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PageSpeed Insights
PageSpeed Insights
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Report from Feb 12, 2025, 10:52:46 PM
Discover what your real users are experiencing
No Data

Diagnose performance issues
62 FCP+1LCP+1TBT+30CLS+25SI+5 Performance
Values are estimated and may vary. The performance score is calculated directly from these metrics.See calculator.
0–49 50–89 90–100
Final Screenshot
Metrics
First Contentful Paint
5.6 s
First Contentful Paint marks the time at which the first text or image is painted. Learn more about the First Contentful Paint metric.
Largest Contentful Paint
7.5 s
Largest Contentful Paint marks the time at which the largest text or image is painted. Learn more about the Largest Contentful Paint metric
Total Blocking Time
50 ms
Sum of all time periods between FCP and Time to Interactive, when task length exceeded 50ms, expressed in milliseconds. Learn more about the Total Blocking Time metric.
Cumulative Layout Shift
0
Cumulative Layout Shift measures the movement of visible elements within the viewport. Learn more about the Cumulative Layout Shift metric.
Speed Index
5.6 s
Speed Index shows how quickly the contents of a page are visibly populated. Learn more about the Speed Index metric.
  • Captured at Feb 12, 2025, 10:52 PM UTC
  • Emulated Moto G Power with Lighthouse 12.2.3
    Unthrottled CPU/Memory Power: 421 CPU throttling: 1.2x slowdown (Simulated) Screen emulation: 412x823, DPR 1.75 Axe version: 4.10.2
  • Single page session
    This data is taken from a single page session, as opposed to field data summarizing many sessions.
  • Initial page load
  • Slow 4G throttling
    Network throttling: 150 ms TCP RTT, 1,638.4 kb/s throughput (Simulated) Browser location: Europe
  • Using HeadlessChromium 131.0.6778.264 with lr
    User agent (network): "Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; Android 11; moto g power (2022)) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/119.0.0.0 Mobile Safari/537.36"
Screenshot
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Show audits relevant to:
Diagnostics
Enable text compression Potential savings of 743 KiB
Text-based resources should be served with compression (gzip, deflate or brotli) to minimize total network bytes. Learn more about text compression.LCPFCP
JoomlaYou can enable text compression by enabling Gzip Page Compression in Joomla (System > Global configuration > Server).
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
911.5 KiB
743.2 KiB
475.3 KiB
417.7 KiB
125.6 KiB
110.1 KiB
146.0 KiB
95.5 KiB
69.6 KiB
54.9 KiB
70.8 KiB
49.3 KiB
7.3 KiB
4.6 KiB
7.5 KiB
4.4 KiB
5.5 KiB
3.7 KiB
3.9 KiB
2.9 KiB
Eliminate render-blocking resources Potential savings of 3,630 ms
Resources are blocking the first paint of your page. Consider delivering critical JS/CSS inline and deferring all non-critical JS/styles. Learn how to eliminate render-blocking resources.LCPFCP
JoomlaThere are a number of Joomla plugins that can help you inline critical assets or defer less important resources. Beware that optimizations provided by these plugins may break features of your templates or plugins, so you will need to test these thoroughly.
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
692.8 KiB
3,450 ms
475.5 KiB
2,400 ms
146.2 KiB
750 ms
71.0 KiB
300 ms
Largest Contentful Paint element 7,470 ms
This is the largest contentful element painted within the viewport. Learn more about the Largest Contentful Paint elementLCP
Element
Wir nutzen für unseren Webauftritt das Content-Management-System (CMS) Joomla!®…
<p>
Phase
% of LCP
Timing
TTFB
8%
600 ms
Load Delay
0%
0 ms
Load Time
0%
0 ms
Render Delay
92%
6,860 ms
Reduce unused CSS Potential savings of 511 KiB
Reduce unused rules from stylesheets and defer CSS not used for above-the-fold content to decrease bytes consumed by network activity. Learn how to reduce unused CSS.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider reducing, or switching, the number of Joomla extensions loading unused CSS in your page. To identify extensions that are adding extraneous CSS, try running code coverage in Chrome DevTools. You can identify the theme/plugin responsible from the URL of the stylesheet. Look out for plugins that have many stylesheets in the list which have a lot of red in code coverage. A plugin should only enqueue a stylesheet if it is actually used on the page.
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
545.0 KiB
511.2 KiB
475.3 KiB
441.5 KiB
69.6 KiB
69.6 KiB
Reduce unused JavaScript Potential savings of 68 KiB
Reduce unused JavaScript and defer loading scripts until they are required to decrease bytes consumed by network activity. Learn how to reduce unused JavaScript.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider reducing, or switching, the number of Joomla extensions loading unused JavaScript in your page. To identify plugins that are adding extraneous JS, try running code coverage in Chrome DevTools. You can identify the extension responsible from the URL of the script. Look out for extensions that have many scripts in the list which have a lot of red in code coverage. An extension should only enqueue a script if it is actually used on the page.
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
146.0 KiB
68.0 KiB
146.0 KiB
68.0 KiB
Serve static assets with an efficient cache policy 28 resources found
A long cache lifetime can speed up repeat visits to your page. Learn more about efficient cache policies.
URL
Cache TTL
Transfer Size
fos-haar.de
1st party
1,665 KiB
None
476 KiB
None
202 KiB
None
146 KiB
None
115 KiB
None
113 KiB
None
71 KiB
None
70 KiB
None
66 KiB
None
52 KiB
None
51 KiB
None
48 KiB
None
43 KiB
None
42 KiB
None
40 KiB
None
22 KiB
None
16 KiB
None
14 KiB
None
14 KiB
None
14 KiB
None
12 KiB
None
8 KiB
None
8 KiB
None
8 KiB
None
6 KiB
None
4 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
2 KiB
Ensure text remains visible during webfont load
Leverage the font-display CSS feature to ensure text is user-visible while webfonts are loading. Learn more about font-display.
URL
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
40 ms
10 ms
10 ms
20 ms
Properly size images Potential savings of 49 KiB
Serve images that are appropriately-sized to save cellular data and improve load time. Learn how to size images.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider using a responsive images plugin to use responsive images in your content.
URL
Resource Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
267.9 KiB
48.9 KiB
a.uk-card > div.uk-card-media-top > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/cc/Bildschirmfoto%202025-01-1…" width="610" height="400" alt="" loading="lazy" class="el-image">
201.9 KiB
32.9 KiB
a.uk-card > div.uk-card-media-top > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/69/Bildschirmfoto%202024-01-1…" width="610" height="400" alt="" loading="lazy" class="el-image">
66.0 KiB
15.9 KiB
Avoid an excessive DOM size 1,202 elements
A large DOM will increase memory usage, cause longer style calculations, and produce costly layout reflows. Learn how to avoid an excessive DOM size.TBT
Statistic
Element
Value
Total DOM Elements
1,202
Maximum DOM Depth
Montag
<td style="width: 19.8305%; height: 20.7969px;">
21
Maximum Child Elements
li.el-item > a.el-link > span.uk-icon > svg
<svg width="20" height="20" viewBox="0 0 20 20">
13
Initial server response time was short Root document took 520 ms
Keep the server response time for the main document short because all other requests depend on it. Learn more about the Time to First Byte metric.LCPFCP
JoomlaTemplates, extensions, and server specifications all contribute to server response time. Consider finding a more optimized template, carefully selecting an optimization extension, and/or upgrading your server.
URL
Time Spent
fos-haar.de
1st party
520 ms
520 ms
JavaScript execution time 0.5 s
Consider reducing the time spent parsing, compiling, and executing JS. You may find delivering smaller JS payloads helps with this. Learn how to reduce Javascript execution time.TBT
URL
Total CPU Time
Script Evaluation
Script Parse
fos-haar.de
1st party
927 ms
533 ms
3 ms
816 ms
531 ms
3 ms
110 ms
3 ms
0 ms
Unattributable
79 ms
3 ms
0 ms
Unattributable
79 ms
3 ms
0 ms
Minimizes main-thread work 1.0 s
Consider reducing the time spent parsing, compiling and executing JS. You may find delivering smaller JS payloads helps with this. Learn how to minimize main-thread workTBT
Category
Time Spent
Script Evaluation
554 ms
Style & Layout
237 ms
Other
171 ms
Parse HTML & CSS
45 ms
Rendering
23 ms
Garbage Collection
9 ms
Script Parsing & Compilation
5 ms
Avoid long main-thread tasks 1 long task found
Lists the longest tasks on the main thread, useful for identifying worst contributors to input delay. Learn how to avoid long main-thread tasksTBT
URL
Start Time
Duration
fos-haar.de
1st party
283 ms
5,401 ms
283 ms
Avoid non-composited animations 2 animated elements found
Animations which are not composited can be janky and increase CLS. Learn how to avoid non-composited animationsCLS
Element
Name
Warum die FOS Haar?
