
Whether you’re trying to understand the intricacies of the ADA, figure out the nuances of WCAG, or decode Section 508, AODA, or the Unruh Civil Rights Act, it can quickly start to feel like alphabet soup.
The good news is this: you don’t need to become a legal expert to make your website accessible. You just need a clear understanding of what these standards are trying to achieve and how they work together. At the core, they all share one goal—making sure that digital experiences are usable by everyone, including people with disabilities.
This topic also becomes much more real when you experience it personally. Having low vision has completely changed the way I see websites—literally and figuratively. Low vision refers to a significant visual impairment that cannot be fully corrected with glasses, contact lenses, medication, or surgery. It can include reduced sharpness, blurred vision, blind spots, tunnel vision, or extreme sensitivity to contrast and light. People with low vision may still see, but often need magnification, high contrast settings, screen readers, or careful design accommodations to access digital content comfortably.
Because of that, things that are designed without accessibility in mind can quickly become barriers: small or low-contrast text, unclear layouts, images without descriptions, or interfaces that rely heavily on visual cues. Even well-designed sites can become frustrating or impossible to navigate when they don’t account for how people actually perceive and interact with content in different ways. Digital accessibility is no longer an abstract concept—it’s something that directly shapes how usable, welcoming, and effective a website truly is. It’s a reminder that accessibility isn’t just about compliance or technical standards. It’s about real human experience, and making sure that everyone, regardless of ability, can engage with information independently and with dignity.
Digital accessibility means designing and building websites, apps, and digital content so that people of all abilities can use them. This includes people who:
But accessibility isn’t only about compliance. It also:
In short, accessible design is better design.
The ADA is a U.S. civil rights law that prohibits discrimination against individuals with disabilities in all areas of public life. While originally passed before the internet as we know it existed, courts and regulators have increasingly interpreted it to include websites and digital services. For websites, this generally means:
Think of the ADA as the foundation of digital accessibility expectations in the United States.
WCAG is not a law—it is a technical standard created by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). However, it is the most widely used benchmark for accessibility compliance. WCAG is organized around four principles. Websites should be:
Most legal accessibility requirements, including ADA-related lawsuits, reference WCAG standards—especially WCAG 2.1 or 2.2 at Level AA. In practical terms, WCAG influences things like:
Section 508 is a U.S. federal law that requires government agencies and federally funded organizations to make their electronic and information technology accessible. It is closely aligned with WCAG and typically requires:
If you work with government contracts or public sector organizations, Section 508 compliance is especially important.
AODA is Ontario, Canada’s accessibility law. It sets legally binding requirements for both public and private sector organizations in Ontario. It includes standards for:
AODA specifically incorporates WCAG guidelines for web accessibility, making WCAG compliance essential for organizations operating in or serving Ontario.
The Unruh Civil Rights Act is a California law that prohibits discrimination by businesses, including on the basis of disability. In practice, it has become a major driver of digital accessibility enforcement in the United States, particularly in website-related lawsuits. Key takeaway:
While each regulation is different, they are deeply interconnected. Here’s a simple way to understand it:
In most real-world situations, WCAG is the common thread tying everything together.
If you’re building or updating a website, you don’t need to memorize every law. Instead, focus on practical steps that align with WCAG standards:
These improvements not only support compliance—they also make your website easier for everyone to use.
Digital accessibility isn’t just a legal checkbox—it’s a shift toward more thoughtful, inclusive design. Yes, the regulations can feel complex at first. But at their core, they’re all pointing in the same direction: making the web usable for everyone. Once you understand that, the rest becomes much less intimidating—and much more actionable.
Kate Tallent is the Chief Marketer and Creative Director of KTD Creative, where she helps organizations develop brand strategy, storytelling, and marketing systems that build meaningful audience relationships. With more than 25 years of experience in communications and design, she works with nonprofits, arts organizations, and mission-driven businesses to strengthen visibility, engagement, and impact.