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Accessibility Statement for the Bright application

We want everyone to be able to use our applications, regardless of their needs. This statement describes how Bright-powered applications comply with accessibility laws, any known accessibility issues, and how you can report problems to us so we can address them.

How Accessible is the Application?

We are aware that parts of the Bright-powered applications are not fully accessible. On this page, you will find lists where we document known accessibility issues.

Contact Us If You Find More Issues

We are constantly working to improve our applications’ accessibility. If you discover problems that are not described here, or if you believe we are not meeting the legal requirements, please contact Bright.

Send an email to Bright support

Oversight

The Swedish Agency for Digital Government (Digg) is responsible for supervising compliance with the law on accessibility to digital public services. You can report to Digg if you believe that our digital service has accessibility issues.

You can also report to Digg if you believe that our accessibility statement has shortcomings or if you believe that we have not handled your request for accessibility correctly.

Report accessibility issues (on Digg’s website)

Technical Information About the Application’s Accessibility

Bright-powered applications are not fully compliant with accessibility laws due to the issues described below.

Content That is Not Accessible

We are aware of the following issues that do not meet accessibility requirements:

  • Dark mode is not yet supported but will become available shortly. This means that the application will not follow the set user color scheme preference on the device and appear with a light color scheme even though the device preference is set to dark.
  • Some screens have tab order issues with keyboard and with screen reader.
  • Data graphs are not completely accessible, known limitations:
    • Scrubbing within the graph area with a screen reader does not work.
    • Data labels are sometimes not logically announced by screen readers.
  • Data tables are not completely accessible, known limitations:
    • Missing grouping of data rows, resulting in context being missed when announced via screen readers.
  • There are some known issues with how the application does not follow the native platform code standard. An application should follow the code standard fully in order to work for as many as possible.
  • Some color contrast issues might occur on some screens.

Our ambition is to have these shortcomings resolved early 2026. Though some of the aforementioned points will be hard to comply with because of the nature of a white label application platform.

Content Not Covered by Accessibility Laws

The content described here is not fully accessible but is exempt according to accessibility laws:

  • Webviews and embedded content from third-party sources.

How We Test Our Applications

We have conducted a self-assessment (internal testing) of all the Bright-powered applications, this includes the Bright application.

Our Work with Digital Accessibility

We strive to ensure that all Bright-powered applications can be perceived, operated, and understood by all users, regardless of their needs or disabilities and independent of what assistive technologies they use. We aim to achieve at least basic accessibility by following WCAG 2.2 Level AA.

Our work with digital accessibility is continuously evolving. We actively work to ensure that everyone, regardless of their circumstances, can access our digital support and services on equal terms.

Last Update

This statement was last updated on: 2025-06-18