An inclusive space starts with being accessible.
Our commitment: build an app that everyone can use, without exception. Here's where we stand and where we're headed.
Accessibility isn't a bonus.
Queerly aims to be a space for everyone. That includes people with disabilities — visual, auditory, motor, cognitive. Digital accessibility isn't a feature you bolt on at the end. It's a design constraint from the very first pixel.
Our benchmark: WCAG 2.1 Level AA and RGAA 4.1. We don't claim to be perfect — but we're transparent about our progress and continuously improving.
Current status
All interactive elements are keyboard-accessible with visible focus indicators.
Semantic HTML structure, ARIA attributes, labels on all forms and buttons.
All text meets a minimum contrast ratio of 4.5:1 (AA). Interactive elements meet 3:1.
All images have descriptive alt text. Decorative images are hidden from assistive technologies.
The interface remains functional at 200% zoom. Text sizes use relative units.
Partial support for prefers-reduced-motion. Goal: disable all animations for users who want it.
A full dark mode is planned for Q3 2026, designed with the same contrast requirements.
All app and website videos are captioned in French and English.
Roadmap
Report a problem
Having trouble accessing something? Let us know.
If you find an accessibility issue on Queerly — website or app — send us an email. We commit to responding within 5 working days and fixing blocking issues as a priority.
accessibilite@queerly.lgbtIf your complaint is not handled satisfactorily, you can contact the Défenseur des droits via defenseurdesdroits.fr