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Vue accessibility for non-profit sites: setup, plugins, and audit checklist

Running an accessible Vue site for non-profit sites combines two layers of responsibility: Vue's platform-level accessibility, and the non-profit-specific compliance frameworks — ADA Title III, Section 504 (federally funded), WCAG 2.2 AA — that layer on top.

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

Why Vue for non-profit sites?

Vue accessibility means writing semantic templates, using accessible component libraries (Vuetify, Quasar, Headless UI Vue), managing focus on route changes, and applying focus-trap composables for modals — Vue itself imposes nothing but its template-first approach makes semantic markup natural.

Non-profit accessibility — the regulated reality

Non-profit accessibility ensures donation portals, volunteer signup, programme information, and grant applications are usable by donors, volunteers, and beneficiaries with disabilities — an obligation under the ADA, Section 504 (for federally funded non-profits), and the EAA for EU-facing non-profit services.

Vue accessibility challenges that hit non-profit sites hardest

• Custom components

• Transition handling without reduced-motion

Non-profit pain points your Vue site will likely have

• Donation forms with poor keyboard support

• Event registration timeouts without warnings

• Inaccessible grant-application PDFs

• Programme content as image-only

• Inaccessible third-party donor platforms

Setup steps

1. Use semantic templates: Native elements first.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

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

  • Can a Vue site be made ADA compliant for non-profit sites?

    Yes, provided the merchant or development team applies WCAG 2.2 AA at the source code and content level. No platform — including Vue — guarantees compliance automatically.

  • Does the ADA apply to non-profits?

    Yes. ADA Title III covers any "public accommodation" — and non-profit charities, foundations, museums, religious-organisation services, social service centres, and educational programmes are typically in scope. Religious organisations themselves are partially exempt from Title III but their auxiliary programmes often are not.

  • Do grant-funded non-profits have additional obligations?

    Federal grants typically require recipients to comply with Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act — which includes a digital accessibility component. Some grant terms now also reference WCAG explicitly.

  • Is Vue accessible?

    As accessible as the components written.

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