why it matters: Screen-reader users use the H1 to confirm they landed on the right page. The H1 is also a strong SEO signal — Google uses it to understand what the page is about.
How to fix it: Add a clear, descriptive H1 to the top of the page. In website builders, this is usually the 'Title' or 'Page heading' setting. Each page should have exactly one H1.
This is an automated scan and catches a portion of accessibility barriers; full WCAG 2.1 Level AA conformance also requires manual and assistive-technology testing. See our methodology for what we do and don't claim.