This guide helps University of Georgia faculty and staff create Microsoft Word documents that are usable for everyone. It supports UGA's ADA Title II commitments and WCAG 2.1 alignment by encouraging a “born accessible” approach to documents rather than last-minute fixes.
These steps focus on Microsoft Word 365 on Windows and Mac. The same principles apply if you are using a different version of Word.
Before writing content, take a moment to set up the document so it is easy to find and identify. This helps all readers and supports assistive technologies such as screen readers.
Use a clear, descriptive file name
- Use plain language that describes what the document is about (for example, BIOL1103_Lab_Safety_Guide_Fall2025.docx).
- Avoid names like Document1.docx or Final_v3_really_final.docx.
- Save in .docx format, not the older .doc format.
Set the document title (metadata)
The document title is what many screen readers announce when the file opens.
- In Word, go to File > Info.
- In the Properties area, find the Title field.
- Enter a short, meaningful title (for example, Introduction to Digital Accessibility Syllabus).
- Select Save.
Set the document language
Setting the language helps screen readers pronounce words correctly and supports other tools such as spell checkers.
- Select all text (Ctrl+A on Windows or Command+A on Mac).
- On the Review tab, choose Language > Set Proofing Language.
- Select the correct language (for example, English (United States)).
- Select OK.
The most important part of an accessible document is its structure. Use Word's built-in styles to indicate headings, paragraphs, and lists instead of only changing the appearance of text.
Use heading styles to outline your document
Heading styles give your document a logical outline and allow keyboard and screen reader users to jump quickly between sections.
- Type the heading text (for example, Course Objectives).
- Select the text.
- On the Home tab, in the Styles group, choose Heading 1 for the main title, Heading 2 for main sections, and Heading 3 for subsections.
Best practices:
- Use a single Heading 1 for the document title.
- Move in order (Heading 2, then Heading 3). Do not skip from Heading 2 to Heading 4.
- If you do not like how a heading looks, modify the style rather than choosing a different heading level for appearance.
Use the Navigation Pane to check structure
The Navigation Pane shows a list of headings and helps you confirm the document is structured correctly.
- On the View tab, check Navigation Pane.
- Use the Headings tab to review the outline.
- Look for missing headings or headings out of order and correct them

Open the Navigation Pane from the View tab to check your heading structure
and make sure the document outline is logical.
Readable text benefits everyone, especially readers with low vision, dyslexia, or attention-related disabilities. Following UGA’s brand typography helps maintain a consistent, clear visual identity while supporting accessibility.
Use accessible, brand-approved fonts
UGA’s brand fonts are designed for clarity, consistency, and strong digital legibility.
-
Oswald (primary sans-serif) is best for headlines, subheads, and callouts. Use only the Light or Medium weights.
-
Merriweather (primary serif) works well for headings or readable body copy.
-
Merriweather Sans (secondary sans-serif) performs well in longer text passages and small sizes.
-
Georgia (secondary serif) is excellent for body copy, dense text, and documents where broad compatibility is needed.
All UGA digital fonts must remain readable in assistive technologies. Avoid decorative or script typefaces.
Font size and spacing
-
Use at least 12 pt for body text, with larger sizes for headings.
-
Set line spacing to 1.15 or 1.5 to improve readability.
-
Use paragraph spacing before or after sections instead of inserting extra blank lines.
Text alignment and emphasis
-
Align text to the left. Avoid full justification because it creates uneven spacing that is harder to read.
-
Avoid long passages in italics or in all caps. These reduce legibility for many readers.
-
Use bold sparingly, and do not rely on color alone to indicate meaning (for example, “items in red”).
Alternative text (alt text) is a short description that explains the content and purpose of an image. Screen readers read this text aloud for users who cannot see the image.
When to write alt text
- Informative images: Describe the essential information. For example, “Bar chart showing enrollment increasing from 50 students in 2023 to 90 students in 2025.”
- Decorative images: If an image is purely decorative and adds no meaning, mark it as decorative so it is skipped by screen readers.
How to add alt text
- Right-click the image and select View Alt Text or Edit Alt Text.
- In the Alt Text pane, type a concise description of the image's purpose in the document.
- Remove any auto-generated alt text that is inaccurate or unhelpful.
- If the image is decorative, select the option to mark it as decorative.

