Access is only the starting point. We’re co-creating a world where people with disabilities can thrive.

Your tools should adapt to you. We’re building with accessibility in mind.

A selection of four different Google hardware products

Hardware

Live Transcribe, Voice Access, Action Blocks, and more to make your hardware work for you

Icons for Google Chrome and Google Cloud Search

Online tools

Screen readers, magnifiers, keyboards, and more help you browse the web with ease

Icons for Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Editor, and Meet

Workspace

Get things done with access features for all our workspace products

More ways we’re building for disability inclusion:

A smartphone displaying voice assistance options with sound waves in the background

How we worked with the disability community to improve our speech recognition technology

Learn about Project Euphonia
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Family photo of a young Asian boy in a striped sweater using sign language

A CODA story: Why one Googler advocates for accessible technology

Read the story
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Innovator of the Year

Google was named 2021 Marketplace Innovator of the Year for Products by Disability:IN.

Learn more about it
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An illustration of three people: a man pushing a stroller, a woman using a walker, and a man pushing himself in a wheelchair

How Google Maps is helping people with disabilities navigate the world

Read about the features
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A young boy with glasses uses a laptop on a bed with his mom

Accessibility is at the core of all Google for Education products.

Read about our work
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A blind man runs alone down a path

How a blind runner is using technology to exercise independently

Read about Project Guideline
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Googler Aubrie Lee (she/her) sits in her wheelchair and takes a selfie with a man in a wheelchair

A new communication tool built in collaboration with the disability community

Read about Project Relate
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Jillian Mercado (she/her), a Black disabled woman, wears a teal shirt and looks into the distance

Meet the innovators helping to amplify Black disabled creatives.

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Alexis Hillyard (she/her), a woman with limb difference, stands in a kitchen and holds a cake

This LGBTQ+ and disabled chef is empowering her community through cooking.

Read the story
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Google employee’s quote

By making a product more accessible for people with disabilities, we’re enabling people to learn more, to accomplish more. I feel so proud to be able to help make our products better for people so that they can do anything that they want to do in their lives.

Eve Andersson (she/her) Senior Director, Accessibility & Disability Inclusion, Google

Person with long blond hair and black shirt and turquoise necklace smiling.
Person with long blond hair and black shirt and turquoise necklace smiling.

By making a product more accessible for people with disabilities, we’re enabling people to learn more, to accomplish more. I feel so proud to be able to help make our products better for people so that they can do anything that they want to do in their lives.

Eve Andersson (she/her) Senior Director, Accessibility & Disability Inclusion, Google

Explore our resources to build accessible technology

Recent stories on disability inclusion: