AudioEye sells website accessibility software on a subscription basis. Its platform helps businesses make their websites and apps usable by people with disabilities — including those relying on screen readers or with visual impairments, dyslexia, or epilepsy. The core demand driver is legal and regulatory compliance: U.S. laws like the ADA and Section 508, and the European Accessibility Act (EAA), require accessible websites, and non-compliance exposes businesses to lawsuits and fines. AudioEye positions its product as continuous compliance monitoring that reduces legal exposure. AudioEye serves SMBs, large enterprises, non-profits, and government agencies through two channels: direct enterprise sales for large and government customers, and a partner channel where AudioEye integrates with CMS platforms and web hosting providers that resell its tools to their SMB customers. Because websites constantly change and accessibility issues recur, customers need ongoing monitoring, making the subscription model a natural fit. AudioEye argues it differentiates from pure automation tools and consulting firms by combining automated fixes with human expert remediation in a single platform. Two regulatory tailwinds are driving near-term growth: the EAA, which took effect in June 2025 with EU deal sizes running roughly 50% above U.S. averages, and a DOJ rule requiring state and local government websites to meet accessibility standards, with deadlines beginning in 2026. AudioEye has built partnerships with Finalsite and CivicPlus to target the government market ahead of those deadlines.
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