On June 4, 2026, the Caen Judicial Court issued a landmark ruling: it found Carrefour liable for the inaccessibility of its online grocery service.

But stopping at the company’s mistake would be reductive. The real point is another: this ruling shows that the European Accessibility Act is now more tangible than ever—not just as a regulatory obligation, but as a response to a real need that directly impacts people, rights, and reputation.

The Carrefour case

It all began in 2025, when the French associations ApiDV and Droit Pluriel reported widespread issues in online grocery services across the retail sector.

In Carrefour’s case, tests carried out by blind and visually impaired users highlighted concrete barriers:

  • inability to navigate properly with screen readers

  • lack of alternative text for images and buttons

  • insufficient color contrast

  • difficulty finding products, prices, and delivery options

  • inability to complete a purchase independently

This was not about minor technical flaws, but a much more significant issue: the service was, in practice, not usable by everyone.

The Court acknowledged this situation and imposed:

  • compliance within 6 months

  • a penalty of €500 per day in case of delay

  • compensation of €10,000 to the associations for collective harm

But the most important aspect is another: the judge assessed the real user experience, not just formal compliance with standards.

Behind digital, there are people

This case reminds us of something fundamental: when a service is not accessible, we are not talking about code—we are talking about people.

For many blind or visually impaired individuals, online grocery shopping is not a convenience. It is an essential tool for living independently.

When that service doesn’t work:

  • independence is lost

  • time is wasted

  • people are forced to ask for help

  • freedom of choice is reduced

The metaphor that emerged during the case explains it perfectly:
an inaccessible website is like a staircase for a wheelchair user.

The EAA: from regulation to operational reality

Since June 28, 2025, accessibility of digital services—including e-commerce and apps—has been a legal requirement.

Some companies have embraced this shift as an opportunity, while others have perceived it as distant, complex, or postponable.

Today, however, the message is clear: accessibility is a right and a concrete necessity.
The EAA simply makes this explicit and ensures it is upheld.

A signal to the entire market

The Carrefour case is not a final milestone—it is a signal.

A signal that:

  • European regulations are being enforced in practice

  • accessibility is being assessed based on real user experience

  • companies are expected to respond not only technically, but culturally

And above all, that behind every interface there is a responsibility.

Because now more than ever, designing digital means answering a simple question: can it truly be used by everyone?

Check your website's accessibility for free with Eye-Able®!

Filter

Filter by category

Confirm your selection with the button at the end of the list after choosing the categories.

Reset filters

How to create accessible PDFs: Simple & legally compliant

Read story
aria label written in a black box in the center, below on the right-hand side is a white arrow.

aria-label in HTML: How to use it correctly

Read story

What Makes a Website Truly Accessible: 5 Concrete Actions

Read story

Gruppo Végé & Eye-Able

Read story

How to make your online shop accessible: requirements, advantages, and implementation tips

Read story

Checklist: Accessible web design for your website

Read story
Laptop displaying an online shop for headphones with a warning sign. Text: "Avoid BFSG warnings: Make your online shop accessible now."

BFSG warnings: What you need to consider now regarding accessibility

Read story

Accessibility statement explained in simple terms: content, obligations, examples

Read story

Eye-Able Audit Update 3.7 – Easier management and hiding of errors

Read story
A red and green graph pointing down is depicted.

A Missed EAA Deadline, a Costly Lesson: The Real Risks of Ignoring the European Accessibility Act in the Netherlands

Read story
A smiling man with a laptop with graphs and statistics on the right side.

Accessibility as Business-Booster

Read story

You need more information?

Contact us and we will be happy to help you.