guide
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.
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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