WCAG 2.1 Is the Current Standard, Not WCAG 2.0 — and WCAG 2.2 Is Coming

The title kind of says it all.

WCAG 2.1 has been the standard for over two years — it was published in June 2018.

If you rewind to when the Accessibility Guidelines Working Group (AGWG) was asking for feedback on its near-final 2.1 draft, many of the Success Criteria in WCAG 2.1 are effectively three years old. Though you could argue only 2½ years if you go by the April 2018 Proposed Recommendation date.

If your software development life cycle is under 3 years (I really hope so) then you have no excuse for not integrating WCAG 2.1 Success Criteria into your projects, even if you are still struggling to sort them out.

If the third-party tools (libraries, frameworks, resets, etc.) on which you rely are not honoring WCAG 2.1 then you should file bugs or, better yet, find new tools. You are the one at risk, not them. At least not until the industry as a whole threatens to move away from these non-conforming tools.

Looking at the larger timeline for WCAG we can spot a trend.

WCAG 1.0 was released in 1999, WCAG 2.0 came out in 2008, and WCAG 2.1 in 2018. It’s not like any of these snuck up on you.

Consider the common tools in use today and how young they are compared to WCAG:

What framework do you use? WCAG is older. What library do you use? WCAG is older. What content management system do you use? WCAG is older. What intern do you use? WCAG is (probably) older. And so on…

There is no reason not to have expected updates to WCAG. If anything, having 10 years between releases was an opportunity to figure it out and account for it into your process. Not to get complacent.

Claiming as an organization that you have chosen not to adopt WCAG 2.1 also does not protect you. A user can file a complaint regardless, and making a conscious decision to ignore the current standard will not absolve your failure to implement it.

If I get pulled over for blowing off a stop sign, I can’t claim that since it only went up two years ago I haven’t had time to prepare. It doesn’t matter that my car is three years old and I did not account for braking at that intersection in my Total Cost of Ownership when I purchased it.

Alternately, I cannot tell the same officer (later that day, I presume) that I am disregarding the 25 miles-per-hour school speed limit simply because I have made a business decision to maintain 40 miles-per-hour so my velocity will still be up going into my next sprint, er, intersection.

By the way, WCAG 2.2 is coming.

If it follows the 2.1 update cadence, you can expect it in under a year (mid-2021). You have enough warning to put it on your roadmap, excise it from backlog, make it a part of your strategy.

WCAG 3.0 is under active development as well.

Get your house in order, because your users don’t care about your excuses.

Update: 17 November 2023

WCAG 2.2 is here. Much later than mid-year 2021. Though it has been in draft form since then, with lots of opportunities to get familiar with it and incorporate it into your testing and development.

And yet, I still see organizations that consider WCAG 2.1 to be a future goal, with WCAG 2.0 failures common. But they absolutely keep their inaccessible libraries and frameworks current!

And users still don’t care about your excuses.

12 Comments

Reply

So, in circa 2017, when Section 508 (in the USA) was FINALLY getting to the “refresh” deployment phase, the new regs were “harmonized” with WCAG 2.0. I remember on a webinar with the US Access Board someone asked if the regs would “automatically” update to WCAG 2.1 which, as I recall, were in the development phase. The blank answer was ‘Section 508 is harmonized with WCAG 2.0’ (period). Emphasis on the period. I heard a similar question asked recently during a webinar, this time as to whether WCAG 2.2 would be the guidance. The same blank response was heard.

Such is life.

Thank you for your blog, Adrian. I always enjoy reading your stuff.

~j

In response to John Brandt. Reply

John, thanks. I think Section 508 is a good, yet unfortunate, example. For laws that cite 2.0 specifically, the transition to WCAG 3.0 will likely be just as painful as the 2.0 update.

Reply

It took a full decade to update Section 508 to incorporate WCAG 2.0. I spent several years on the advisory committee defining the updates and then watched it take another several years to be finalized (to something quite different than the committee proposed). Do not anticipate Section 508 being updated any time soon – or perhaps ever. The reality is that Section 508 is irrelevant to the vast, vast majority of the web. We barely even mention it any more in our trainings.

