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Accessibility

We want Logo2Favicon to be usable by as many people as possible, regardless of ability or the technology they use to browse the web.

Last updated: 30 May 2026

Our commitment

Logo2Favicon is a free, privacy-first tool that turns one logo into a complete favicon and app icon set entirely in your browser. Because the whole experience runs client-side, accessibility is something we own end to end - there is no third-party widget or hosted dashboard between you and the generator. We treat accessibility as an ongoing responsibility, not a one-time checkbox, and we aim to make every core task - uploading a logo, adjusting it, and downloading the output - available to everyone.

Conformance target

We aim to meet the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.1, Level AA. These guidelines, published by the W3C, explain how to make web content more accessible to people with a wide range of disabilities, including visual, auditory, physical, speech, cognitive, and neurological conditions. WCAG 2.1 AA is our reference standard, and we treat it as the bar that new features should clear before they ship.

Conformance is a goal we work toward continuously rather than a fixed state. Some areas of the site meet this target more fully than others, and we describe the known gaps honestly below.

Measures we take

We build the site with accessibility in mind from the start. Concrete measures include:

  • Semantic HTML. We use landmarks, headings, lists, and native elements so the page structure is meaningful to screen readers and other assistive technology.
  • Keyboard-operable controls. Buttons, links, and interactive controls can be reached and activated with the keyboard alone, without requiring a mouse or touch.
  • Visible focus states. The element you are currently focused on is clearly indicated, so keyboard users can always see where they are on the page.
  • Sufficient color contrast. We choose text and interface colors that aim to meet WCAG AA contrast ratios in both our light and dark presentations.
  • Text alternatives. Meaningful images carry descriptive alt text, and purely decorative imagery is marked so it is skipped by assistive technology.
  • Respect for reduced motion. When your system requests reduced motion via prefers-reduced-motion, we minimize or remove non-essential animation.
  • Responsive, zoomable layout. The layout adapts to different screen sizes and supports browser zoom and text resizing without trapping content or breaking functionality.

Known limitations

We want to be honest about where we still fall short. Despite our best efforts, some parts of the experience are not yet fully accessible:

  • Some of the more advanced canvas-based editing interactions - such as fine-grained dragging, cropping, and live previewing of how an icon is masked - rely on pointer-driven gestures that can be harder to operate with assistive technology or by keyboard alone.
  • A live canvas preview is inherently visual, so the exact pixel-level result of an edit may not be fully conveyed to screen reader users today.
  • Some dynamic status updates may not yet be announced as clearly as we would like across every assistive technology and browser combination.

These are areas we are actively working to improve. Where an advanced interaction is hard to operate, we aim to offer a more accessible path to the same outcome, and we prioritize fixes that unblock core tasks.

How we test

We evaluate accessibility using a combination of approaches:

  • Manual keyboard testing to confirm that controls can be reached, focused, and activated without a mouse.
  • Screen reader checks to verify that structure, labels, and important changes are announced.
  • Automated tooling in the browser to catch common issues such as missing labels, low contrast, and invalid markup.
  • Responsive and zoom testing across screen sizes and increased text or page zoom levels.

Automated tools cannot catch everything, so feedback from real people using the site is an essential part of how we find and fix problems.

Feedback & contact

If you encounter an accessibility barrier on Logo2Favicon, we want to hear about it. Please email info@Logo2Favicon.com and, if you can, tell us the page you were on, what you were trying to do, the assistive technology or browser you were using, and what went wrong. Even a short note helps. We read every accessibility report and aim to respond promptly and to address valid issues as quickly as we reasonably can.

Because everything runs in your browser, your logo never leaves your device when you use the tool - see our Privacy Policy for how we handle the limited information you do share, such as the contents of a feedback email. Your use of the service is also subject to our Terms of Service. For more about the tool itself, visit our FAQ or head back to the generator.