<a href="" aria-selected="true" role="tab" id="uk-switcher-28" aria-controls="uk-switcher-29">
Unsupported CSS Property: color
color
Unsupported CSS Property: background-color
background-color
Slide 1
<a href="" aria-selected="true" role="tab" aria-controls="uk-slider-24" aria-label="Slide 1">
Unsupported CSS Property: background-color
background-color
Avoids enormous network payloads Total size was 1,791 KiB
Large network payloads cost users real money and are highly correlated with long load times. Learn how to reduce payload sizes.
JoomlaConsider showing excerpts in your article categories (e.g. via the read more link), reducing the number of articles shown on a given page, breaking your long posts into multiple pages, or using a plugin to lazy-load comments.
URL
Transfer Size
fos-haar.de
1st party
1,436.7 KiB
475.5 KiB
202.1 KiB
146.2 KiB
126.1 KiB
114.7 KiB
112.8 KiB
71.0 KiB
69.8 KiB
66.2 KiB
52.2 KiB
Avoid chaining critical requests 10 chains found
The Critical Request Chains below show you what resources are loaded with a high priority. Consider reducing the length of chains, reducing the download size of resources, or deferring the download of unnecessary resources to improve page load. Learn how to avoid chaining critical requests.
Maximum critical path latency: 888.754 ms
Initial Navigation
- 107.364 ms, 146.23 KiB
- 72.619 ms, 71.05 KiB
- 99.508 ms, 1.76 KiB
- 101.833 ms, 4.07 KiB
- 15.014 ms, 13.95 KiB
- 14.116 ms, 14.03 KiB
- 13.81 ms, 14.09 KiB
- 67.224 ms, 7.69 KiB
- 40.818 ms, 1.53 KiB
- 70.393 ms, 5.68 KiB
More information about the performance of your application. These numbers don't directly affect the Performance score.
Passed audits (20)
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Defer offscreen images
Consider lazy-loading offscreen and hidden images after all critical resources have finished loading to lower time to interactive. Learn how to defer offscreen images.LCPFCP
JoomlaInstall a lazy-load Joomla plugin that provides the ability to defer any offscreen images, or switch to a template that provides that functionality. Starting with Joomla 4.0, all new images will automatically get the loading attribute from the core.
Minify CSS
Minifying CSS files can reduce network payload sizes. Learn how to minify CSS.LCPFCP
JoomlaA number of Joomla extensions can speed up your site by concatenating, minifying, and compressing your css styles. There are also templates that provide this functionality.
Minify JavaScript
Minifying JavaScript files can reduce payload sizes and script parse time. Learn how to minify JavaScript.LCPFCP
JoomlaA number of Joomla extensions can speed up your site by concatenating, minifying, and compressing your scripts. There are also templates that provide this functionality.
Efficiently encode images
Optimized images load faster and consume less cellular data. Learn how to efficiently encode images.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider using an image optimization plugin that compresses your images while retaining quality.
Serve images in next-gen formats
Image formats like WebP and AVIF often provide better compression than PNG or JPEG, which means faster downloads and less data consumption. Learn more about modern image formats.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider using a plugin or service that will automatically convert your uploaded images to the optimal formats.
Preconnect to required origins
Consider adding preconnect or dns-prefetch resource hints to establish early connections to important third-party origins. Learn how to preconnect to required origins.LCPFCP
Avoid multiple page redirects
Redirects introduce additional delays before the page can be loaded. Learn how to avoid page redirects.LCPFCP
Use video formats for animated content
Large GIFs are inefficient for delivering animated content. Consider using MPEG4/WebM videos for animations and PNG/WebP for static images instead of GIF to save network bytes. Learn more about efficient video formatsLCPFCP
JoomlaConsider uploading your GIF to a service which will make it available to embed as an HTML5 video.
Remove duplicate modules in JavaScript bundles
Remove large, duplicate JavaScript modules from bundles to reduce unnecessary bytes consumed by network activity. LCPFCP
Avoid serving legacy JavaScript to modern browsers
Polyfills and transforms enable legacy browsers to use new JavaScript features. However, many aren't necessary for modern browsers. For your bundled JavaScript, adopt a modern script deployment strategy using module/nomodule feature detection to reduce the amount of code shipped to modern browsers, while retaining support for legacy browsers. Learn how to use modern JavaScriptLCPFCP
Preload Largest Contentful Paint image
If the LCP element is dynamically added to the page, you should preload the image in order to improve LCP. Learn more about preloading LCP elements.LCP
User Timing marks and measures
Consider instrumenting your app with the User Timing API to measure your app's real-world performance during key user experiences. Learn more about User Timing marks.
Minimize third-party usage
Third-party code can significantly impact load performance. Limit the number of redundant third-party providers and try to load third-party code after your page has primarily finished loading. Learn how to minimize third-party impact.TBT
Lazy load third-party resources with facades
Some third-party embeds can be lazy loaded. Consider replacing them with a facade until they are required. Learn how to defer third-parties with a facade.TBT
Largest Contentful Paint image was not lazily loaded
Above-the-fold images that are lazily loaded render later in the page lifecycle, which can delay the largest contentful paint. Learn more about optimal lazy loading.LCP
Avoid large layout shifts
These are the largest layout shifts observed on the page. Each table item represents a single layout shift, and shows the element that shifted the most. Below each item are possible root causes that led to the layout shift. Some of these layout shifts may not be included in the CLS metric value due to windowing. Learn how to improve CLSCLS
Uses passive listeners to improve scrolling performance
Consider marking your touch and wheel event listeners as passive to improve your page's scroll performance. Learn more about adopting passive event listeners.
Avoids document.write()
For users on slow connections, external scripts dynamically injected via document.write() can delay page load by tens of seconds. Learn how to avoid document.write().
Image elements have explicit width and height
Set an explicit width and height on image elements to reduce layout shifts and improve CLS. Learn how to set image dimensionsCLS
Has a <meta name="viewport"> tag with width or initial-scale
A <meta name="viewport"> not only optimizes your app for mobile screen sizes, but also prevents a 300 millisecond delay to user input. Learn more about using the viewport meta tag.
These checks highlight opportunities to improve the accessibility of your web app. Automatic detection can only detect a subset of issues and does not guarantee the accessibility of your web app, so manual testing is also encouraged.
Names and labels
These are opportunities to improve the semantics of the controls in your application. This may enhance the experience for users of assistive technology, like a screen reader.
Navigation
Heading elements are not in a sequentially-descending order
Properly ordered headings that do not skip levels convey the semantic structure of the page, making it easier to navigate and understand when using assistive technologies. Learn more about heading order.
Failing Elements
Abgabe der Anmeldeunterlagen
<h3 class="el-title uk-h2 uk-link-reset uk-margin-small-top uk-margin-remove-bottom">
Newsletter-Anmeldung
<h3 class="el-title uk-margin-top uk-margin-remove-bottom">
These are opportunities to improve keyboard navigation in your application.
Additional items to manually check (10)
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Interactive controls are keyboard focusable
Custom interactive controls are keyboard focusable and display a focus indicator. Learn how to make custom controls focusable.
Interactive elements indicate their purpose and state
Interactive elements, such as links and buttons, should indicate their state and be distinguishable from non-interactive elements. Learn how to decorate interactive elements with affordance hints.
The page has a logical tab order
Tabbing through the page follows the visual layout. Users cannot focus elements that are offscreen. Learn more about logical tab ordering.
