2025 has been a significant year for digital accessibility. Across the public sector, expectations rose, standards matured, and accessibility moved from a specialist conversation to an essential part of how services are delivered.
As the year comes to a close, one theme has stood out to me across all our work at focusgov: accessibility continues to matter deeply to the people who use public services. Whether supporting families, care-experienced young people, vulnerable adults, or professionals, accessibility has remained one of the most consistently valued aspects of digital design.
In user testing across multiple projects, accessibility surfaced again and again as a priority. People asked for clearer journeys, simpler language, more predictable layouts and content they could understand without effort. For many, these aren’t “nice features”; they are essential to feeling confident in understanding essential information.
This feedback reinforced what we already believe: accessible design improves outcomes for everyone, and it strengthens trust in the services our clients provide.
We are proud to work with a diverse group of organisations, each with different audiences but a shared commitment to making their digital services easier to use.
Accessibility audits completed in 2025 included:
Across all of these, we saw the same pattern: small accessibility improvements often created significant benefits for users.
Alongside formal audits, many clients leant on us this year for practical help in embedding accessibility into their everyday processes. This included:
We greatly value the trust our clients place in us, and we’re proud to support teams who genuinely want to do right by their users.
We are grateful to all our clients for recognising the importance of accessibility and for working with us to build services that include everyone. We're excited to continue sharing knowledge, raising awareness and supporting even more teams in 2026.
Several accessibility audits are already booked into the diary for the new year, and we’ll be continuing to strengthen our own skills too - with particular focus on how AI can support accessibility responsibly, and on deepening our work around designing for neurodiversity.
Thank you to everyone who has partnered with us this year. Here’s to another year of creating digital services that are clearer, kinder and genuinely accessible to all.