The web,
on your terms.
ClearPath is a browser extension that simplifies text, reads pages aloud with word highlighting, and displays AAC symbols — so anyone can access any website.
Also available for Firefox · No data collected · MIT License
The web was built for people who read dense text quickly. That's not everyone.
AAC users, people with dyslexia, cognitive disabilities, acquired brain injuries — millions of people face a web that wasn't designed with them in mind. ClearPath changes that, on any site, right now.
Everything you need.
Nothing you don't.
Six focused tools that work on any website, with no account or setup required.
Read Aloud
Text-to-speech with word-by-word highlighting, built into every page. Configure voice, speed, and pitch. Works offline.
Simplify
Right-click any text and rewrite it in plain English at Grade 3, 5, or 8 level. Powered by your choice of LLM — or works offline with rule-based simplification.
Reading Mode
Strip pages down to their content. Apply OpenDyslexic font, adjust spacing, choose from six colour themes. Saved per site.
Symbol Overlay
Display AAC pictogram symbols above words using the open ARASAAC library. Built for AAC users and the people who support them.
Focus Tools
Reading ruler that follows your cursor. Paragraph focus mode. Word complexity highlighting with simpler alternatives on hover.
Profiles
Save accessibility settings as named profiles and share them as JSON. Perfect for SLPs configuring settings for a client.
Built for real people.
AAC users
Symbols + simplification on any website
Dyslexia
OpenDyslexic font, reading ruler, TTS
Cognitive disabilities
Plain language, reduced complexity
SLPs & caregivers
Shareable profiles for clients
Your data goes nowhere.
No analytics. No telemetry. No servers. All settings stay in your browser. If you use LLM features, text goes directly from your browser to your API provider — never through us. Everything is open source and auditable.
Read the privacy policy →
Community built.
Everyone welcome.
ClearPath is built and maintained by volunteers. Developers, designers, SLPs, and accessibility advocates all have a place here.