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AODA on Webflow: complete compliance checklist

Implementing AODA compliance on Webflow means addressing the platform's specific failure modes (visual-first design ignoring heading hierarchy, custom interactions without keyboard fallback) while applying Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act success criteria across content, code, and editorial workflow.

Arjun Walia · IAAP CPACC · Media accessibility specialist3 min readPublished · Updated

AODA in 60 seconds

The Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA) is a 2005 Ontario law that mandates accessibility for the public, private, and not-for-profit sectors operating in Ontario — including a digital requirement that public-facing websites conform to WCAG 2.0 Level AA.

Webflow accessibility — what you are starting with

Webflow has invested heavily in accessibility tooling — built-in audit panel, semantic tags, focus styling controls. Failures are typically the designer treating Webflow as a pure visual tool and ignoring semantic structure.

AODA setup checklist for Webflow

1. Run Webflow's built-in Audit panel: Webflow ships an accessibility audit panel (Audit tab in the Designer). Resolve all critical and serious issues.

2. Use semantic tags: Convert Div Blocks to header/nav/main/footer where appropriate. Set heading levels via the H1–H6 controls, not visual styling.

3. Test custom interactions: Webflow Interactions are JS-driven; verify they work via keyboard and announce state changes to AT.

Common AODA failures on Webflow

• Visual-first design ignoring heading hierarchy

• Custom interactions without keyboard fallback

• Inaccessible CMS Collections renderers

• Modal trigger components without focus-trap

• Inaccessible form messages

Putting it together

Combine AODA's Level AA requirements with Webflow's native tooling. Bake accessibility into your component library and editorial workflow; instrument axe-core in CI for regression.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

  • Is Webflow AODA-compliant out of the box?

    Webflow produces semantically correct HTML if the designer uses semantic tags. The platform provides the controls; the designer is responsible for using them.

  • What is the easiest path to AODA compliance on Webflow?

    Start with the platform's most-accessible default theme (where applicable), audit each installed plugin/extension/module, train content authors on alt text and heading hierarchy, and instrument axe-core in your CI pipeline.

  • Is Webflow accessible by default?

    Webflow produces semantically correct HTML if the designer uses semantic tags. The platform provides the controls; the designer is responsible for using them.

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