Accessibility Statement

Last updated: July 9, 2026

SensoryGift is built to make sensory support easier to understand, easier to use, and easier to return to when life feels overwhelming. Accessibility is part of that work. We want SensoryGift to be usable by neurodivergent individuals, teens, and adults, as well as families, caregivers, educators, therapists, and readers with different sensory, cognitive, visual, motor, hearing, language, and technology needs.

This statement explains what we are working toward, what we already try to do, where there may still be limitations, and how you can contact us if something on the site is hard to use.

Our accessibility goal

SensoryGift is working toward making its website, app pages, printable previews, downloads, and reader resources as accessible and sensory-considerate as possible. Our practical goal is to support the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2 Level AA where we can, while continuing to improve older pages, files, tools, and design patterns over time.

Accessibility is not treated as a one-time checklist. SensoryGift is a growing site, and we expect to keep learning from real readers, technical reviews, accessibility tools, and lived experience feedback.

What accessibility means on SensoryGift

For SensoryGift, accessibility means more than whether a page technically loads. We want the site to feel clear, predictable, readable, and usable for people who may be overwhelmed, tired, overloaded, distracted, anxious, dysregulated, using assistive technology, using a phone one-handed, printing supports quickly, or helping someone else through a hard moment.

That includes practical choices such as plain language, calm page structure, meaningful headings, readable spacing, descriptive link text, keyboard-friendly controls where possible, reduced clutter, and clear paths to related resources.

Accessibility features and practices we aim to support

Across SensoryGift, we aim to use accessibility-minded design and content practices, including:

  • Clear page headings and section structure so pages are easier to scan.
  • Plain-language explanations that avoid unnecessary jargon.
  • Descriptive links that explain where a reader will go.
  • Readable text, calm spacing, and layouts designed to reduce visual overwhelm.
  • Alt text or meaningful labels for important images when images add information.
  • Keyboard-accessible navigation and controls where possible.
  • Forms with clear labels and simple instructions.
  • Content that does not rely only on color to communicate meaning.
  • Avoidance of flashing, startling, or unnecessary motion-heavy content.
  • Printable resources that try to stay practical, readable, and easy to use in real settings.
  • Educational language that reminds readers SensoryGift is not a substitute for medical, therapy, diagnostic, emergency, or individualized professional support.

Sensory and cognitive accessibility

Because SensoryGift serves many sensory-sensitive and neurodivergent readers, we pay special attention to cognitive load and sensory load. We try to make pages feel less demanding by using shorter sections, direct explanations, predictable page flow, practical examples, and clear next steps.

We also try to avoid making support feel like another complicated system to manage. When possible, SensoryGift resources are designed to help someone start with one small support, one routine, one printable, one app step, or one reset option instead of needing to understand everything at once.

Apps and interactive tools

SensoryGift includes interactive tools and app-style pages, including visual routine tools, sensory support tools, and reset-style support flows. These tools are designed to be low-pressure, privacy-conscious, and usable on mobile devices.

We are continuing to improve app accessibility, including clearer labels, calmer navigation, better mobile flow, keyboard and screen reader support where possible, reduced-motion considerations, readable contrast, and easier paths back to where a person started.

Printables and downloadable files

SensoryGift offers free and paid printable resources. We try to design printables so they are practical, readable, and useful in real life, including home, school, therapy, work, and caregiving settings.

Some printable PDF files may not yet be fully optimized for every assistive technology workflow. If you purchased or downloaded a SensoryGift printable and need help accessing the content in another way, please contact us. We may be able to help with a clearer file, a simpler explanation, or another practical workaround.

Known limitations

We are actively improving SensoryGift, but some parts of the site may not yet be as accessible as they should be. Known or possible limitations may include:

  • Older pages that may need improved heading structure, link text, spacing, or image descriptions.
  • Older downloadable PDFs that may not be fully tagged or optimized for screen readers.
  • Interactive tools or app screens that may still need stronger keyboard, focus, or screen reader support.
  • Third-party tools, forms, embedded content, affiliate links, payment processors, or external websites that are outside SensoryGift’s full control.
  • Product images, affiliate content, or older visual examples that may need improved descriptive text.

We do not want these limitations to stop someone from using SensoryGift. If you run into a barrier, please let us know so we can understand the issue and look for a practical fix.

Third-party content and services

Some SensoryGift pages may link to or use third-party services, including affiliate retailers, payment tools, email tools, forms, analytics, social platforms, or embedded content. We cannot fully control the accessibility of third-party websites or services, but we try to choose practical, trustworthy tools and keep the SensoryGift experience as clear as possible.

How to report an accessibility issue

If something on SensoryGift is difficult to see, hear, read, navigate, understand, print, download, or use with assistive technology, please contact us. Accessibility feedback is welcome.

You can contact SensoryGift through the Contact SensoryGift page or email Contact@sensorygift.com.

For printable or download access issues, you can also email Support@sensorygift.com.

When possible, please include:

  • The page URL, app screen, product, or printable name.
  • What you were trying to do.
  • What made it difficult or inaccessible.
  • Your device, browser, operating system, or assistive technology, if relevant.
  • Any format or workaround that would help you access the information.

Our response process

Messages are reviewed on business days. We try to review accessibility concerns as promptly as possible, especially when they affect access to a paid download, a core resource, or an app-style support tool.

Depending on the issue, we may fix the page, improve the wording, adjust a design pattern, repair a file, provide a workaround, or add the issue to a larger accessibility improvement pass.

Ongoing improvement

SensoryGift is still growing. As new guides, printables, tools, and apps are added, we are continuing to improve accessibility, readability, mobile usability, sensory-friendly design, and trust-focused site structure.

Reader feedback matters. If something feels confusing, overwhelming, inaccessible, or harder than it needs to be, your feedback can help make SensoryGift better for the next person who needs it.

Related pages

A final note

SensoryGift exists to reduce overwhelm and increase predictability. If an accessibility barrier makes the site harder to use, that matters. Thank you for helping us make SensoryGift clearer, calmer, and more usable for more people.