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Guidelines

WCAG overview

Understand the principles of WCAG and the levels of conformance.

The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2 are a set of recommendations designed to make web content more accessible to people with disabilities.

The guidelines aim to improve the user experience for everyone. Including people with impairments to their vision, hearing, thinking and understanding and mobility.

Principles

WCAG 2.2 is organised around 4 principles.

Perceivable

Information and user interface components must be presented in ways that users can perceive. This means content should be available to at least one of a user's senses (sight, hearing, touch).

Use the guidelines to meet the Perceivable principle.

Operable

User interface components and navigation must be operable. Users should be able to use and interact with the interface effectively.

Use the guidelines to meet the Operable principle.

Understandable

Information and the operation of user interfaces must be understandable. Users should be able to comprehend the information, as well as how to use the interface.

Use the guidelines to meet the Understandable principle.

Robust

Content must be robust enough to be interpreted reliably by a wide variety of user agents, including assistive technologies. This means ensuring compatibility as technologies evolve.

Use the guidelines to meet the Robust principle.

What we have to meet

WCAG 2.2 is organised into 3 conformance levels: A, AA and AAA. Each level builds on the previous one, adding more requirements to improve accessibility.

Start by aiming for Level A to cover essential barriers, then work towards Level AA to address the most frequent issues. Consider Level AAA where feasible to offer the fullest accessibility possible.

In DfE your product or website must meet level AA.

Level A

This is the minimum level of conformance. It addresses the most basic web accessibility features and includes requirements that will have the highest impact on the largest number of users with disabilities.

Level AA

This level addresses the biggest and most common barriers for disabled users. It's often considered the standard level of conformance for web accessibility.

Level AAA

This is the highest and most stringent level of conformance.

It includes additional improvements that will make content accessible to the maximum number of users. However, it is recognised that it may not be possible to meet all Level AAA success criteria for all content.

Declaring compliance

Your accessibility statement must tell people how compliant the product or website is in meeting the declared level of conformance.

The statement must declare one of following.

Fully compliant

All pages of the product or website, including every step in any transactional service, must meet all WCAG level A and AA success criteria in full.

Partially compliant

One or more, but less than half, of WCAG Level A and AA success criteria have not been met.

Non-compliant

More than half of all WCAG Level A and AA success criteria have not been met.

Also see

Cognitive accessibility guidelines

Making content usable for people who have thinking, learning, remembering, and problem-solving challenges.

Universal design principles

The 7 design principles are guidelines to design spaces and products that everyone can use.

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