Reply

I would like to mention same thing for AODA as Section 508, about specific WCAG 2.0 guidelines.
Thanks Adrian for all your blogs, it has been very informative.

Hiral Mehta; . Permalink
Reply

The only problem with this is that the definitions and requirements in WCAG2.x are so vague and broad that they are impossible to meet without tripling the amount of code required and significantly reducing usability for the vast majority of users.

Not to mention that the spec itself is so ridiculously convoluted and full of jargon that it’s difficult for college educated developers to understand, much less the “cognitively challenged.”

I have been an advocate for accessibility for years, understanding that the spirit of the law is more important than the letter and that there’s plenty of gray area in between. WCAG has turned that into a completely legalistic exercise in frustration for me as a developer and UI/UX professional.

The current spec appears to have been written for the sole benefit of ambulance-chasing lawyers.

RioBrewster; . Permalink
In response to RioBrewster. Reply

Disliking WCAG, or its language, does not mean you can ignore it.

There is broad agreement that meeting WCAG does not guarantee accessibility; meeting WCAG only signals a baseline, minimum effort.

I understand some people struggle with some of the language in WCAG, which is all the more reason to file issues and get involved in the development of WCAG3.

I doubt I can convince you that WCAG is for anyone other than amoral lawyers (nor is that my job). I can, however, point you to WCAG Success Criteria that have machine-testable outcomes (such as text contrast and missing media alternatives). While those are only useful for ~30% of SCs, they also tend to correspond to the biggest accessibility barriers.

But as you note, humans will always be needed to make both accessible and usable experiences.

Reply

Hey,
I work on a project where following “ADA requirements” is the rule. Do you know if the ADA specifically states that they follow the WCAG 2.1 version? Or that the law automatically follows the currently released version of WCAG?

Thanks.

Marion; . Permalink
In response to Marion. Reply

Marion, the ADA does not specifically state that. The ADA was passed years before the WCAG guidelines were written, before W3C existed, and even prior to the very first web browser (by a few months). Generally the case law around ADA as it has been applied to web sites is what matters, and that case law lands on WCAG.

The good news is that the very day you asked this question, the US Department of Justice put out a release addressing this titled Justice Department Issues Web Accessibility Guidance Under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

That release points to a resource at ADA.gov titled Guidance on Web Accessibility and the ADA. While the URL is beta-dot, it still demonstrates that the US Federal Government is taken an official position on how WCAG and Section 508 (which incorporates WCAG 2.0) apply.

Reply

Hi Adrian,
Thank you for the update and the links to further resources.
What I understand from what you shared with me is that, from a legal perspective, in the USA, WCAG 2.0 is the compliance standard under the ADA, and not WCAG 2.1.

Despite this, many law firms and accessibility advocates recommend already implementing WCAG 2.1 rather than “waiting” for it to be officially enacted.
Would you agree to this?

Marion; . Permalink
In response to Marion. Reply

What I understand from what you shared with me is that, from a legal perspective, in the USA, WCAG 2.0 is the compliance standard under the ADA, and not WCAG 2.1.

The ADA is still silent on the web. Those documents are guidance, not law. Recent DoJ cases have pushed for WCAG 2.1 compliance. Of course, Section 508 incorporates WCAG 2.0, though it is also not the ADA.

Despite this, many law firms and accessibility advocates recommend already implementing WCAG 2.1 rather than “waiting” for it to be officially enacted.

Yes, accessibility advocates recommend WCAG 2.1 because it is the current standard and incorporates more SCs that support more users. They also know WCAG represents the floor of accessibility, the bare minimum.

Law firms do so because many of them genuinely want to ensure remediations benefit more users. Some recommend it because of cases that have been settled at WCAG 2.1, which establishes case law for WCAG 2.1. For example, in January the DoJ settled with Kroger over its inaccessible vaccine sites by requiring them to conform to WCAG 2.1 AA.

As a reminder, I am not a lawyer and this does not constitute legal advice.

Reply

Sure, it’s not a legal advice, but that’s a really clear answer. Thank you for your support and answers!

Marion; . Permalink
In response to Marion. Reply

I just posted this, partially spurred by this conversation: ADA Web Site Compliance Still Not a Thing

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