Principles Governing a SEBI-Grade Accessibility Audit
SEBI accessibility audit processes are governed by principles that ensure regulatory credibility, technical accuracy, and documentation integrity.
Audit independence is fundamental to regulatory credibility. Auditors must evaluate digital platforms objectively, without influence from development teams, project timelines, or commercial pressures. IAAP-certified auditors adhere to professional codes of conduct that require impartial evaluation and accurate reporting of accessibility barriers regardless of remediation complexity or organizational preferences.
Independence also requires separation between audit and remediation functions. Organizations that conduct their own accessibility testing without independent verification face scrutiny regarding objectivity and thoroughness. Third-party audits by credentialed professionals provide the evidentiary foundation necessary for regulatory defense.
SEBI accessibility audits align with multiple overlapping standards: WCAG 2.1 Level AA, WCAG 2.2 where applicable, IS 17802:2021, GIGW 3.0 principles, and requirements under the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act. Auditors must understand the interrelationship between these frameworks and evaluate digital platforms against the most stringent applicable requirements.
Standards alignment requires that audit findings reference specific WCAG success criteria, explain conformance requirements in the Indian regulatory context, and map issues to IS 17802:2021 provisions where relevant. This multi-standard approach ensures audit reports support both SEBI compliance and broader legal defensibility.
Automated accessibility scanning tools detect only a fraction of WCAG violations—typically 25 to 40 percent of issues that impact users with disabilities. SEBI-grade audits require manual verification across all WCAG success criteria, including those that cannot be evaluated algorithmically: keyboard navigation logic, focus management, form label association, heading hierarchy semantic correctness, alternative text accuracy, and cognitive accessibility.
Manual verification also includes testing with assistive technologies used by persons with disabilities in India, including JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, TalkBack, and ZoomText. This real-world validation identifies usability barriers that automated tools cannot detect.
Every audit finding must be traceable to specific page elements, WCAG success criteria, and user impact scenarios. Traceability enables remediation teams to locate and fix issues systematically and allows regulatory authorities to verify that identified barriers have been addressed.
Documentation standards include screenshots or recordings demonstrating non-conformance, code-level identification of problematic elements, step-by-step reproduction procedures, and clear remediation guidance aligned with WCAG techniques. This documentation forms the evidentiary basis for SEBI compliance claims.
