Hourly → Salary Pro

Accessibility

We aim for WCAG 2.1 AA. If you encounter any barriers, contact us and we’ll help.

Accessibility standards

We aim to meet WCAG 2.1 AA guidelines. Pages are navigable via keyboard, color contrast meets recommended ratios, and images include descriptive alt text where applicable.

Request an accommodation

If you find any barrier, please contact us at everydayroyalties@gmail.com. We will review and address the issue promptly.

Continuous improvement

Accessibility is not a one‑time effort but an ongoing process. We regularly audit our site to improve compatibility with screen readers, mobile devices, and different browsers. Feedback from users directly shapes these updates.

Accessible features

Future goals

We plan to add dark mode options, more language support, and additional testing with assistive technologies to ensure all users can benefit from the calculator and resources.

Accessibility Approach

The goal is to make the Hourly → Salary Pro experience usable for as many people as possible, across devices and abilities.

If you encounter a barrier, your feedback can directly shape the next round of improvements.

Tips for Getting the Most from the Tool

Depending on your setup, a few adjustments can make the calculator easier to use.

Accessibility is an ongoing practice, not a box to check once. Thank you for helping us notice what still needs work.

How Accessibility Feedback Is Used

When people point out barriers in the design, that information is taken seriously.

The aim is steady improvement over time, not a one-time certification.

Additional Resources for Accessible Financial Learning

No single site can meet every need. These ideas can help you find more accessible support.

Your access needs are valid. Planning tools should adapt to you, not the other way around.

Self-Advocacy When Tools Fall Short

It is reasonable to ask for better access when you run into barriers.

Your feedback helps move the web toward more inclusive design.

Celebrating Small Wins in Accessibility

Progress in accessibility often happens through a series of modest but meaningful changes.

Small wins add up to a more welcoming experience over time.

Accessibility Is a Community Effort

No single designer or developer can anticipate every barrier.

If you are reading this, you are already part of that broader effort.

Looking Ahead for More Inclusive Tools

Financial planning tools will continue to evolve, and accessibility should evolve with them.

Your experiences and expectations help shape the next generation of financial tools.

Accessibility and Energy

Accessible tools are not just about technology—they are also about your energy and attention.

Your capacity on any given day is part of the design context, too.

Simple Ways to Advocate for Better Access

You do not have to be an expert to nudge tools toward accessibility.

Small, consistent feedback from many people can reshape how tools are built.

Designing Your Own Accessible Planning Environment

In addition to website features, the space where you plan makes a difference.

Your environment can either drain or support your ability to think clearly about money.

Your Preferences Matter

Accessibility is also about honoring the ways you personally like to take in information.

There is no one “right” way to understand money topics.

A Personal Accessibility Checklist

You can build your own list of features that help you use tools comfortably.

  1. Note which font sizes, spacing, and contrast levels feel best for your eyes.
  2. Identify whether you focus better with keyboard shortcuts, mouse, or touch.
  3. List technologies that support you—screen readers, zoom tools, reading rulers.
  4. Bring this checklist with you when you try new financial tools or resources.

Knowing what helps you makes it easier to advocate for what you need.

Evaluating Employer-Provided Tools

Some workplaces offer their own portals and calculators.

You deserve accessible systems in the places where you work and earn.

Emotional Safety Is Part of Accessibility

Feeling shamed, rushed, or dismissed can make any tool hard to use, no matter how well designed.

Accessibility includes how a space makes you feel, not just how it looks on a checklist.

Offering Helpful Accessibility Feedback

Your observations can improve tools for many people, including you.

You are allowed to ask for changes that would make planning tools more usable.