Visual order on the page follows DOM order
DOM order matches the visual order, improving navigation for assistive technology. Learn more about DOM and visual ordering.
User focus is not accidentally trapped in a region
A user can tab into and out of any control or region without accidentally trapping their focus. Learn how to avoid focus traps.
The user's focus is directed to new content added to the page
If new content, such as a dialog, is added to the page, the user's focus is directed to it. Learn how to direct focus to new content.
HTML5 landmark elements are used to improve navigation
Landmark elements (<main>, <nav>, etc.) are used to improve the keyboard navigation of the page for assistive technology. Learn more about landmark elements.
Offscreen content is hidden from assistive technology
Offscreen content is hidden with display: none or aria-hidden=true. Learn how to properly hide offscreen content.
Custom controls have associated labels
Custom interactive controls have associated labels, provided by aria-label or aria-labelledby. Learn more about custom controls and labels.
Custom controls have ARIA roles
Custom interactive controls have appropriate ARIA roles. Learn how to add roles to custom controls.
These items address areas which an automated testing tool cannot cover. Learn more in our guide on conducting an accessibility review.
Passed audits (26)
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[aria-*] attributes match their roles
Each ARIA role supports a specific subset of aria-* attributes. Mismatching these invalidates the aria-* attributes. Learn how to match ARIA attributes to their roles.
[aria-hidden="true"] is not present on the document <body>
Assistive technologies, like screen readers, work inconsistently when aria-hidden="true" is set on the document <body>. Learn how aria-hidden affects the document body.
[role]s have all required [aria-*] attributes
Some ARIA roles have required attributes that describe the state of the element to screen readers. Learn more about roles and required attributes.
Elements with an ARIA [role] that require children to contain a specific [role] have all required children.
Some ARIA parent roles must contain specific child roles to perform their intended accessibility functions. Learn more about roles and required children elements.
[role]s are contained by their required parent element
Some ARIA child roles must be contained by specific parent roles to properly perform their intended accessibility functions. Learn more about ARIA roles and required parent element.
[aria-*] attributes have valid values
Assistive technologies, like screen readers, can't interpret ARIA attributes with invalid values. Learn more about valid values for ARIA attributes.
[aria-*] attributes are valid and not misspelled
Assistive technologies, like screen readers, can't interpret ARIA attributes with invalid names. Learn more about valid ARIA attributes.
Buttons have an accessible name
When a button doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it as "button", making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to make buttons more accessible.
Image elements have [alt] attributes
Informative elements should aim for short, descriptive alternate text. Decorative elements can be ignored with an empty alt attribute. Learn more about the alt attribute.
[user-scalable="no"] is not used in the <meta name="viewport"> element and the [maximum-scale] attribute is not less than 5.
Disabling zooming is problematic for users with low vision who rely on screen magnification to properly see the contents of a web page. Learn more about the viewport meta tag.
ARIA attributes are used as specified for the element's role
Some ARIA attributes are only allowed on an element under certain conditions. Learn more about conditional ARIA attributes.
[aria-hidden="true"] elements do not contain focusable descendents
Focusable descendents within an [aria-hidden="true"] element prevent those interactive elements from being available to users of assistive technologies like screen readers. Learn how aria-hidden affects focusable elements.
Elements use only permitted ARIA attributes
Using ARIA attributes in roles where they are prohibited can mean that important information is not communicated to users of assistive technologies. Learn more about prohibited ARIA roles.
[role] values are valid
ARIA roles must have valid values in order to perform their intended accessibility functions. Learn more about valid ARIA roles.
Background and foreground colors have a sufficient contrast ratio
Low-contrast text is difficult or impossible for many users to read. Learn how to provide sufficient color contrast.
Document has a <title> element
The title gives screen reader users an overview of the page, and search engine users rely on it heavily to determine if a page is relevant to their search. Learn more about document titles.
<html> element has a [lang] attribute
If a page doesn't specify a lang attribute, a screen reader assumes that the page is in the default language that the user chose when setting up the screen reader. If the page isn't actually in the default language, then the screen reader might not announce the page's text correctly. Learn more about the lang attribute.
<html> element has a valid value for its [lang] attribute
Specifying a valid BCP 47 language helps screen readers announce text properly. Learn how to use the lang attribute.
Lists contain only <li> elements and script supporting elements (<script> and <template>).
Screen readers have a specific way of announcing lists. Ensuring proper list structure aids screen reader output. Learn more about proper list structure.
List items (<li>) are contained within <ul>, <ol> or <menu> parent elements
Screen readers require list items (<li>) to be contained within a parent <ul>, <ol> or <menu> to be announced properly. Learn more about proper list structure.
No element has a [tabindex] value greater than 0
A value greater than 0 implies an explicit navigation ordering. Although technically valid, this often creates frustrating experiences for users who rely on assistive technologies. Learn more about the tabindex attribute.
Touch targets have sufficient size and spacing.
Touch targets with sufficient size and spacing help users who may have difficulty targeting small controls to activate the targets. Learn more about touch targets.
Uses ARIA roles only on compatible elements
Many HTML elements can only be assigned certain ARIA roles. Using ARIA roles where they are not allowed can interfere with the accessibility of the web page. Learn more about ARIA roles.
Deprecated ARIA roles were not used
Deprecated ARIA roles may not be processed correctly by assistive technology. Learn more about deprecated ARIA roles.
Image elements do not have [alt] attributes that are redundant text.
Informative elements should aim for short, descriptive alternative text. Alternative text that is exactly the same as the text adjacent to the link or image is potentially confusing for screen reader users, because the text will be read twice. Learn more about the alt attribute.
Not applicable (29)
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[accesskey] values are unique
Access keys let users quickly focus a part of the page. For proper navigation, each access key must be unique. Learn more about access keys.
button, link, and menuitem elements have accessible names
When an element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to make command elements more accessible.
Elements with role="dialog" or role="alertdialog" have accessible names.
ARIA dialog elements without accessible names may prevent screen readers users from discerning the purpose of these elements. Learn how to make ARIA dialog elements more accessible.
ARIA input fields have accessible names
When an input field doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn more about input field labels.
ARIA meter elements have accessible names
When a meter element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to name meter elements.
ARIA progressbar elements have accessible names
When a progressbar element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to label progressbar elements.
Elements with the role=text attribute do not have focusable descendents.
Adding role=text around a text node split by markup enables VoiceOver to treat it as one phrase, but the element's focusable descendents will not be announced. Learn more about the role=text attribute.
ARIA toggle fields have accessible names
When a toggle field doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn more about toggle fields.
ARIA tooltip elements have accessible names
When a tooltip element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to name tooltip elements.
ARIA treeitem elements have accessible names
When a treeitem element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn more about labeling treeitem elements.
The page contains a heading, skip link, or landmark region
Adding ways to bypass repetitive content lets keyboard users navigate the page more efficiently. Learn more about bypass blocks.
<dl>'s contain only properly-ordered <dt> and <dd> groups, <script>, <template> or <div> elements.
When definition lists are not properly marked up, screen readers may produce confusing or inaccurate output. Learn how to structure definition lists correctly.
Definition list items are wrapped in <dl> elements
Definition list items (<dt> and <dd>) must be wrapped in a parent <dl> element to ensure that screen readers can properly announce them. Learn how to structure definition lists correctly.
ARIA IDs are unique
The value of an ARIA ID must be unique to prevent other instances from being overlooked by assistive technologies. Learn how to fix duplicate ARIA IDs.
No form fields have multiple labels
Form fields with multiple labels can be confusingly announced by assistive technologies like screen readers which use either the first, the last, or all of the labels. Learn how to use form labels.
<frame> or <iframe> elements have a title
Screen reader users rely on frame titles to describe the contents of frames. Learn more about frame titles.
<html> element has an [xml:lang] attribute with the same base language as the [lang] attribute.
If the webpage does not specify a consistent language, then the screen reader might not announce the page's text correctly. Learn more about the lang attribute.
Input buttons have discernible text.
Adding discernable and accessible text to input buttons may help screen reader users understand the purpose of the input button. Learn more about input buttons.
