Clear and readable
Strong color contrast, meaningful visual hierarchy, scalable text, and content that does not rely on color alone.
We want planning, booking, and remembering a journey to feel straightforward for as many people as possible—regardless of ability, technology, or how they interact with SkyLog.
Last updated: July 17, 2026
Our approach
Accessibility is an ongoing practice. These are the areas we consider as SkyLog's website and mobile experiences evolve.
Strong color contrast, meaningful visual hierarchy, scalable text, and content that does not rely on color alone.
Logical focus order, visible focus states, and support for navigating important website actions without a mouse.
Semantic structure, descriptive labels, useful alternative text, and announcements for important interface changes.
Generous touch targets, clear controls, predictable behavior, and alternatives to interactions that depend on hovering.
Plain language, descriptive headings, helpful errors, and booking information designed to be easy to review.
We use WCAG 2.2 Level AA as a guiding standard while continuing to review, test, and improve the experience.
What we commit to
Some flight, stay, car-rental, payment, or destination content comes from travel partners. Their experiences may not always meet the same accessibility level as SkyLog. We still want to hear when partner content creates a barrier so we can offer guidance and raise the issue where appropriate.
Found an accessibility barrier?
Include the page, device, browser, assistive technology, and what you were trying to do. Please do not include passwords or payment-card details.
You can also email hello@myskylog.com.