• About Our Ecommerce Blog
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Login
How to set up an Ecommerce Store
Advertisement
  • Getting Started
    • Finding Your Niche
    • Business Planning & Validation
    • First Steps & Milestones
    • Mindset & Entrepreneurship
  • Building an Ecommerce Store
    • Platform Selection
    • Store Setup & Configuration
    • Theme Design & Customization
    • Product Catalog Management
    • Navigation & User Experience
  • Technology
    • Apps & Integrations
    • Payment Systems
    • Automation & Workflows
    • Technical Setup & Tools
  • Marketing
    • SEO & Content Marketing
    • Email Marketing
    • Social Media & Advertising
    • Customer Acquisition
    • Conversion Optimization
  • Business
    • Operations & Processes
    • Hiring & Team Building
    • Financial Management
    • Legal & Compliance
    • Shipping & Fulfillment
  • Deals
    • Discount Strategy
    • Promotions & Campaigns
    • Launch Offers
    • Seasonal Sales
No Result
View All Result
  • Getting Started
    • Finding Your Niche
    • Business Planning & Validation
    • First Steps & Milestones
    • Mindset & Entrepreneurship
  • Building an Ecommerce Store
    • Platform Selection
    • Store Setup & Configuration
    • Theme Design & Customization
    • Product Catalog Management
    • Navigation & User Experience
  • Technology
    • Apps & Integrations
    • Payment Systems
    • Automation & Workflows
    • Technical Setup & Tools
  • Marketing
    • SEO & Content Marketing
    • Email Marketing
    • Social Media & Advertising
    • Customer Acquisition
    • Conversion Optimization
  • Business
    • Operations & Processes
    • Hiring & Team Building
    • Financial Management
    • Legal & Compliance
    • Shipping & Fulfillment
  • Deals
    • Discount Strategy
    • Promotions & Campaigns
    • Launch Offers
    • Seasonal Sales
No Result
View All Result
How to set up an Ecommerce Store
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Accessibility in Ecommerce: Why It Matters

Howtosetupanecommercestore by Howtosetupanecommercestore
January 15, 2026
in Business, Legal & Compliance
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Making Your Store Welcoming to Everyone

Accessibility in ecommerce isn’t just about compliance or avoiding lawsuits—it’s about ensuring everyone can shop on your site regardless of disabilities or limitations. Approximately 15% of the global population lives with some form of disability, representing a massive market often overlooked by ecommerce businesses. Beyond the moral imperative and business opportunity, many countries have legal requirements for digital accessibility. An accessible website benefits everyone, not just people with disabilities—clear navigation, readable text, and logical structure improve user experience for all customers. Yet most ecommerce sites have significant accessibility barriers that prevent people from browsing, purchasing, or even accessing basic information. Whether you’re building a new store or improving an existing one, implementing accessibility best practices creates inclusive experiences, expands your market, reduces legal risk, and demonstrates your values. Let’s explore why accessibility matters and how to make your ecommerce store accessible to all customers.

Why Accessibility Matters

The Business Case

Massive untapped market:

  • 1 billion+ people worldwide have disabilities
  • $13 trillion in annual disposable income (disability market)
  • People with disabilities often have higher brand loyalty when accommodated
  • Accessible sites rank better in search engines
  • Improved usability benefits all customers

Competitive advantage:

  • Most ecommerce sites have accessibility issues
  • Being accessible differentiates your brand
  • Demonstrates social responsibility
  • Builds trust and loyalty
  • Positive brand reputation

Legal Requirements

Global regulations:

United States:

  • Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) applies to websites
  • Increasing lawsuits against inaccessible sites
  • No specific technical standard but WCAG 2.1 AA recommended
  • Settlements often $50,000-$100,000+

European Union:

  • European Accessibility Act (EAA) requires compliance by 2025
  • Applies to ecommerce selling in EU
  • WCAG 2.1 AA standard
  • Significant fines for non-compliance

Australia:

  • Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) covers websites
  • WCAG 2.1 AA recommended
  • Complaints can lead to legal action

Canada:

  • Accessible Canada Act (ACA)
  • Provincial accessibility laws
  • WCAG 2.1 AA standard

Other countries:

  • UK, Japan, Israel, and many others have accessibility laws
  • Global trend toward mandatory accessibility

The Moral Imperative

Beyond business and legal reasons:

  • Everyone deserves equal access to commerce
  • Disabilities don’t diminish purchasing power or needs
  • Inclusion is the right thing to do
  • Your products could improve someone’s life
  • Accessibility reflects your values

SEO Benefits

Accessibility and SEO overlap significantly:

  • Alt text helps search engines understand images
  • Clear heading structure improves crawlability
  • Descriptive links benefit both users and search engines
  • Fast load times help everyone
  • Mobile accessibility crucial for rankings
  • Accessible sites often rank higher

Understanding Disabilities

Visual Disabilities

Types:

  • Blindness (complete vision loss)
  • Low vision (partial vision loss)
  • Color blindness (difficulty distinguishing colors)
  • Age-related vision decline

How they browse:

  • Screen readers (software that reads content aloud)
  • Screen magnification
  • High contrast modes
  • Keyboard-only navigation

Common barriers:

  • Images without alt text
  • Poor color contrast
  • Text in images
  • Unlabeled form fields
  • Complex navigation

Hearing Disabilities

Types:

  • Deafness (complete hearing loss)
  • Hard of hearing (partial hearing loss)

Common barriers:

  • Videos without captions
  • Audio-only content
  • No transcripts for podcasts
  • Phone-only customer service

Motor/Physical Disabilities

Types:

  • Limited hand mobility
  • Tremors or spasms
  • Paralysis
  • Arthritis

How they browse:

  • Keyboard-only navigation
  • Voice control
  • Switch devices
  • Eye-tracking technology

Common barriers:

  • Small clickable areas
  • Time-limited interactions
  • Hover-only menus
  • Drag-and-drop requirements
  • Mouse-only functionality

Cognitive Disabilities

Types:

  • Dyslexia
  • ADHD
  • Autism spectrum
  • Memory impairments
  • Learning disabilities

Common barriers:

  • Complex language
  • Cluttered layouts
  • Distracting animations
  • Inconsistent navigation
  • Time pressure
  • Lack of clear instructions

Temporary and Situational Disabilities

Accessibility helps everyone:

  • Broken arm (temporary motor disability)
  • Eye surgery recovery (temporary vision disability)
  • Bright sunlight (situational vision difficulty)
  • Noisy environment (situational hearing difficulty)
  • Holding a baby (situational motor limitation)

Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG)

Understanding WCAG

What it is:

  • International standard for web accessibility
  • Developed by W3C (World Wide Web Consortium)
  • Current version: WCAG 2.1 (2.2 released 2023)
  • Organized into principles, guidelines, and success criteria

Conformance levels:

  • Level A: Minimum accessibility (basic)
  • Level AA: Recommended standard (most laws require this)
  • Level AAA: Highest level (often not fully achievable)

Target: WCAG 2.1 Level AA for ecommerce

Four Principles (POUR)

Perceivable:

  • Information must be presentable to users in ways they can perceive
  • Provide text alternatives for non-text content
  • Provide captions and alternatives for multimedia
  • Make content adaptable and distinguishable

Operable:

  • Interface components must be operable
  • Make all functionality keyboard accessible
  • Give users enough time to read and use content
  • Don’t design content that causes seizures
  • Help users navigate and find content

Understandable:

  • Information and operation must be understandable
  • Make text readable and understandable
  • Make content appear and operate predictably
  • Help users avoid and correct mistakes

Robust:

  • Content must be robust enough for assistive technologies
  • Maximize compatibility with current and future tools
  • Use valid, semantic HTML

Essential Accessibility Improvements

Images and Alt Text

Provide meaningful alt text:

  • Describe what’s in the image
  • Be concise but descriptive
  • Don’t start with “image of” or “picture of”
  • For decorative images, use empty alt=””

Examples:

  • Bad: alt=”product”
  • Good: alt=”Navy blue cotton t-shirt with crew neck”
  • Bad: alt=”Click here”
  • Good: alt=”Add to cart button”

Product images:

  • Describe product, color, key features
  • Include relevant details for purchasing decision
  • Update alt text if image changes

Color and Contrast

Sufficient contrast ratios:

  • Text and background: minimum 4.5:1 ratio
  • Large text (18pt+): minimum 3:1 ratio
  • UI components and graphics: minimum 3:1 ratio

Don’t rely on color alone:

  • Use icons, patterns, or text in addition to color
  • Error messages: don’t just turn fields red
  • Charts and graphs: use patterns or labels
  • Links: underline or use other indicators beyond color

Tools to check contrast:

  • WebAIM Contrast Checker
  • Colour Contrast Analyser
  • Browser developer tools

Keyboard Navigation

All functionality must work with keyboard:

  • Tab through all interactive elements
  • Enter/Space to activate buttons and links
  • Arrow keys for menus and dropdowns
  • Escape to close modals and menus

Visible focus indicators:

  • Show clear outline when element is focused
  • Don’t remove default focus styles without replacement
  • Make focus indicator high contrast
  • Ensure focus order is logical

Skip links:

  • “Skip to main content” link at top of page
  • Allows keyboard users to bypass navigation
  • Can be visually hidden until focused

Headings and Structure

Use semantic HTML:

  • Proper heading hierarchy (H1, H2, H3, etc.)
  • Only one H1 per page
  • Don’t skip heading levels
  • Use headings for structure, not just styling

Semantic elements:

  • <header>, <nav>, <main>, <footer>
  • <article>, <section>, <aside>
  • Helps screen readers understand page structure

Lists:

  • Use <ul>, <ol>, <li> for lists
  • Screen readers announce number of items
  • Helps users understand content organization

Forms and Labels

Label all form fields:

  • Use <label> element associated with input
  • Labels must be visible (not just placeholder text)
  • Describe what information is needed
  • Required fields clearly marked

Error messages:

  • Clearly identify errors
  • Explain what’s wrong and how to fix
  • Don’t rely on color alone
  • Associate errors with specific fields
  • Provide suggestions for correction

Example:

  • Bad: “Invalid email” (vague)
  • Good: “Email address must include @ symbol. Example: name@example.com”

Links and Buttons

Descriptive link text:

  • Avoid “click here” or “read more”
  • Link text should make sense out of context
  • Describe destination or action

Examples:

  • Bad: “Click here for our return policy”
  • Good: “View our return policy”
  • Bad: “Learn more”
  • Good: “Learn more about organic cotton”

Buttons vs. links:

  • Use <button> for actions (submit, add to cart)
  • Use <a> for navigation (go to page)
  • Proper semantics help assistive technology

Video and Audio

Captions for videos:

  • Provide accurate captions for all speech
  • Include relevant sound effects
  • Synchronized with audio
  • Use proper caption formatting

Transcripts:

  • Provide text transcripts for audio and video
  • Include all spoken content
  • Describe important visual information
  • Searchable and accessible to all

Audio descriptions:

  • Describe important visual information
  • For videos where visuals convey meaning
  • Narrate actions, settings, expressions

Mobile Accessibility

Touch targets:

  • Minimum 44×44 pixels for tap targets
  • Adequate spacing between clickable elements
  • Easy to tap without zooming

Responsive design:

  • Content adapts to screen size
  • No horizontal scrolling required
  • Text remains readable when zoomed
  • All functionality available on mobile

Orientation:

  • Support both portrait and landscape
  • Don’t lock orientation unless essential
  • Content adapts to orientation changes

Ecommerce-Specific Accessibility

Product Pages

Product images:

  • Descriptive alt text for all product images
  • Image zoom accessible via keyboard
  • Multiple images clearly labeled
  • 360-degree views with keyboard controls

Product information:

  • Clear heading structure
  • Specifications in accessible tables or lists
  • Size charts with proper markup
  • Reviews accessible and navigable

Add to cart:

  • Clear, descriptive button text
  • Confirmation message announced to screen readers
  • Quantity selectors keyboard accessible
  • Variant selection (size, color) properly labeled

Shopping Cart

Cart updates:

  • Announce changes to screen readers
  • Quantity changes clearly communicated
  • Remove item buttons clearly labeled
  • Total updates announced

Cart table:

  • Proper table markup with headers
  • Each row clearly associated with product
  • Actions (edit, remove) clearly labeled

Checkout Process

Form accessibility:

  • All fields properly labeled
  • Required fields clearly marked
  • Error messages clear and helpful
  • Autocomplete attributes for common fields

Progress indication:

  • Clear steps in checkout process
  • Current step clearly indicated
  • Ability to review before submitting

Payment:

  • Payment options clearly labeled
  • Security information accessible
  • Confirmation clearly communicated

Search and Filters

Search functionality:

  • Search field properly labeled
  • Autocomplete suggestions keyboard accessible
  • Results announced to screen readers
  • “No results” clearly communicated

Filters and sorting:

  • Filter controls keyboard accessible
  • Applied filters clearly indicated
  • Results update announced
  • Clear way to remove filters

Testing for Accessibility

Automated Testing Tools

Browser extensions:

  • WAVE: Free browser extension, visual feedback
  • axe DevTools: Comprehensive testing, free and paid versions
  • Lighthouse: Built into Chrome DevTools, accessibility audit

Online checkers:

  • WebAIM WAVE: Enter URL for instant report
  • AChecker: Checks against WCAG guidelines
  • Accessibility Insights: Microsoft tool

Limitations:

  • Automated tools catch only 30-40% of issues
  • Can’t test subjective criteria (clarity, usefulness)
  • Manual testing still essential

Manual Testing

Keyboard testing:

  • Navigate entire site using only keyboard
  • Tab through all interactive elements
  • Ensure focus is always visible
  • Test all functionality (forms, menus, modals)

Screen reader testing:

  • NVDA: Free screen reader for Windows
  • JAWS: Popular paid screen reader for Windows
  • VoiceOver: Built into Mac and iOS
  • TalkBack: Built into Android

What to test:

  • Can you navigate and understand content?
  • Are images described adequately?
  • Are forms usable?
  • Can you complete checkout?

Color and contrast:

  • Use contrast checker tools
  • Test with color blindness simulators
  • Ensure information isn’t conveyed by color alone

Zoom and magnification:

  • Zoom to 200% – content should remain usable
  • No horizontal scrolling
  • Text remains readable
  • Functionality still works

User Testing

Test with people with disabilities:

  • Most valuable feedback
  • Reveals real-world issues
  • Hire accessibility testers
  • Services like Fable connect you with testers

Accessibility Tools and Resources

Shopify Accessibility Features

  • Built-in accessibility features in themes
  • Skip to content links
  • Keyboard navigation support
  • Semantic HTML structure
  • Choose accessibility-focused themes

Accessibility Apps and Services

Accessibility overlays (use with caution):

  • AccessiBe, UserWay, AudioEye: Automated accessibility widgets
  • Pros: Quick implementation, some improvements
  • Cons: Don’t fix underlying issues, can create new problems, not substitute for proper accessibility
  • Recommendation: Focus on fixing actual code, not overlays

Accessibility auditing services:

  • Professional accessibility audits
  • Detailed reports and recommendations
  • Ongoing monitoring
  • $2,000-$10,000+ depending on site size

Learning Resources

  • WebAIM: Comprehensive guides and articles
  • A11y Project: Community-driven accessibility resources
  • W3C WCAG: Official guidelines and documentation
  • Deque University: Accessibility training courses
  • Inclusive Design Principles: Design guidance

Common Accessibility Mistakes

Relying on Automated Tools Alone

Automated tools catch only 30-40% of issues. Manual testing and user testing are essential.

Using Accessibility Overlays as Solution

Overlays don’t fix underlying problems and can create new issues. Fix the actual code.

Removing Focus Indicators

Keyboard users need to see where they are. Never remove focus styles without replacement.

Using Placeholder Text as Labels

Placeholders disappear when typing and aren’t always read by screen readers. Use proper labels.

Images of Text

Text in images can’t be resized or read by screen readers. Use actual text with CSS styling.

Auto-Playing Media

Auto-playing videos or audio are disruptive and problematic. Provide controls and don’t auto-play.

Time Limits Without Options

Timed sessions or actions disadvantage many users. Provide options to extend or disable time limits.

The Bottom Line

Accessibility in ecommerce opens your store to 1 billion+ people worldwide with disabilities representing $13 trillion in annual disposable income while reducing legal risk from increasing ADA lawsuits and compliance requirements in the US, European Accessibility Act in the EU, and similar laws globally. Target WCAG 2.1 Level AA conformance following the four POUR principles—Perceivable (provide text alternatives, captions, adaptable content), Operable (keyboard accessible, sufficient time, navigable), Understandable (readable, predictable, error prevention), and Robust (compatible with assistive technologies).

Implement essential improvements including meaningful alt text for all images describing products and features concisely, sufficient color contrast ratios (4.5:1 for text, 3:1 for large text and UI components), complete keyboard navigation with visible focus indicators and logical tab order, proper heading hierarchy using semantic HTML (H1, H2, H3 without skipping levels), labeled form fields with clear error messages and correction suggestions, descriptive link text that makes sense out of context, and captions plus transcripts for all video and audio content.

Focus on ecommerce-specific accessibility including product pages with descriptive image alt text and keyboard-accessible zoom, shopping carts with screen reader announcements for updates and proper table markup, checkout processes with properly labeled required fields and clear progress indication, and search and filters that are keyboard accessible with results announced to screen readers. Test using automated tools like WAVE, axe DevTools, and Lighthouse to catch 30-40% of issues, then conduct manual testing with keyboard-only navigation, screen readers (NVDA, JAWS, VoiceOver), contrast checkers, and zoom to 200%, and most valuably test with actual users with disabilities through services like Fable.