<input type="image"> elements have [alt] text
When an image is being used as an <input> button, providing alternative text can help screen reader users understand the purpose of the button. Learn about input image alt text.
Form elements have associated labels
Labels ensure that form controls are announced properly by assistive technologies, like screen readers. Learn more about form element labels.
The document does not use <meta http-equiv="refresh">
Users do not expect a page to refresh automatically, and doing so will move focus back to the top of the page. This may create a frustrating or confusing experience. Learn more about the refresh meta tag.
<object> elements have alternate text
Screen readers cannot translate non-text content. Adding alternate text to <object> elements helps screen readers convey meaning to users. Learn more about alt text for object elements.
Select elements have associated label elements.
Form elements without effective labels can create frustrating experiences for screen reader users. Learn more about the select element.
Tables have different content in the summary attribute and <caption>.
The summary attribute should describe the table structure, while <caption> should have the onscreen title. Accurate table mark-up helps users of screen readers. Learn more about summary and caption.
Cells in a <table> element that use the [headers] attribute refer to table cells within the same table.
Screen readers have features to make navigating tables easier. Ensuring <td> cells using the [headers] attribute only refer to other cells in the same table may improve the experience for screen reader users. Learn more about the headers attribute.
<th> elements and elements with [role="columnheader"/"rowheader"] have data cells they describe.
Screen readers have features to make navigating tables easier. Ensuring table headers always refer to some set of cells may improve the experience for screen reader users. Learn more about table headers.
[lang] attributes have a valid value
Specifying a valid BCP 47 language on elements helps ensure that text is pronounced correctly by a screen reader. Learn how to use the lang attribute.
<video> elements contain a <track> element with [kind="captions"]
When a video provides a caption it is easier for deaf and hearing impaired users to access its information. Learn more about video captions.
Trust and Safety
Ensure CSP is effective against XSS attacks
A strong Content Security Policy (CSP) significantly reduces the risk of cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. Learn how to use a CSP to prevent XSS
Description
Directive
Severity
No CSP found in enforcement mode
High
General
Detected JavaScript libraries
All front-end JavaScript libraries detected on the page. Learn more about this JavaScript library detection diagnostic audit.
Name
Version
Joomla
Joomla! - Open Source Content Management
Passed audits (15)
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Uses HTTPS
All sites should be protected with HTTPS, even ones that don't handle sensitive data. This includes avoiding mixed content, where some resources are loaded over HTTP despite the initial request being served over HTTPS. HTTPS prevents intruders from tampering with or passively listening in on the communications between your app and your users, and is a prerequisite for HTTP/2 and many new web platform APIs. Learn more about HTTPS.
Avoids deprecated APIs
Deprecated APIs will eventually be removed from the browser. Learn more about deprecated APIs.
Avoids third-party cookies
Chrome is moving towards a new experience that allows users to choose to browse without third-party cookies. Learn more about third-party cookies.
Allows users to paste into input fields
Preventing input pasting is a bad practice for the UX, and weakens security by blocking password managers.Learn more about user-friendly input fields.
Avoids requesting the geolocation permission on page load
Users are mistrustful of or confused by sites that request their location without context. Consider tying the request to a user action instead. Learn more about the geolocation permission.
Avoids requesting the notification permission on page load
Users are mistrustful of or confused by sites that request to send notifications without context. Consider tying the request to user gestures instead. Learn more about responsibly getting permission for notifications.
Displays images with correct aspect ratio
Image display dimensions should match natural aspect ratio. Learn more about image aspect ratio.
Serves images with appropriate resolution
Image natural dimensions should be proportional to the display size and the pixel ratio to maximize image clarity. Learn how to provide responsive images.
Has a <meta name="viewport"> tag with width or initial-scale
A <meta name="viewport"> not only optimizes your app for mobile screen sizes, but also prevents a 300 millisecond delay to user input. Learn more about using the viewport meta tag.
Document uses legible font sizes 100% legible text
Font sizes less than 12px are too small to be legible and require mobile visitors to “pinch to zoom” in order to read. Strive to have >60% of page text ≥12px. Learn more about legible font sizes.
Source
Selector
% of Page Text
Font Size
Legible text
100.00%
≥ 12px
Page has the HTML doctype
Specifying a doctype prevents the browser from switching to quirks-mode. Learn more about the doctype declaration.
Properly defines charset
A character encoding declaration is required. It can be done with a <meta> tag in the first 1024 bytes of the HTML or in the Content-Type HTTP response header. Learn more about declaring the character encoding.
No browser errors logged to the console
Errors logged to the console indicate unresolved problems. They can come from network request failures and other browser concerns. Learn more about this errors in console diagnostic audit
No issues in the Issues panel in Chrome Devtools
Issues logged to the Issues panel in Chrome Devtools indicate unresolved problems. They can come from network request failures, insufficient security controls, and other browser concerns. Open up the Issues panel in Chrome DevTools for more details on each issue.
Page has valid source maps
Source maps translate minified code to the original source code. This helps developers debug in production. In addition, Lighthouse is able to provide further insights. Consider deploying source maps to take advantage of these benefits. Learn more about source maps.
URL
Map URL
fos-haar.de
1st party
Not applicable (1)
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Redirects HTTP traffic to HTTPS
Make sure that you redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS in order to enable secure web features for all your users. Learn more.
These checks ensure that your page is following basic search engine optimization advice. There are many additional factors Lighthouse does not score here that may affect your search ranking, including performance on Core Web Vitals. Learn more about Google Search Essentials.
Content Best Practices
Document does not have a meta description
Meta descriptions may be included in search results to concisely summarize page content. Learn more about the meta description.
Format your HTML in a way that enables crawlers to better understand your app’s content.
Crawling and Indexing
Links are not crawlable
Search engines may use href attributes on links to crawl websites. Ensure that the href attribute of anchor elements links to an appropriate destination, so more pages of the site can be discovered. Learn how to make links crawlable
Uncrawlable Link
(c) 2023 FOS Haar
<a class="el-content uk-disabled">
To appear in search results, crawlers need access to your app.
Additional items to manually check (1)
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Structured data is valid
Run these additional validators on your site to check additional SEO best practices.
Passed audits (7)
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Page isn’t blocked from indexing
Search engines are unable to include your pages in search results if they don't have permission to crawl them. Learn more about crawler directives.
Document has a <title> element
The title gives screen reader users an overview of the page, and search engine users rely on it heavily to determine if a page is relevant to their search. Learn more about document titles.
Page has successful HTTP status code
Pages with unsuccessful HTTP status codes may not be indexed properly. Learn more about HTTP status codes.
robots.txt is valid
If your robots.txt file is malformed, crawlers may not be able to understand how you want your website to be crawled or indexed. Learn more about robots.txt.
Image elements have [alt] attributes
Informative elements should aim for short, descriptive alternate text. Decorative elements can be ignored with an empty alt attribute. Learn more about the alt attribute.
Document has a valid hreflang
hreflang links tell search engines what version of a page they should list in search results for a given language or region. Learn more about hreflang.
Not applicable (1)
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Document has a valid rel=canonical
Canonical links suggest which URL to show in search results. Learn more about canonical links.
Discover what your real users are experiencing
No Data

Diagnose performance issues
93 FCP+8LCP+21TBT+30CLS+25SI+9 Performance
Values are estimated and may vary. The performance score is calculated directly from these metrics.See calculator.
0–49 50–89 90–100
Final Screenshot
Metrics
First Contentful Paint
1.1 s
First Contentful Paint marks the time at which the first text or image is painted. Learn more about the First Contentful Paint metric.
Largest Contentful Paint
1.4 s
Largest Contentful Paint marks the time at which the largest text or image is painted. Learn more about the Largest Contentful Paint metric
Total Blocking Time
20 ms
Sum of all time periods between FCP and Time to Interactive, when task length exceeded 50ms, expressed in milliseconds. Learn more about the Total Blocking Time metric.
Cumulative Layout Shift
0.016
Cumulative Layout Shift measures the movement of visible elements within the viewport. Learn more about the Cumulative Layout Shift metric.
Speed Index
1.3 s
Speed Index shows how quickly the contents of a page are visibly populated. Learn more about the Speed Index metric.
