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ACA for e-commerce: requirements, priorities, and audit checklist

ACA compliance for e-commerce sites requires applying Accessible Canada Act to the specific failure points typical of the e-commerce industry — including product image carousels without keyboard control or proper labels, dynamic filter facets that do not announce updates to screen readers, cart drawer modals that trap focus or fail to restore it on close.

Kai Schmidt · IAAP CPACC · Document accessibility specialist (PDF/UA-1)3 min readPublished · Updated

Does ACA apply to e-commerce sites?

The Accessible Canada Act (ACA, 2019) requires federally regulated entities — federal government, banks, telecom, broadcasting, transportation — to identify, remove and prevent accessibility barriers, with the explicit goal of "a Canada without barriers by 2040" and detailed regulations layered on top including the ICT regulations referencing EN 301 549.

E-commerce accessibility — the lay of the land

E-commerce is the single highest-litigation accessibility vertical in the United States: industry analysts attribute the majority of ADA Title III web filings to online retail. The standard breaks happen at search filters, product gallery zoom, cart drawers, modal checkouts, and CAPTCHA — flows that combine custom widgets, dynamic state, and time-pressed transactions.

Where ACA bites hardest in e-commerce sites

• Product image carousels without keyboard control or proper labels

• Dynamic filter facets that do not announce updates to screen readers

• Cart drawer modals that trap focus or fail to restore it on close

• Checkout time-out warnings without WCAG 2.2.1 extend/dismiss

• CAPTCHA without accessible alternative (violates WCAG 1.1.1 + 2.5.6)

• Inaccessible PDF receipts, invoices and order confirmations

Remediation priorities

• Search and browse — must be fully keyboard- and SR-navigable

• Product detail pages — image alt text, structured data, accessible zoom

• Cart and checkout — focus management, time-out controls, accessible error recovery

• Account and order history — semantic tables, accessible filtering

• Marketing pop-ups — dismissible from keyboard, no auto-focus traps

How to comply with ACA on a E-commerce site

1. Publish an accessibility plan: Every federally regulated entity must publish a multi-year accessibility plan, updated every three years.

2. Establish a feedback mechanism: Accept and respond to accessibility complaints.

3. File progress reports: Annual progress report between plans.

4. Meet technical ICT requirements: Reference EN 301 549 for digital products and services.

Sources

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Cited answers. Sourced. Updated as standards and case law change.

  • Does ACA apply to e-commerce websites?

    The Accessible Canada Act (ACA, 2019) requires federally regulated entities — federal government, banks, telecom, broadcasting, transportation — to identify, remove and prevent accessibility barriers, with the explicit goal of "a Canada without barriers by 2040" and detailed regulations layered on top including the ICT regulations referencing EN 301 549.

  • What are the most common ACA failures in e-commerce sites?

    Product image carousels without keyboard control or proper labels Dynamic filter facets that do not announce updates to screen readers Cart drawer modals that trap focus or fail to restore it on close

  • What conformance level should a e-commerce site target?

    WCAG 2.2 Level AA is the consensus target for legal compliance and the level referenced by virtually every national accessibility law.

  • Why are e-commerce sites sued most often under the ADA?

    Online retail combines high traffic, transactional flows, common custom widgets (carousels, filter facets, modals), and visible failures — making it the easiest target for plaintiff firms running automated demand-letter operations. The Seyfarth Shaw tracker and UsableNet annual reports consistently place retail at the top of filings.

  • Does WCAG 2.2 apply to Shopify and other hosted platforms?

    Yes — and platform-level accessibility does not insulate you. Shopify, BigCommerce, and Magento provide partially accessible base themes, but each merchant is responsible for the final rendered site. Custom themes, custom apps, and merchant-added content typically introduce failures the base platform did not.

  • Are accessibility widgets enough for an e-commerce site?

    No. US courts have specifically ruled (Murphy v. Eyebobs, Suarez v. Camping World) that overlay widgets do not preclude ADA liability. Compliance must be achieved at the source-code level.

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