Accessibility Developer Hourly Rate

Accessibility developers typically charge $75-$250 per hour, based on experience, remediation type, and whether they are independent or agency.

Accessibility developers typically charge between $75 and $250 per hour. Rates vary based on experience level, the type of remediation work involved, and whether the developer operates independently or through an agency.

Accessibility Developer Hourly Rate Overview
Key Point What It Means
Typical Range $75 to $250 per hour depending on the developer and project scope
Junior Developers $75 to $125 per hour, suitable for routine code remediation tasks
Senior or Specialized $150 to $250 per hour for complex web applications and WCAG 2.1 AA conformance work
Agency vs. Independent Agency rates tend to be 20% to 40% higher than independent contractors

What Affects an Accessibility Developer’s Hourly Rate?

Several factors push rates higher or lower. A developer with five or more years of dedicated accessibility remediation experience commands more than a general front-end developer who occasionally addresses WCAG conformance issues.

The complexity of the codebase matters too. Remediating a static marketing site costs less per hour than fixing a dynamic web application with custom components, third-party integrations, and authenticated user flows. Developers working on complex applications often price at the upper end of the range because the work demands deeper knowledge of ARIA patterns, screen reader behavior, and keyboard interaction models.

Geographic location still influences pricing, though the gap has narrowed with remote work. Developers based in major metro areas in the U.S. or Western Europe tend to charge $150 or more per hour. Developers in regions with lower cost of living may charge $75 to $125 per hour for comparable skill levels.

Hourly Rate vs. Per-Page Pricing

Some accessibility developers quote hourly, while others prefer per-page or per-component pricing. Per-page code remediation typically runs $250 to $550 per page or screen. For a 10-page site, that translates to $2,500 to $5,500 as a fixed project cost.

Hourly billing works better when the scope is unclear or the project involves ongoing remediation across frequent code releases. Per-page pricing gives organizations a predictable budget and a defined deliverable.

How Hourly Rates Compare to Technical Support

Accessibility technical support, where a specialist answers developer questions and provides guidance without writing code, runs around $195 per hour. This is a separate service from hands-on remediation. Organizations sometimes combine both: a technical support specialist advises the internal team while an accessibility developer takes on the more complex remediation work.

When Hourly Rates Add Up Quickly

Hourly billing can become expensive when remediation scope is underestimated. Without an audit identifying specific issues and their locations, developers spend billable time diagnosing problems rather than fixing them.

An audit conducted before remediation begins gives the developer a clear list of issues, priority levels, and affected pages. This reduces discovery time and keeps hourly costs focused on actual fixes. Most accessibility audits start at $1,000 and range to $3,000, which is a fraction of the cost that open-ended hourly remediation can accumulate.

Pairing an audit with a developer who charges a known hourly rate gives organizations the clearest picture of total remediation cost before work begins.