  • Captured at Feb 12, 2025, 10:52 PM UTC
  • Emulated Desktop with Lighthouse 12.2.3
    Unthrottled CPU/Memory Power: 438 CPU throttling: 1x slowdown (Simulated) Screen emulation: 1350x940, DPR 1 Axe version: 4.10.2
  • Single page session
    This data is taken from a single page session, as opposed to field data summarizing many sessions.
  • Initial page load
  • Custom throttling
    Network throttling: 40 ms TCP RTT, 10,240 kb/s throughput (Simulated) Browser location: Europe
  • Using HeadlessChromium 131.0.6778.264 with lr
    User agent (network): "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_15_7) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/119.0.0.0 Safari/537.36"
Screenshot
Screenshot
Screenshot
Screenshot
Screenshot
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Show audits relevant to:
Diagnostics
Enable text compression Potential savings of 743 KiB
Text-based resources should be served with compression (gzip, deflate or brotli) to minimize total network bytes. Learn more about text compression.LCPFCP
JoomlaYou can enable text compression by enabling Gzip Page Compression in Joomla (System > Global configuration > Server).
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
911.5 KiB
743.2 KiB
475.3 KiB
417.7 KiB
125.6 KiB
110.1 KiB
146.0 KiB
95.5 KiB
69.6 KiB
54.9 KiB
70.8 KiB
49.3 KiB
7.3 KiB
4.6 KiB
7.5 KiB
4.4 KiB
5.5 KiB
3.7 KiB
3.9 KiB
2.9 KiB
Reduce unused CSS Potential savings of 503 KiB
Reduce unused rules from stylesheets and defer CSS not used for above-the-fold content to decrease bytes consumed by network activity. Learn how to reduce unused CSS.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider reducing, or switching, the number of Joomla extensions loading unused CSS in your page. To identify extensions that are adding extraneous CSS, try running code coverage in Chrome DevTools. You can identify the theme/plugin responsible from the URL of the stylesheet. Look out for plugins that have many stylesheets in the list which have a lot of red in code coverage. A plugin should only enqueue a stylesheet if it is actually used on the page.
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
545.0 KiB
503.3 KiB
475.3 KiB
433.6 KiB
69.6 KiB
69.6 KiB
Eliminate render-blocking resources Potential savings of 690 ms
Resources are blocking the first paint of your page. Consider delivering critical JS/CSS inline and deferring all non-critical JS/styles. Learn how to eliminate render-blocking resources.LCPFCP
JoomlaThere are a number of Joomla plugins that can help you inline critical assets or defer less important resources. Beware that optimizations provided by these plugins may break features of your templates or plugins, so you will need to test these thoroughly.
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
692.8 KiB
560 ms
475.5 KiB
360 ms
146.2 KiB
120 ms
71.0 KiB
80 ms
Largest Contentful Paint element 1,380 ms
This is the largest contentful element painted within the viewport. Learn more about the Largest Contentful Paint elementLCP
Element
div#uk-slideshow-7 > div.uk-position-cover > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/41/photo-1667391405747-bb437b…" width="4032" height="3024" alt="" class="el-image" uk-cover="">
Phase
% of LCP
Timing
TTFB
12%
160 ms
Load Delay
56%
770 ms
Load Time
1%
20 ms
Render Delay
31%
430 ms
Reduce unused JavaScript Potential savings of 68 KiB
Reduce unused JavaScript and defer loading scripts until they are required to decrease bytes consumed by network activity. Learn how to reduce unused JavaScript.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider reducing, or switching, the number of Joomla extensions loading unused JavaScript in your page. To identify plugins that are adding extraneous JS, try running code coverage in Chrome DevTools. You can identify the extension responsible from the URL of the script. Look out for extensions that have many scripts in the list which have a lot of red in code coverage. An extension should only enqueue a script if it is actually used on the page.
URL
Transfer Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
146.0 KiB
68.1 KiB
146.0 KiB
68.1 KiB
Serve static assets with an efficient cache policy 37 resources found
A long cache lifetime can speed up repeat visits to your page. Learn more about efficient cache policies.
URL
Cache TTL
Transfer Size
fos-haar.de
1st party
2,294 KiB
None
631 KiB
None
476 KiB
None
169 KiB
None
146 KiB
None
125 KiB
None
71 KiB
None
71 KiB
None
70 KiB
None
70 KiB
None
66 KiB
None
59 KiB
None
48 KiB
None
43 KiB
None
38 KiB
None
35 KiB
None
35 KiB
None
29 KiB
None
14 KiB
None
14 KiB
None
14 KiB
None
8 KiB
None
8 KiB
None
8 KiB
None
8 KiB
None
7 KiB
None
6 KiB
None
4 KiB
None
4 KiB
None
3 KiB
None
3 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
2 KiB
None
1 KiB
Ensure text remains visible during webfont load
Leverage the font-display CSS feature to ensure text is user-visible while webfonts are loading. Learn more about font-display.
URL
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
80 ms
30 ms
10 ms
30 ms
Properly size images Potential savings of 192 KiB
Serve images that are appropriately-sized to save cellular data and improve load time. Learn how to size images.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider using a responsive images plugin to use responsive images in your content.
URL
Resource Size
Potential Savings
fos-haar.de
1st party
371.9 KiB
192.5 KiB
a.uk-card > div.uk-card-media-top > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/fd/Bildschirmfoto%202025-01-1…" width="610" height="400" alt="" loading="lazy" class="el-image">
125.1 KiB
78.2 KiB
a.uk-card > div.uk-card-media-top > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/e6/Bildschirmfoto%202024-01-1…" width="610" height="400" alt="" loading="lazy" class="el-image">
47.5 KiB
29.7 KiB
div.uk-child-width-expand > div.uk-width-3-5@m > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/af/Schulleitbild%203.7.23_V3-…" width="900" height="859" class="el-image" alt="" loading="lazy">
58.8 KiB
24.1 KiB
div.uk-width-2-5@s > div.uk-card-media-right > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/2c/photo-1667391405747-bb437b…" width="900" height="675" alt="" loading="lazy" class="el-image uk-height-1-1 uk-object-cover">
35.0 KiB
21.9 KiB
a.uk-card > div.uk-card-media-top > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/f1/Workshop%203-f173851e.webp" width="610" height="400" alt="" loading="lazy" class="el-image">
34.7 KiB
21.7 KiB
div.uk-panel > div.uk-position-absolute > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/55/background-square-02-5555f…" width="1100" height="1100" class="el-image" alt="" loading="eager">
70.8 KiB
16.9 KiB
Avoid an excessive DOM size 1,202 elements
A large DOM will increase memory usage, cause longer style calculations, and produce costly layout reflows. Learn how to avoid an excessive DOM size.TBT
Statistic
Element
Value
Total DOM Elements
1,202
Maximum DOM Depth
Montag
<td style="width: 19.8305%; height: 20.7969px;">
21
Maximum Child Elements
li.el-item > a.el-link > span.uk-icon > svg
<svg width="20" height="20" viewBox="0 0 20 20">
13
Initial server response time was short Root document took 370 ms
Keep the server response time for the main document short because all other requests depend on it. Learn more about the Time to First Byte metric.LCPFCP
JoomlaTemplates, extensions, and server specifications all contribute to server response time. Consider finding a more optimized template, carefully selecting an optimization extension, and/or upgrading your server.
URL
Time Spent
fos-haar.de
1st party
370 ms
370 ms
Avoid large layout shifts 1 layout shift found
These are the largest layout shifts observed on the page. Each table item represents a single layout shift, and shows the element that shifted the most. Below each item are possible root causes that led to the layout shift. Some of these layout shifts may not be included in the CLS metric value due to windowing. Learn how to improve CLSCLS
Element
Layout shift score
Willkommen an der FOS Haar
<div class="uk-grid tm-grid-expand uk-child-width-1-1 uk-grid-margin">
0.016
A late network request adjusted the page layout
A late network request adjusted the page layout
A late network request adjusted the page layout
A late network request adjusted the page layout
A late network request adjusted the page layout
A late network request adjusted the page layout
Avoid non-composited animations 4 animated elements found
Animations which are not composited can be janky and increase CLS. Learn how to avoid non-composited animationsCLS
Element
Name
Slide 1
<a href="#" aria-selected="false" role="tab" aria-controls="uk-slideshow-7" aria-label="Slide 1" tabindex="-1">
Unsupported CSS Property: background-color
background-color
Back to top
<a href="#" uk-totop="" uk-scroll="" class="uk-icon uk-totop" role="button" aria-label="Back to top">
Unsupported CSS Property: color
color
Unsupported CSS Property: background-color
background-color
Unsupported CSS Property: box-shadow
box-shadow
Warum die FOS Haar?
<a href="" aria-selected="true" role="tab" id="uk-switcher-28" aria-controls="uk-switcher-29">
Unsupported CSS Property: color
color
Unsupported CSS Property: background-color
background-color
Slide 1
<a href="" aria-selected="true" role="tab" aria-controls="uk-slider-23" aria-label="Slide 1">
Unsupported CSS Property: background-color
background-color
Avoids enormous network payloads Total size was 2,420 KiB
Large network payloads cost users real money and are highly correlated with long load times. Learn how to reduce payload sizes.
JoomlaConsider showing excerpts in your article categories (e.g. via the read more link), reducing the number of articles shown on a given page, breaking your long posts into multiple pages, or using a plugin to lazy-load comments.
URL
Transfer Size
fos-haar.de
1st party
1,955.1 KiB
631.4 KiB
475.5 KiB
169.1 KiB
146.2 KiB
126.1 KiB
125.3 KiB
71.0 KiB
71.0 KiB
69.8 KiB
69.5 KiB
Avoid chaining critical requests 10 chains found
The Critical Request Chains below show you what resources are loaded with a high priority. Consider reducing the length of chains, reducing the download size of resources, or deferring the download of unnecessary resources to improve page load. Learn how to avoid chaining critical requests.
Maximum critical path latency: 690.519 ms
Initial Navigation
- 101.878 ms, 146.23 KiB
- 71.096 ms, 71.05 KiB
- 49.118 ms, 1.76 KiB
- 50.923 ms, 4.07 KiB
- 30.413 ms, 13.95 KiB
- 14.175 ms, 14.03 KiB
- 34.581 ms, 14.09 KiB
- 40.046 ms, 7.69 KiB
- 49.256 ms, 1.53 KiB
- 59.648 ms, 5.68 KiB
JavaScript execution time 0.4 s
Consider reducing the time spent parsing, compiling, and executing JS. You may find delivering smaller JS payloads helps with this. Learn how to reduce Javascript execution time.TBT
URL
Total CPU Time
Script Evaluation
Script Parse
fos-haar.de
1st party
682 ms
363 ms
4 ms
595 ms
361 ms
4 ms
87 ms
2 ms
0 ms
Unattributable
62 ms
2 ms
0 ms
Unattributable
62 ms
2 ms
0 ms
Minimizes main-thread work 0.8 s
Consider reducing the time spent parsing, compiling and executing JS. You may find delivering smaller JS payloads helps with this. Learn how to minimize main-thread workTBT
Category
Time Spent
Script Evaluation
378 ms
Style & Layout
169 ms
Other
153 ms
Parse HTML & CSS
44 ms
Rendering
29 ms
Script Parsing & Compilation
7 ms
Garbage Collection
6 ms
Avoid long main-thread tasks 2 long tasks found
Lists the longest tasks on the main thread, useful for identifying worst contributors to input delay. Learn how to avoid long main-thread tasksTBT
URL
Start Time
Duration
fos-haar.de
1st party
218 ms
981 ms
132 ms
1,113 ms
86 ms
More information about the performance of your application. These numbers don't directly affect the Performance score.
Passed audits (19)
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Defer offscreen images
Consider lazy-loading offscreen and hidden images after all critical resources have finished loading to lower time to interactive. Learn how to defer offscreen images.LCPFCP
JoomlaInstall a lazy-load Joomla plugin that provides the ability to defer any offscreen images, or switch to a template that provides that functionality. Starting with Joomla 4.0, all new images will automatically get the loading attribute from the core.
Minify CSS
Minifying CSS files can reduce network payload sizes. Learn how to minify CSS.LCPFCP
JoomlaA number of Joomla extensions can speed up your site by concatenating, minifying, and compressing your css styles. There are also templates that provide this functionality.
Minify JavaScript
Minifying JavaScript files can reduce payload sizes and script parse time. Learn how to minify JavaScript.LCPFCP
JoomlaA number of Joomla extensions can speed up your site by concatenating, minifying, and compressing your scripts. There are also templates that provide this functionality.
Efficiently encode images
Optimized images load faster and consume less cellular data. Learn how to efficiently encode images.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider using an image optimization plugin that compresses your images while retaining quality.
Serve images in next-gen formats
Image formats like WebP and AVIF often provide better compression than PNG or JPEG, which means faster downloads and less data consumption. Learn more about modern image formats.LCPFCP
JoomlaConsider using a plugin or service that will automatically convert your uploaded images to the optimal formats.
Preconnect to required origins
Consider adding preconnect or dns-prefetch resource hints to establish early connections to important third-party origins. Learn how to preconnect to required origins.LCPFCP
Avoid multiple page redirects
Redirects introduce additional delays before the page can be loaded. Learn how to avoid page redirects.LCPFCP
Use video formats for animated content
Large GIFs are inefficient for delivering animated content. Consider using MPEG4/WebM videos for animations and PNG/WebP for static images instead of GIF to save network bytes. Learn more about efficient video formatsLCPFCP
JoomlaConsider uploading your GIF to a service which will make it available to embed as an HTML5 video.
Remove duplicate modules in JavaScript bundles
Remove large, duplicate JavaScript modules from bundles to reduce unnecessary bytes consumed by network activity. LCPFCP
Avoid serving legacy JavaScript to modern browsers
Polyfills and transforms enable legacy browsers to use new JavaScript features. However, many aren't necessary for modern browsers. For your bundled JavaScript, adopt a modern script deployment strategy using module/nomodule feature detection to reduce the amount of code shipped to modern browsers, while retaining support for legacy browsers. Learn how to use modern JavaScriptLCPFCP
Preload Largest Contentful Paint image
If the LCP element is dynamically added to the page, you should preload the image in order to improve LCP. Learn more about preloading LCP elements.LCP
User Timing marks and measures
Consider instrumenting your app with the User Timing API to measure your app's real-world performance during key user experiences. Learn more about User Timing marks.
Minimize third-party usage
Third-party code can significantly impact load performance. Limit the number of redundant third-party providers and try to load third-party code after your page has primarily finished loading. Learn how to minimize third-party impact.TBT
Lazy load third-party resources with facades
Some third-party embeds can be lazy loaded. Consider replacing them with a facade until they are required. Learn how to defer third-parties with a facade.TBT
Largest Contentful Paint image was not lazily loaded
Above-the-fold images that are lazily loaded render later in the page lifecycle, which can delay the largest contentful paint. Learn more about optimal lazy loading.LCP
Element
div#uk-slideshow-7 > div.uk-position-cover > picture > img.el-image
<img src="https://fos-haar.de/templates/yootheme/cache/41/photo-1667391405747-bb437b…" width="4032" height="3024" alt="" class="el-image" uk-cover="">
Uses passive listeners to improve scrolling performance
Consider marking your touch and wheel event listeners as passive to improve your page's scroll performance. Learn more about adopting passive event listeners.
Avoids document.write()
For users on slow connections, external scripts dynamically injected via document.write() can delay page load by tens of seconds. Learn how to avoid document.write().
Image elements have explicit width and height
Set an explicit width and height on image elements to reduce layout shifts and improve CLS. Learn how to set image dimensionsCLS
Has a <meta name="viewport"> tag with width or initial-scale
A <meta name="viewport"> not only optimizes your app for mobile screen sizes, but also prevents a 300 millisecond delay to user input. Learn more about using the viewport meta tag.
These checks highlight opportunities to improve the accessibility of your web app. Automatic detection can only detect a subset of issues and does not guarantee the accessibility of your web app, so manual testing is also encouraged.
Names and labels
These are opportunities to improve the semantics of the controls in your application. This may enhance the experience for users of assistive technology, like a screen reader.
Navigation
Heading elements are not in a sequentially-descending order
Properly ordered headings that do not skip levels convey the semantic structure of the page, making it easier to navigate and understand when using assistive technologies. Learn more about heading order.
Failing Elements
Abgabe der Anmeldeunterlagen
<h3 class="el-title uk-h2 uk-link-reset uk-margin-small-top uk-margin-remove-bottom">
Newsletter-Anmeldung
<h3 class="el-title uk-margin-top uk-margin-remove-bottom">
These are opportunities to improve keyboard navigation in your application.
Additional items to manually check (10)
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Interactive controls are keyboard focusable
Custom interactive controls are keyboard focusable and display a focus indicator. Learn how to make custom controls focusable.
Interactive elements indicate their purpose and state
Interactive elements, such as links and buttons, should indicate their state and be distinguishable from non-interactive elements. Learn how to decorate interactive elements with affordance hints.
The page has a logical tab order
Tabbing through the page follows the visual layout. Users cannot focus elements that are offscreen. Learn more about logical tab ordering.
Visual order on the page follows DOM order
DOM order matches the visual order, improving navigation for assistive technology. Learn more about DOM and visual ordering.
User focus is not accidentally trapped in a region
A user can tab into and out of any control or region without accidentally trapping their focus. Learn how to avoid focus traps.
The user's focus is directed to new content added to the page
If new content, such as a dialog, is added to the page, the user's focus is directed to it. Learn how to direct focus to new content.
HTML5 landmark elements are used to improve navigation
Landmark elements (<main>, <nav>, etc.) are used to improve the keyboard navigation of the page for assistive technology. Learn more about landmark elements.
Offscreen content is hidden from assistive technology
Offscreen content is hidden with display: none or aria-hidden=true. Learn how to properly hide offscreen content.
Custom controls have associated labels
Custom interactive controls have associated labels, provided by aria-label or aria-labelledby. Learn more about custom controls and labels.
Custom controls have ARIA roles
Custom interactive controls have appropriate ARIA roles. Learn how to add roles to custom controls.
These items address areas which an automated testing tool cannot cover. Learn more in our guide on conducting an accessibility review.
Passed audits (30)
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[aria-*] attributes match their roles
Each ARIA role supports a specific subset of aria-* attributes. Mismatching these invalidates the aria-* attributes. Learn how to match ARIA attributes to their roles.
[aria-hidden="true"] is not present on the document <body>
Assistive technologies, like screen readers, work inconsistently when aria-hidden="true" is set on the document <body>. Learn how aria-hidden affects the document body.
[role]s have all required [aria-*] attributes
Some ARIA roles have required attributes that describe the state of the element to screen readers. Learn more about roles and required attributes.
Elements with an ARIA [role] that require children to contain a specific [role] have all required children.
Some ARIA parent roles must contain specific child roles to perform their intended accessibility functions. Learn more about roles and required children elements.
[role]s are contained by their required parent element
Some ARIA child roles must be contained by specific parent roles to properly perform their intended accessibility functions. Learn more about ARIA roles and required parent element.
[aria-*] attributes have valid values
Assistive technologies, like screen readers, can't interpret ARIA attributes with invalid values. Learn more about valid values for ARIA attributes.
[aria-*] attributes are valid and not misspelled
Assistive technologies, like screen readers, can't interpret ARIA attributes with invalid names. Learn more about valid ARIA attributes.
Buttons have an accessible name
When a button doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it as "button", making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to make buttons more accessible.
Image elements have [alt] attributes
Informative elements should aim for short, descriptive alternate text. Decorative elements can be ignored with an empty alt attribute. Learn more about the alt attribute.
[user-scalable="no"] is not used in the <meta name="viewport"> element and the [maximum-scale] attribute is not less than 5.
Disabling zooming is problematic for users with low vision who rely on screen magnification to properly see the contents of a web page. Learn more about the viewport meta tag.
button, link, and menuitem elements have accessible names
When an element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to make command elements more accessible.
ARIA attributes are used as specified for the element's role
Some ARIA attributes are only allowed on an element under certain conditions. Learn more about conditional ARIA attributes.
[aria-hidden="true"] elements do not contain focusable descendents
Focusable descendents within an [aria-hidden="true"] element prevent those interactive elements from being available to users of assistive technologies like screen readers. Learn how aria-hidden affects focusable elements.
Elements use only permitted ARIA attributes
Using ARIA attributes in roles where they are prohibited can mean that important information is not communicated to users of assistive technologies. Learn more about prohibited ARIA roles.
[role] values are valid
ARIA roles must have valid values in order to perform their intended accessibility functions. Learn more about valid ARIA roles.
Background and foreground colors have a sufficient contrast ratio
Low-contrast text is difficult or impossible for many users to read. Learn how to provide sufficient color contrast.
Document has a <title> element
The title gives screen reader users an overview of the page, and search engine users rely on it heavily to determine if a page is relevant to their search. Learn more about document titles.
<html> element has a [lang] attribute
If a page doesn't specify a lang attribute, a screen reader assumes that the page is in the default language that the user chose when setting up the screen reader. If the page isn't actually in the default language, then the screen reader might not announce the page's text correctly. Learn more about the lang attribute.
<html> element has a valid value for its [lang] attribute
Specifying a valid BCP 47 language helps screen readers announce text properly. Learn how to use the lang attribute.
Form elements have associated labels
Labels ensure that form controls are announced properly by assistive technologies, like screen readers. Learn more about form element labels.
Lists contain only <li> elements and script supporting elements (<script> and <template>).
Screen readers have a specific way of announcing lists. Ensuring proper list structure aids screen reader output. Learn more about proper list structure.
List items (<li>) are contained within <ul>, <ol> or <menu> parent elements
Screen readers require list items (<li>) to be contained within a parent <ul>, <ol> or <menu> to be announced properly. Learn more about proper list structure.
No element has a [tabindex] value greater than 0
A value greater than 0 implies an explicit navigation ordering. Although technically valid, this often creates frustrating experiences for users who rely on assistive technologies. Learn more about the tabindex attribute.
Touch targets have sufficient size and spacing.
Touch targets with sufficient size and spacing help users who may have difficulty targeting small controls to activate the targets. Learn more about touch targets.
Cells in a <table> element that use the [headers] attribute refer to table cells within the same table.
Screen readers have features to make navigating tables easier. Ensuring <td> cells using the [headers] attribute only refer to other cells in the same table may improve the experience for screen reader users. Learn more about the headers attribute.
Uses ARIA roles only on compatible elements
Many HTML elements can only be assigned certain ARIA roles. Using ARIA roles where they are not allowed can interfere with the accessibility of the web page. Learn more about ARIA roles.
Deprecated ARIA roles were not used
Deprecated ARIA roles may not be processed correctly by assistive technology. Learn more about deprecated ARIA roles.
Image elements do not have [alt] attributes that are redundant text.
Informative elements should aim for short, descriptive alternative text. Alternative text that is exactly the same as the text adjacent to the link or image is potentially confusing for screen reader users, because the text will be read twice. Learn more about the alt attribute.
Tables have different content in the summary attribute and <caption>.
The summary attribute should describe the table structure, while <caption> should have the onscreen title. Accurate table mark-up helps users of screen readers. Learn more about summary and caption.
Not applicable (25)
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[accesskey] values are unique
Access keys let users quickly focus a part of the page. For proper navigation, each access key must be unique. Learn more about access keys.
Elements with role="dialog" or role="alertdialog" have accessible names.
ARIA dialog elements without accessible names may prevent screen readers users from discerning the purpose of these elements. Learn how to make ARIA dialog elements more accessible.
ARIA input fields have accessible names
When an input field doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn more about input field labels.
ARIA meter elements have accessible names
When a meter element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to name meter elements.
ARIA progressbar elements have accessible names
When a progressbar element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to label progressbar elements.
Elements with the role=text attribute do not have focusable descendents.
Adding role=text around a text node split by markup enables VoiceOver to treat it as one phrase, but the element's focusable descendents will not be announced. Learn more about the role=text attribute.
