About Our Remote Working Accessibility Contract Roles
What does a accessibility contractor do?
As a contract Accessibility, you are hired to ensure that digital products, services, and content can be used effectively by people with a wide range of disabilities, including visual, auditory, motor, and cognitive impairments. Contract engagements typically involve conducting accessibility audits against WCAG 2.1 or 2.2 standards, advising product and engineering teams on remediation, embedding accessible design practices into UX and development workflows, and supporting organisations in meeting their legal obligations under the Equality Act 2010 and the Public Sector Bodies Accessibility Regulations. Demand is particularly strong within central and local government, the NHS, financial services, and large consumer-facing digital businesses.
Successful accessibility contractors combine technical knowledge with strong communication and advocacy skills. On the technical side, experience conducting audits using assistive technologies such as JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, and Dragon NaturallySpeaking is essential, alongside proficiency with automated testing tools such as Axe or Lighthouse. Knowledge of HTML and ARIA is expected for roles involving hands-on remediation guidance to engineering teams. Equally important is the ability to work with designers, product managers, and content teams to embed accessible practices upstream in the design process, rather than treating accessibility as a retrofit activity. A strong portfolio of audit reports and remediation programmes is the primary differentiator in this market.
What is the market like for accessibility contractors?
Demand for accessibility contractors has grown steadily over the past three years, driven by increasing regulatory scrutiny, public sector compliance deadlines, and growing awareness among digital product teams that accessibility failures carry legal and reputational risk. The public sector remains the most active market, with many central government and NHS digital programmes requiring dedicated accessibility resource. Demand in financial services and retail is also increasing as organisations face greater pressure from regulators and customers. Supply of genuinely experienced accessibility contractors remains thin relative to demand, supporting rate levels above the broader UX market.
What does 'remote working' mean for accessibility contractors?
Remote contract roles are delivered primarily from the contractor's own location rather than the client's premises. In the UK contractor market, "remote" covers a range of arrangements, from fully remote with no on-site requirement through to predominantly remote roles that involve periodic travel for workshops or stakeholder meetings, typically a few days per month.
Remote contracts can show different rate patterns compared to on-site or hybrid positions. In some cases, remote working reduces location-driven rate premiums; in others, rates remain aligned to the employer's location or market benchmarks. As with all contract roles, rates are primarily driven by scope, expertise, and delivery expectations rather than working arrangement alone.
The availability of remote contracting varies by role and sector. Technology, data, and digital roles offer the broadest remote opportunities, while financial services and government clients more commonly require hybrid arrangements. Contractors evaluating remote opportunities should clarify on-site expectations before accepting, as definitions of "remote" vary between clients.
How much do accessibility contractors usually earn when working remotely?
Contract rates for accessibility roles typically range from £400 to £700 per day, depending on the scope of the role, required expertise, and the delivery expectations of the engagement. Remote roles may sit at different points within this range depending on the employer's location and whether any on-site attendance is required.
How many remote working accessibility vacancies are there on Quality Contracts?
Over the past twelve months, we have tracked over 100 accessibility contract roles across the site. Around 50% of the jobs currently listed on Quality Contracts offer some sort of remote or hybrid working arranegment. Data reviewed up to June 2026.