Accessibility of Web Content and Mobile Apps Provided by State and Local Government Entities: A Small Entity Compliance Guide
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On April 24, 2024, the Federal Register1 published the Department of Justice’s (Department) final rule updating its regulations for Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). The final rule has specific requirements about how to make sure that web content and mobile applications (apps) are accessible to people with disabilities.
Purpose of this guide: This Small Entity Compliance Guide2 (“guide”) is meant for people who work for or with small state and local governments. The guide will help you understand the rule’s requirements for making sure your government’s web content and mobile apps are accessible.
The Reasons the Department Set Specific Requirements for Web Content and Mobile App Accessibility
State and local governments provide many of their services, programs, and activities through websites and mobile apps. When these websites and mobile apps are not accessible, they can create barriers for people with disabilities.
- For example, individuals who are blind may use a screen reader to deliver visual information on a website or mobile app as speech. A state or local government might post an image on its website that provides information to the public. If the website does not include text describing the image (sometimes called “alternative text” or “alt text”), individuals who are blind and who use screen readers may have no way of knowing what is in the image because a screen reader cannot “read” an image.
Websites and mobile apps that are not accessible can make it difficult or impossible for people with disabilities to access government services, like ordering mail-in ballots or getting tax information. These services are quickly and easily available to other members of the public online. Sometimes, inaccessible websites and mobile apps can keep people with disabilities from joining or fully participating in civic or other community events like town meetings or programs at their child’s school.
Accessibility requirements for web and mobile apps will help make sure people with disabilities have access to state and local governments’ services, programs, and activities. The requirements will also provide state and local governments with more clarity about what they have to do to comply with the ADA.
State and Local Governments Must Follow the Requirements for Web Content and Mobile App Accessibility
Like the rest of Title II, the web content and mobile app accessibility requirements apply to all state and local governments. State and local governments include any agencies or departments of the governments. Title II and the web content and mobile app accessibility requirements also apply to special purpose districts, Amtrak, and other commuter authorities.
Examples of state and local governments include:
- State and local government offices that provide benefits and/or social services, like food assistance, health insurance, or employment services
- Public schools, community colleges, and public universities
- State and local police departments
- State and local courts
- State and local elections offices
- Public hospitals and public healthcare clinics
- Public parks and recreation programs
- Public libraries
- Public transit agencies
For more information about the responsibilities of state and local governments under Title II, visit our State and Local Governments page.
Web Content and Mobile Apps that State and Local Governments Provide Through Contractors or Vendors
If you have a contract, license, or other arrangement with another entity to provide public services for your government, you still need to make sure that those services comply with Title II. This includes making sure that any web content or mobile apps the other entity provides or posts for your government meet the accessibility requirements in Title II. This might mean working with vendors to help ensure they understand these requirements or seeking out vendors with such knowledge. For example, if a town hires an outside web developer to design and build the town’s website, the town needs to make sure that the web developer’s design complies with the web content and mobile app accessibility requirements under the ADA.
When the Rule’s Requirements for Web Content and Mobile App Accessibility Start
Starting on April 26, 2027, small state and local governments have to make sure that their web content and mobile apps meet the requirements in the rule. After this time, you must continue to make sure your state or local government’s web content and mobile apps meet the accessibility requirements.
State and local government size | Compliance date |
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0 to 49,999 persons | April 26, 2027 |
Special district governments | April 26, 2027 |
50,000 or more persons | April 24, 2026 |
Web Content and Mobile App Accessibility Requirements Before the Rule’s Start Dates
The ADA has always required state and local governments to provide individuals with disabilities with effective communication, reasonable modifications, and an equal opportunity to participate in or benefit from government services, programs, and activities. These requirements still apply to your state or local government’s services, programs, and activities offered online and through mobile apps before the rule’s start dates. After the rule’s start dates, you need to make sure your government’s web content and mobile app meet these requirements as well as the specific requirements for web content and mobile app accessibility.
Highlights of the Requirements for Web and Mobile App Accessibility
The requirements for making web content and mobile apps accessible are highlighted below. The requirements are explained in full detail in the final rule.
The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) Version 2.1, Level AA is the technical standard for state and local governments’ web content and mobile apps.
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There is a specific technical standard that your state or local government must follow to meet your obligations under Title II of the ADA for web and mobile app accessibility. That technical standard is WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
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WCAG, the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, is a set of guidelines that say what is needed for web accessibility, such as requirements for captions for videos. WCAG is developed by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).
State and local governments’ web content usually needs to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
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The requirements apply to web content that your state or local government provides or makes available. This includes when you have an arrangement with someone else who provides or makes available web content for your government.
- Example: If a county web page lists the addresses and hours of operation for all county parks, that web page must meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA even if a local web design company made the web page and updates it for the county, or if the county uses a template that was created by a private company.
State and local governments’ mobile apps usually need to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
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The requirements apply to mobile apps that your state or local government provides or makes available. This includes when you have an arrangement with someone else who provides or makes available a mobile app for your government.
- Example: If a city lets people pay for public parking using a mobile app, that mobile app must meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA even if the app is run by a private company.
In limited situations described below, some kinds of web content and content in mobile apps do not have to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
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There are limited exceptions for some kinds of content that are not as frequently used or that may be particularly hard to address right away.
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These exceptions are included so that you can prioritize making the most important content—like current or commonly used information—accessible to people with disabilities quickly.
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If an exception applies to certain content, it means that content would not have to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
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In the next section, we describe the exceptions and provide examples of how they might apply. We also give examples of when the exceptions would not apply.
Summary of the Exceptions
1. Archived web content
State and local governments’ websites often include a lot of content that is not currently used. This information may be outdated, not needed, or repeated somewhere else. Sometimes, this information is archived on the website.
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Your state or local government’s web content that meets all four of the following points would not need to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA:
- The content was created before the date your government must comply with this rule, or reproduces paper documents or the contents of other physical media (audiotapes, film negatives, and CD-ROMs for example) that were created before your government must comply with this rule, AND
- The content is kept only for reference, research, or recordkeeping, AND
- The content is kept in a special area for archived content, AND
- The content has not been changed since it was archived.
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Example: A water quality report from 1998 that a state has stored only for research purposes in an “archive” section of its website and has not updated would fall under the exception. The exception would also apply to handwritten research notes or photos that go with the 1998 water quality report that the state scans and posts to its website in the archive section.
What the exception does not change
The ADA requires that your state or local government must provide individuals with disabilities with effective communication, reasonable modifications, and an equal opportunity to participate in or benefit from your state or local government’s services, programs, and activities.
- Example: If a person with a hearing disability requests access to a video that is archived, one way that the city could provide effective communication to the person is by adding captions to the video and sharing a copy of the captioned video file with the person.
2. Preexisting conventional electronic documents
Some state and local governments have a lot of old documents, like PDFs, on their website. It can sometimes be hard to make these documents meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
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Your state or local government’s documents that meet all three of the following points do not need to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA:
- The documents are word processing, presentation, PDF, or spreadsheet files; AND
- They were available on your state or local government’s website or mobile app before the date your state or local government must comply with this rule; AND
- They are not currently being used to apply for, access, or participate in your state or local government’s services, programs, or activities.
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Example: This exception would apply to a PDF flyer for a Thanksgiving Day parade posted on a town’s website in 2018, or a Microsoft Word version of a sample ballot for a school board election posted on a school district’s website in 2014.
3. Content posted by a third party where the third party is not posting due to contractual, licensing, or other arrangements with a state or local government
Third parties sometimes post content on state and local governments’ websites or mobile apps. Third parties are members of the public or others who are not controlled by or acting for state or local governments. Your state or local government may not be able to change the content third parties post.
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Content that is posted by third parties on your state or local government’s website or mobile app would not need to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
- Example: A message that a member of the public posts on a town’s online message board would fall under the exception.
What the exception does not change
The ADA requires that your state or local government must provide individuals with disabilities with effective communication, reasonable modifications, and an equal opportunity to participate in or benefit from your state or local government’s services, programs, and activities.
- Example: If a person with a disability is a party to a state court case, and a third-party private law firm in the case submits documents to the state court’s website, the court could provide effective communication to the person with a disability by quickly providing the documents to the person in a format that is accessible to them upon request.
4. Individualized documents that are password-protected
State and local governments sometimes use password-protected websites to share documents that are for specific individuals, like a water or tax bill. It might be hard to make all of these documents accessible right away for everyone, and there might not be a person with a disability who needs access to these documents.
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Your state or local government’s documents that meet all three of the following points do not need to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA:
- The documents are word processing, presentation, PDF, or spreadsheet files, AND
- The documents are about a specific person, property, or account, AND
- The documents are password-protected or otherwise secured.
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Example: A PDF version of a water bill for a person’s home that is available in that person’s secure account on a city’s website would fall under the exception. However, the exception does not apply to the city’s website itself.
What the exception does not change
The ADA requires that your state or local government must provide individuals with disabilities with effective communication, reasonable modifications, and an equal opportunity to participate in or benefit from your state or local government’s services, programs, and activities.
- Example: If a person with vision loss asks to access their personal and password-protected PDF town water bill, the town might provide effective communication to the person by giving them a large print version of the water bill, or a version of the water bill that meets some WCAG criteria, even though the PDF document would meet the exception.
5. Preexisting social media posts
For many state and local governments, making all of their past social media posts accessible may be impossible. There also may be very little value to making these old posts accessible because they were usually intended to provide updates about things happening at the time they were posted in the past.
For these reasons, your state or local government’s social media posts made before the date your government must comply with this rule do not need to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
- Example: This exception would apply to a 2017 social media post by a city’s sanitation department announcing that trash collection would be delayed due to a snowstorm.
What the exception does not change
The ADA requires that your state or local government must provide individuals with disabilities with effective communication, reasonable modifications, and an equal opportunity to participate in or benefit from your state or local government’s services, programs, and activities.
- Example: If an individual who is blind requests access to a picture a city posted on social media in 2023, the city could provide effective communication by providing an alternative text description of the image to the individual.
Other Information About Complying with Requirements for Web and Mobile App Accessibility
Use of Conforming Alternate Versions
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Sometimes a state or local government tries to have two versions of the same web content or content in a mobile app: one version that is not accessible and another version that is accessible and provides all the same information and features. The second version is called a “conforming alternate version.”
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Usually it is not allowable to have a main web page that is inaccessible and a separate accessible version of the same content, because people with disabilities should get equal access to that content on the same page.
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Under the rule, your state or local government may use conforming alternate versions as an alternative to inaccessible content only in very limited circumstances. You are allowed to do this only when there is a technical or legal limitation that prevents inaccessible web content or mobile apps from being made accessible.
Failing to Meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA in a Minor Way that Does Not Impact Access
In some limited situations, state and local governments may be able to show that their web content or mobile apps do not meet WCAG Version 2.1, Level AA in a way that is so minor that it would not change a person with a disability’s access to the content or mobile app. If the state or local government can show that, then they are not violating the rule.
You cannot use this part of the rule to avoid trying to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
If your web content fails to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA, you would have to prove two things:
You would have to prove that the failure to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA does not change what people with disabilities can use your web content or mobile apps to do. You must show that despite the failure, people with disabilities can access the same information, engage in the same interactions, conduct the same transactions, and otherwise participate or benefit from your same services, programs, and activities as individuals without disabilities.
You also have to prove that the failure to meet WCAG 2.1, Level AA does not change the way people with disabilities can use your web content or mobile apps. In other words, you must show that the failure does not make it harder, slower, or more frustrating for someone with a disability to use your web content or mobile apps, and that they do not lose any privacy or independence because of the failure.
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Example that violates the rule: A state’s online renewal form does not meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA. Because of that, a person with a manual dexterity disability may need to spend a lot more time to renew their professional license online than someone without a disability. This person might also need to get help from someone who does not have a disability, give personal information to someone else, or go through a much harder and more frustrating process than someone without a disability. Even if this person with a disability could ultimately renew their license online, the state would violate the rule.