ARIA toggle fields have accessible names
When a toggle field doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn more about toggle fields.
ARIA tooltip elements have accessible names
When a tooltip element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn how to name tooltip elements.
ARIA treeitem elements have accessible names
When a treeitem element doesn't have an accessible name, screen readers announce it with a generic name, making it unusable for users who rely on screen readers. Learn more about labeling treeitem elements.
The page contains a heading, skip link, or landmark region
Adding ways to bypass repetitive content lets keyboard users navigate the page more efficiently. Learn more about bypass blocks.
<dl>'s contain only properly-ordered <dt> and <dd> groups, <script>, <template> or <div> elements.
When definition lists are not properly marked up, screen readers may produce confusing or inaccurate output. Learn how to structure definition lists correctly.
Definition list items are wrapped in <dl> elements
Definition list items (<dt> and <dd>) must be wrapped in a parent <dl> element to ensure that screen readers can properly announce them. Learn how to structure definition lists correctly.
ARIA IDs are unique
The value of an ARIA ID must be unique to prevent other instances from being overlooked by assistive technologies. Learn how to fix duplicate ARIA IDs.
No form fields have multiple labels
Form fields with multiple labels can be confusingly announced by assistive technologies like screen readers which use either the first, the last, or all of the labels. Learn how to use form labels.
<frame> or <iframe> elements have a title
Screen reader users rely on frame titles to describe the contents of frames. Learn more about frame titles.
<html> element has an [xml:lang] attribute with the same base language as the [lang] attribute.
If the webpage does not specify a consistent language, then the screen reader might not announce the page's text correctly. Learn more about the lang attribute.
Input buttons have discernible text.
Adding discernable and accessible text to input buttons may help screen reader users understand the purpose of the input button. Learn more about input buttons.
<input type="image"> elements have [alt] text
When an image is being used as an <input> button, providing alternative text can help screen reader users understand the purpose of the button. Learn about input image alt text.
The document does not use <meta http-equiv="refresh">
Users do not expect a page to refresh automatically, and doing so will move focus back to the top of the page. This may create a frustrating or confusing experience. Learn more about the refresh meta tag.
<object> elements have alternate text
Screen readers cannot translate non-text content. Adding alternate text to <object> elements helps screen readers convey meaning to users. Learn more about alt text for object elements.
Select elements have associated label elements.
Form elements without effective labels can create frustrating experiences for screen reader users. Learn more about the select element.
<th> elements and elements with [role="columnheader"/"rowheader"] have data cells they describe.
Screen readers have features to make navigating tables easier. Ensuring table headers always refer to some set of cells may improve the experience for screen reader users. Learn more about table headers.
[lang] attributes have a valid value
Specifying a valid BCP 47 language on elements helps ensure that text is pronounced correctly by a screen reader. Learn how to use the lang attribute.
<video> elements contain a <track> element with [kind="captions"]
When a video provides a caption it is easier for deaf and hearing impaired users to access its information. Learn more about video captions.
Trust and Safety
Ensure CSP is effective against XSS attacks
A strong Content Security Policy (CSP) significantly reduces the risk of cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks. Learn how to use a CSP to prevent XSS
Description
Directive
Severity
No CSP found in enforcement mode
High
General
Detected JavaScript libraries
All front-end JavaScript libraries detected on the page. Learn more about this JavaScript library detection diagnostic audit.
Name
Version
Joomla
Joomla! - Open Source Content Management
Passed audits (14)
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Uses HTTPS
All sites should be protected with HTTPS, even ones that don't handle sensitive data. This includes avoiding mixed content, where some resources are loaded over HTTP despite the initial request being served over HTTPS. HTTPS prevents intruders from tampering with or passively listening in on the communications between your app and your users, and is a prerequisite for HTTP/2 and many new web platform APIs. Learn more about HTTPS.
Avoids deprecated APIs
Deprecated APIs will eventually be removed from the browser. Learn more about deprecated APIs.
Avoids third-party cookies
Chrome is moving towards a new experience that allows users to choose to browse without third-party cookies. Learn more about third-party cookies.
Allows users to paste into input fields
Preventing input pasting is a bad practice for the UX, and weakens security by blocking password managers.Learn more about user-friendly input fields.
Avoids requesting the geolocation permission on page load
Users are mistrustful of or confused by sites that request their location without context. Consider tying the request to a user action instead. Learn more about the geolocation permission.
Avoids requesting the notification permission on page load
Users are mistrustful of or confused by sites that request to send notifications without context. Consider tying the request to user gestures instead. Learn more about responsibly getting permission for notifications.
Displays images with correct aspect ratio
Image display dimensions should match natural aspect ratio. Learn more about image aspect ratio.
Serves images with appropriate resolution
Image natural dimensions should be proportional to the display size and the pixel ratio to maximize image clarity. Learn how to provide responsive images.
Has a <meta name="viewport"> tag with width or initial-scale
A <meta name="viewport"> not only optimizes your app for mobile screen sizes, but also prevents a 300 millisecond delay to user input. Learn more about using the viewport meta tag.
Page has the HTML doctype
Specifying a doctype prevents the browser from switching to quirks-mode. Learn more about the doctype declaration.
Properly defines charset
A character encoding declaration is required. It can be done with a <meta> tag in the first 1024 bytes of the HTML or in the Content-Type HTTP response header. Learn more about declaring the character encoding.
No browser errors logged to the console
Errors logged to the console indicate unresolved problems. They can come from network request failures and other browser concerns. Learn more about this errors in console diagnostic audit
No issues in the Issues panel in Chrome Devtools
Issues logged to the Issues panel in Chrome Devtools indicate unresolved problems. They can come from network request failures, insufficient security controls, and other browser concerns. Open up the Issues panel in Chrome DevTools for more details on each issue.
Page has valid source maps
Source maps translate minified code to the original source code. This helps developers debug in production. In addition, Lighthouse is able to provide further insights. Consider deploying source maps to take advantage of these benefits. Learn more about source maps.
URL
Map URL
fos-haar.de
1st party
Not applicable (2)
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Redirects HTTP traffic to HTTPS
Make sure that you redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS in order to enable secure web features for all your users. Learn more.
Document uses legible font sizes
Font sizes less than 12px are too small to be legible and require mobile visitors to “pinch to zoom” in order to read. Strive to have >60% of page text ≥12px. Learn more about legible font sizes.
These checks ensure that your page is following basic search engine optimization advice. There are many additional factors Lighthouse does not score here that may affect your search ranking, including performance on Core Web Vitals. Learn more about Google Search Essentials.
Content Best Practices
Document does not have a meta description
Meta descriptions may be included in search results to concisely summarize page content. Learn more about the meta description.
Format your HTML in a way that enables crawlers to better understand your app’s content.
Crawling and Indexing
Links are not crawlable
Search engines may use href attributes on links to crawl websites. Ensure that the href attribute of anchor elements links to an appropriate destination, so more pages of the site can be discovered. Learn how to make links crawlable
Uncrawlable Link
(c) 2023 FOS Haar
<a class="el-content uk-disabled">
To appear in search results, crawlers need access to your app.
Additional items to manually check (1)
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Structured data is valid
Run these additional validators on your site to check additional SEO best practices.
Passed audits (7)
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Page isn’t blocked from indexing
Search engines are unable to include your pages in search results if they don't have permission to crawl them. Learn more about crawler directives.
Document has a <title> element
The title gives screen reader users an overview of the page, and search engine users rely on it heavily to determine if a page is relevant to their search. Learn more about document titles.
Page has successful HTTP status code
Pages with unsuccessful HTTP status codes may not be indexed properly. Learn more about HTTP status codes.
robots.txt is valid
If your robots.txt file is malformed, crawlers may not be able to understand how you want your website to be crawled or indexed. Learn more about robots.txt.
Image elements have [alt] attributes
Informative elements should aim for short, descriptive alternate text. Decorative elements can be ignored with an empty alt attribute. Learn more about the alt attribute.
Document has a valid hreflang
hreflang links tell search engines what version of a page they should list in search results for a given language or region. Learn more about hreflang.
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Document has a valid rel=canonical
Canonical links suggest which URL to show in search results. Learn more about canonical links.