For Nonprofits
Your Website Serves People Too
The patient reading your care instructions at home, just back from a hard appointment. The parent at the kitchen table at 10pm, trying to find out if their child qualifies for your program on a phone with a cracked screen. The community member at the public library, twenty minutes left on the computer, looking up your food pantry hours.
These are not edge cases. For many nonprofits, they are the majority of visitors. And they are almost never the people who built your site.
That gap, between who built it and who uses it, is quiet and expensive. Body copy at 14 pixels. A donate button in light gray on white. A form field whose label disappears the moment someone clicks in. Your visitors do not file complaints. Most of them do not even tell themselves the site is the problem. They close the tab.
What EasyNav does
EasyNav is a small button that lives in the corner of your site. Visitors who want larger text, sharper contrast, or a reading guide for a long impact report can get it in two clicks. Their preferences are saved in their own browser. No cookies. No tracking. Nothing stored on a server. For more on the privacy posture, see What Data Does EasyNav Collect About Your Visitors?
Visitors who already use screen readers or browser accessibility tools have what they need. EasyNav uses the Shadow DOM to stay completely out of their way. For the technical detail on how that works, see Will This Widget Break My Site?
This is not a compliance tool. It does not claim to fix a broken site. In April 2025, the FTC fined accessiBe $1 million for marketing a widget as a compliance fix; our breakdown of that ruling has the full context. EasyNav is for organizations that have already built something good and want every visitor to be able to use it comfortably, including the ones reading with tired eyes at the end of a hard day.
Nonprofit pricing
I worked in the nonprofit sector years ago, which is why EasyNav has nonprofit rates. See the pricing page for current numbers. If even that is too much for your organization, reach out.
For a free look at your own site before deciding anything, run the Inspect Hack. It is a 60-second browser test that shows you what your site looks like to an older visitor on a dim screen.