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Example that meets the rule: A state’s web page with information about a park has text with a color contrast ratio that is 4.45:1. WCAG 2.1, Level AA requires a color contrast ratio of 4.5:1 for this text. It can be hard for some people with vision disabilities to see text on a web page if there is not enough contrast between the color of the text and the background color. But that very small difference in color contrast ratio probably would not change whether most people with vision disabilities could read the text on the website and access the information about the park. If the state can prove the difference in color contrast is so small that it would not make it harder for people with disabilities to access the information about the park, the state would not violate the rule.
Planning for Success
Creating and maintaining accessible web content and mobile apps takes planning. Below are some practices that state and local governments can use to help plan for success. Starting these practices well before the date that you have to start complying with the requirements of the rule can help ensure the process goes as smoothly as possible.
Creating policies on how you will make sure that your web content and mobile apps are accessible
You can help set your government up for success by creating policies on web and mobile app accessibility. These policies could identify specific actions that your government will take to start complying with the rule and stay compliant in the future. These policies may be similar to, or part of, the other ADA nondiscrimination policies you may have adopted.
There are lots of topics that you might include in your government’s policies, depending on what your needs are. For example, your government’s policies might:
- Explain what your government’s staff should do to make sure that the content they are posting is accessible.
- Identify a staff member to coordinate your government’s efforts to comply with this rule and answer questions from other staff members about how to make content accessible.
- Describe how staff will regularly test your government’s web content and mobile apps to make sure they are accessible. This may include working with people with disabilities to test the content.
- Explain the steps staff will take if a person with a disability asks them to make accessible content that falls under an exception to the rule.
- For example, a policy might say that if a person who is deaf asks for a captioned version of a video that falls within the archived web content exception, the government will send the person a captioned video.
- The policy might also discuss how your government will make sure that it responds quickly enough if the request for accessibility is urgent.
Creating processes for people to make accessibility requests and report accessibility issues
Sometimes, members of the public might need to get in touch with your government about accessibility issues. Your government can set up processes to make this easy for people to do. Some examples of processes include:
- Letting members of the public know, in prominent places on your website, how they can ask your government to make content accessible when the content falls within an exception to this rule.
- Providing an email address, accessible link, accessible web page, or other accessible way for people to let your government know if there are any accessibility issues with its web content or mobile apps.
Training your staff
An important part of ensuring success in complying with the ADA is thorough and ongoing staff training. You may have good policies, but, if staff or volunteers are not aware of them or do not know how to implement them, problems can arise. It is important that staff receive training about how to ensure that content is accessible. This includes staff who update or post on your websites or mobile apps. Some state and local governments might hold their own trainings, while others might use trainings that are available online for free.
Training may look different depending on the specific duties and responsibilities assigned to staff members. Some of examples of trainings might include:
- A training for a web developer that focuses on coding web pages that meet the requirements of WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
- A training for a public university professor that focuses on making sure that course materials meet the requirements of WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
- A training for a procurement staff member about how a local government plans to make sure it buys web content and mobile apps that meet the requirements of WCAG 2.1, Level AA.
W3C’s website contains additional information about planning and managing accessibility for web content and mobile apps that you may find helpful when thinking about how to comply with this rule: https://www.w3.org/WAI/planning-and-managing/
ADA Information Resources
If you have questions about this rule or the ADA, you can call the ADA Information Line.
You can also contact the ADA National Network. The National Network includes ten regional centers that provide ADA technical assistance. One toll-free number connects you to the center in your region: 800-949-4232 (Voice and TTY).
The contents of this document do not have the force and effect of law and are not meant to bind the public in any way. This document is intended only to provide clarity to the public regarding existing requirements under the law or the Department’s policies.
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The official version of the rule is published in the Federal Register at 89 FR 31320 (April 24, 2024). Back to text
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This guide was prepared as a “small entity compliance guide” under Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996. The guide is not a substitute for the rule. Only the rule itself provides complete and definitive information about its requirements. For all the details about the rule, please read the full final rule. Back to text