One more thing — don’t assume your low-code platform’s built-in accessibility features are perfect. They’re a starting point, not a finish line. Always run your own audits.
The future is… well, it’s already here
Low-code platforms are maturing fast. I’m seeing more native support for ARIA attributes, better screen reader compatibility, and even AI-powered suggestions for contrast ratios. The trend is clear: accessibility is becoming a first-class citizen in no-code/low-code ecosystems.
But here’s the thing — tools are only as good as the people using them. A low-code platform won’t magically make you care about accessibility. It won’t replace empathy or user research. What it will do is remove the technical friction that stops you from building. It lowers the barrier to entry, so more people can participate in making the web — and the world — a little more inclusive.
So go ahead. Pick a platform. Build something small. Break it. Fix it. Share it. That’s how real change happens — not in a boardroom, but in a weekend project that turns into a lifeline for someone.