Avoid common mistakes including relying solely on automated tools without manual testing, using accessibility overlays (AccessiBe, UserWay) as solutions instead of fixing underlying code, removing focus indicators without replacement, using placeholder text instead of proper labels, creating images of text that can’t be resized or read by screen readers, auto-playing media without controls, and imposing time limits without extension options. Accessibility isn’t just compliance—it’s good business that expands your market, improves SEO through better structure and alt text, enhances usability for all customers including those with temporary or situational disabilities, and demonstrates your commitment to inclusion and social responsibility.


Affiliate Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links to accessibility testing tools and services. If you purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you. We only recommend tools we genuinely believe will help you create accessible ecommerce experiences for all customers.

Tags: AccessibilityADA ComplianceInclusive DesignLegal ComplianceWCAGWeb AccessibilityWebsite Accessibility
Previous Post

Product Photography on a Budget: DIY Tips

Next Post

Creating an Exceptional Unboxing Experience

Howtosetupanecommercestore

Howtosetupanecommercestore

How to setup an ecommerce store is your go to guide, for beginners looking to start an ecommerce journey. Read our blogs to help make informed decisions to assist with opening and running your online store.

Next Post
Creating an Exceptional Unboxing Experience

Creating an Exceptional Unboxing Experience

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected test

  • 23.9k Followers
  • 99 Subscribers
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Product Photography and Image Optimisation: Why Both Matter for Ecommerce Success

Product Photography and Image Optimisation: Why Both Matter for Ecommerce Success

January 15, 2026

Stop Doing Everything. Start Running a Business.

June 17, 2026
When to Reinvest vs. Take Profit

When to Reinvest vs. Take Profit

January 15, 2026
The Best Ways to Source Products for Your Ecommerce Business

The Best Ways to Source Products for Your Ecommerce Business

January 21, 2026
Tax Considerations for Ecommerce Businesses

Tax Considerations for Ecommerce Businesses

0
Managing Returns and Refunds Profitably

Managing Returns and Refunds Profitably

0
Pricing Strategies Beyond Cost-Plus

Pricing Strategies Beyond Cost-Plus

0
How to Set Up an Ecommerce Store on a Shoestring Budget

How to Set Up an Ecommerce Store on a Shoestring Budget

0

Stop Doing Everything. Start Running a Business.

June 17, 2026

What Running an Ecommerce Business Actually Cost Us to Learn — The Honest Numbers

May 18, 2026

Shopify vs WordPress: Why Shopify Wins on Technical SEO Out of the Box

May 18, 2026

NetSuite and the Robust Integrator by Wee Bee Global — Enterprise ERP Power for Growing Ecommerce Businesses

May 18, 2026

Recent News

Stop Doing Everything. Start Running a Business.

June 17, 2026

What Running an Ecommerce Business Actually Cost Us to Learn — The Honest Numbers

May 18, 2026

Shopify vs WordPress: Why Shopify Wins on Technical SEO Out of the Box

May 18, 2026

NetSuite and the Robust Integrator by Wee Bee Global — Enterprise ERP Power for Growing Ecommerce Businesses

May 18, 2026
How to set up an Ecommerce Store

Learn how to start, launch, and grow
a profitable online store

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Getting Started
  • Building an Ecommerce Store
  • Technology
  • Marketing
  • Business
  • Deals

Recent News

Stop Doing Everything. Start Running a Business.

June 17, 2026

What Running an Ecommerce Business Actually Cost Us to Learn — The Honest Numbers

May 18, 2026
  • About Our Ecommerce Blog
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2026 How to set up an Ecommerce Store

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Getting Started
    • Finding Your Niche
    • Business Planning & Validation
    • First Steps & Milestones
    • Mindset & Entrepreneurship
  • Building an Ecommerce Store
    • Platform Selection
    • Store Setup & Configuration
    • Theme Design & Customization
    • Product Catalog Management
    • Navigation & User Experience
  • Technology
    • Apps & Integrations
    • Payment Systems
    • Automation & Workflows
    • Technical Setup & Tools
  • Marketing
    • SEO & Content Marketing
    • Email Marketing
    • Social Media & Advertising
    • Customer Acquisition
    • Conversion Optimization
  • Business
    • Operations & Processes
    • Hiring & Team Building
    • Financial Management
    • Legal & Compliance
    • Shipping & Fulfillment
  • Deals
    • Discount Strategy
    • Promotions & Campaigns
    • Launch Offers
    • Seasonal Sales

© 2026 How to set up an Ecommerce Store