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Digital Accessibility for 30 crore Indians — Part 1
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Digital accessibility just became non-optional. In recent judgments in the April 2025 Supreme Court Order, the RBI Circular, and IS-17802 mandatory compliance is converging for Indian financial industry including fintechs, banks and insurance companies.
In this three-part article series, I try to unfold why making digital systems accessible is not only a compliance issue, but an essential requirement today for 30 crore indians.
Declaration: No AI was used to generate this content. All inputs are originally from the author.
Digital systems and their ease of access are commonplace now. However, the majority of 30 crore indians (including about 16 crore people above the age of 60) are classified as having one or the other digital accessibility challenges
Here are some of the case examples.
Take, e.g., Asha, who is 31. She has been blind since childhood. She has a job, an income, a credit history, and — for the last three months — a strong reason to take out a home loan.
She has tried three Indian Housing Finance websites. On all three, her screen reader announced the home page as “image, image, image, link, link, link.” Form fields had no labels. Buttons said “Click here” with no context. She gave up before reaching the EMI calculator on any of them.
Asha is a customer who is now legally protected by the law. She is also a customer, and the law now legally requires you to serve. And if you run a fintech, NBFC, HFC, bank, or insurance company in India, you almost certainly cannot serve her today.
What I have stated above is not a hypothesis. It’s measurable and a fairly common scenario.
At InfoAxon, we have run the accessibility scan against the home pages of over a dozen Indian financial services brands in the past two months.
The median Lighthouse accessibility score is in the 40s.
Several are below 20.
A good score should be at least 80.
Already, the Indian fintech and insurance companies have all of them have started receiving — or will shortly start receiving — regulatory advisories that turn this from a “nice to have” into a board-level compliance item.
The definition of digital accessibility is actually quite simple: “Anyone visiting your site, mobile app, or any digital channel should be able to use it without any issues”. In this, anyone specially people with disabilities who can not usually access the product, or see the screen, or have low vision or similar, should be able to access your digital channels.
In a more technical friendly definition, one can say that Digital accessibility is the practice of building digital products that work for people regardless of how they use the web. That includes users who:
Often when you see Government web sites in India, try accessing them on mobile, or imagine a person with accessibility limitations accessing the site its very apparant that we need to be far more sensitive and inclusive to their needs.
Now that it is a legal requirement, fintech and insurance companies at least need to ramp up their accessibility posture. There are many reasons for indian businesses to fast ramp up on digital accessibility.
The international standard for “accessible” is the W3C’s Web Content Accessibility Guidelines version 2.1 at Level AA.
WCAG 2.1 AA defines 50 testable success criteria across four principles: a page must be Perceivable, Operable, Understandable, and Robust.
India’s national standard for ICT accessibility — IS-17802, published by the Bureau of Indian Standards — is the technical adoption of the European EN 301 549 v3.2.1 standard, which incorporates WCAG 2.1 AA wholesale and adds India-specific clauses around the 22 Indian languages, Indian Sign Language, captioning, and documentation accessibility.
We have done a detailed study of the recent laws, mapping them with a common accessibility criteria that mixes the scoring techniques using three scoring approaches.
We went further and created a composite scoring approach that is a mix of all three common standards of measuring accessibility.
This was needed because the available mechanisms cater to different kind of scoring assessments. For e.g. the AXE method is more tuned to measure in terms of HTML accessibility and more fits the detailed criteria for engineering teams. But at the same time the WAVE evaluation tools are more aligned to scoring the content and whether the content publishes is accessible when rendered into a page.
The next chapter will be on how fintech and insurance organizations can quickly move to digital accessiblity future using the technology frameworks and composite scoring.