Making PDFs accessible has long been a complex task – conflicting tagging methods, ambiguous structures, and a lack of clear guidance have left many struggling to get it right. But that’s changing. The PDF Association’s newly released Techniques for Accessible PDFs finally provide a standardized approach, eliminating the guesswork. As contributors to these techniques, the PDFix team brought its expertise to help shape these best practices. Now, the question is: how can you leverage these new techniques effectively? And how can PDFix streamline the process for you? Let’s dive in.
The PDF Association has just unveiled its first release of Techniques for Accessible PDF – a game-changer for developers, authors, and remediators aiming to create PDFs that truly work for users with disabilities. Crafted by the PDF Accessibility Liaison Working Group and shaped by community input, these techniques offer clear, expert guidance. They align with ISO 14289 (PDF/UA-2), the global standard for accessible PDFs, and W3C’s WCAG, ensuring your documents meet the highest accessibility standards.
Vendor-Neutral PDF Accessibility Techniques
The Techniques for Accessible PDF from the PDF Association are completely vendor-neutral, ensuring that accessibility isn’t tied to any specific software. Instead of focusing on how a PDF is created, these guidelines prioritize the structure and integrity of the file itself. This means that regardless of the tools you use, you can apply these techniques to improve document accessibility. By providing clear, standardized methods, these techniques help advance digital accessibility across all PDF use cases – ensuring inclusivity for all users, no matter their software or platform.
Accessibility Made Easy with PDFix
As a proud member of the PDF Association, PDFix plays a key role in shaping the future of PDF accessibility. Our tools are designed to seamlessly align with the latest Techniques for Accessible PDFs, which we were actively involved in developing. This ensures that your PDF accessibility tool provider meets the highest standards of expertise, reliability, and industry alignment. As trusted experts, we make it easier than ever to adopt these best practices and create fully accessible documents.
Techniques for Accessible PDF
Each PDF Association Technique comes with a functional PDF example, showing both the right and wrong ways to approach accessibility – making it easier to understand and apply best practices. Read more about Fundamentals.
Fundamental 1: Basic Technical Rules
Software that creates a PDF must follow basic technical rules for tagged PDF, so that other software can process the PDF for accessibility.
pass
PDF100 G1_01 Custom tag correctly role mapped – UA1_Tpdf-G1_01
FAILURE
PDF-F1 G1_F01 Custom tag incorrectly role mapped – UA1_Tpdf-G1_F01
Fundamental 2: Text
Text content in PDF files must be machine-readable in order to allow assistive technology to present the document’s content as text.
PASS
PDF101 G2_01 Text content correctly tagged (in one container – UA1_Tpdf-G2_01
PDF102 G2_02 Text content correctly tagged (one container per word – UA1_Tpdf-G2_02
PDF103 G2_03 Text content correctly tagged (one container per character – UA1_Tpdf-G2_03
PDF104 G2_04 Special character with correct Unicode mapping – UA1_Tpdf-G2_04
PDF105 G2_05 Graphics representing text correctly tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G2_05
PDF106 G2_06 ActualText provides correct extractable characters in place of OCR errors – UA1_Tpdf-G2_02
FAILURES
PDF-F2 G2_F01 Special character missing Unicode mapping – UA1_Tpdf-G2_F01
PDF-F3 G2_F02 Special character with incorrect Unicode mapping – UA1_Tpdf-G2_F02
PDF-F4 G2_F03 Graphics representing text incorrectly tagged as figure – UA1_Tpdf-G2_F03
PDF-F5 G2_F04 Extractable characters are not present in a document with visible text – UA1_Tpdf-G2_F04
Fundamental 3: Content
Accessible PDF files must clearly distinguish between real content, the information the author wants to convey to the reader, and artifacts (e.g., lines, page headers and footers).
PASS
PDF107 G3_01 Real content correctly tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G3_01
PDF108 G3_02 Decorative content correctly marked as artifact – UA1_Tpdf-G3_02
FAILURES
PDF-F6 G3_F01 Real content not tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G3_F01
PDF-F7 G3_F02 Real content incorrectly tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G3_F02
PDF-F8 G3_F03 Decorative content incorrectly tagged as figure – UA1_Tpdf-G3_F03
PDF-F9 G3_F04 Decorative content not marked as artifact – UA1_Tpdf-G3_F04
Fundamental 4: Logical Content Order
The logical content order is determined by the order of the tags in the tag tree, and expresses the author’s intent for consumption of the content.
PASS
PDF109 G4_01 Content order correctly set – UA1_Tpdf-G4_01
PDF110 G4_02 Order of marked content sequences within a tag correctly set – UA1_Tpdf-G4_02
PDF111 G4_03 Content in columns correctly ordered – UA1_Tpdf-G4_03
PDF112 G4_04 Sidebar correctly located in the document’s content order – UA1_Tpdf-G4_04
PDF113 G4_05 Tab order for pages with annotations correctly set – UA1_Tpdf-G4_05
FAILURES
PDF-F10 G4_F01 Content order incorrectly set – UA1_Tpdf-G4_F01
PDF-F11 G4_F02 Order of marked content sequences within a tag incorrectly set – UA1_Tpdf-G4_F02
PDF-F12 G4_F03 Content in columns incorrectly ordered – UA1_Tpdf-G4_F03
PDF-F13 G4_F04 Sidebar incorrectly located in the document’s content order – UA1_Tpdf-G4_F04
PDF-F14 G4_F05 Order of content within a marked content sequence incorrectly set – UA1_Tpdf-G4_F05
PDF-F15 G4_F06 Tab order for pages with annotations incorrectly set – UA1_Tpdf-G4_F06
PDF-F16 G4_F07 Tab order for pages with annotations missing – UA1_Tpdf-G4_F07
Fundamental 5: Appropriate Semantics
Appropriate tags allow software to distinguish between elements of real content to deliver information that would otherwise be conveyed purely via layout.
PASS
PDF114 G5_01 H1 heading appropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_01
PDF115 G5_02 Similar real content appropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_02
PDF116 G5_03 Visually-separated content appropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_03
PDF117 G5_04 Multiline heading appropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_04
FAILURES
PDF-F17 G5_F01 H1 heading inappropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_F01
PDF-F18 G5_F02 Similar real content inappropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_F02
PDF-F19 G5_F03 Single semantic unit of content inappropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_F03
PDF-F20 G5_F04 Visually-separated content inappropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_F04
PDF-F21 G5_F05 Multiline heading inappropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_F05
PDF-F22 G5_F06 Table header cell inappropriately tagged – UA1_Tpdf-G5_F06