Right-click an image and select View Alt Text to open the Alt Text pane.
Add a concise description or mark the image as decorative when it does not
convey essential meaning.
Accessible lists and tables help everyone navigate your content more easily. They also allow screen readers to understand structure, relationships, and meaning within your document.
Use built-in list tools
Lists are easier to navigate when you create them with Word's built-in tools instead of typed characters.
- Use the Bullets or Numbering buttons on the Home tab.
- Use Increase Indent and Decrease Indent to create sub-lists.
- Avoid typing hyphens, numbers, or asterisks manually at the start of each line.
Using Word’s list options ensures assistive technologies can interpret list order and hierarchy correctly.
Use tables for data, not layout
Tables should present data, not control the visual layout of the page. Layout tables can be very confusing for screen reader users and should be avoided.
1. Insert a real data table
- Go to Insert > Table.
- Choose the number of rows and columns you need.
- Keep the structure simple. Avoid merged or split cells and nested tables.
2. Identify header rows and header columns
Marking headers tells screen readers how to associate each data cell with the correct header.
- Select the header row.
- Go to the Table Design tab.
- Check Header Row. If the first column also acts as a header, check First Column.

Selecting Header Row and First Column identifies the headers so screen
readers can read table relationships accurately.
3. Repeat table headers on every page
If the table spans multiple pages, repeat the header row to maintain context for all readers.
- Select the header row.
- Go to the Table Layout tab.
- Select Repeat Header Rows.

Use Repeat Header Rows so header cells appear
on every page of a multi-page table.
4. Add table alt text
Table alt text helps users understand the purpose of the table before navigating through the cells.
- Right-click the table and select Table Properties.
- Go to the Alt Text tab.
- Provide a short title and summary that explain what the table shows, not every cell.
Accessible tables use real table structure, include clearly identified headers, repeat header rows on each page, avoid complex formatting, and include a brief alt text summary. These practices make your document easier to navigate and significantly improve screen reader usability.
Links should clearly communicate where they lead or what action they perform. Clear, descriptive link text helps all readers, and it is especially important for screen reader users who often navigate links out of context.
Using meaningful, action-focused link text
Write link text that describes the destination or task, for example:
This helps users understand the purpose of the link before selecting it.
Avoid vague or generic link phrases
Avoid using:
-
“Click here”
-
“Read more”
-
“Learn more”
-
“Here” or “this link”
These phrases provide no context when read aloud by a screen reader or when scanned visually.
Handle long URLs carefully
If you must show a long URL:
-
Place it in parentheses after clear descriptive text
(for example: “Online training materials (https://training.uga.edu/...)”)
-
Avoid turning long URLs into live hyperlink text in documents intended for printing or PDFs.
-
Never use a raw URL by itself as the only link text unless absolutely necessary.
Make repeated links clear and unique
If the same page is linked multiple times on a page or document, make sure the surrounding text or the link wording provides enough context to tell them apart.
Examples of good repeated links:
Support key board and screen reader navigation
Screen reader users often navigate documents by tabbing through links or using a “list of links” feature. Descriptive link text ensures:
Color plays an important role in accessibility and supports UGA’s visual identity. Many readers have low vision or color vision differences, so text and essential visual elements must remain clear and readable. UGA’s brand colors work well when paired with strong contrast and thoughtful design.
Use UGA brand colors intentionally
UGA’s color palette includes primary, secondary, and neutral tones. When choosing colors in your documents, aim for combinations that support readability and maintain brand consistency.
Best practices:
-
Use black or very dark gray text on white or light backgrounds whenever possible.
-
Use Arch Black, Bulldog Red, and neutral grays for headings, accents, and emphasis.
-
Avoid using bright reds or lighter grays for small text, because they may not meet accessibility contrast requirements.
Minimum contrast requirements
To meet WCAG 2.1 AA:
-
Normal body text must have a contrast ratio of at least 4.5:1.
-
Large text (18 pt or 14 pt bold) must meet at least 3:1.
-
Icons, shapes, and other essential visual elements should also meet a 3:1 ratio.
These standards help ensure your content is readable for people with low vision and for anyone viewing your document on different devices or in varied lighting.
Avoid using color alone to convey meaning
Color should not be the only way to communicate important information. For example, instead of saying “items in red are required,” include an additional cue, such as:
This provides clarity for readers with color blindness, low vision, or those printing documents in grayscale.
Using brand colors effectively with text
When applying UGA brand colors, keep readability at the center:
-
Bulldog Red works best for headings or emphasis, not for full paragraphs of body text.
-
Use white text only on very dark backgrounds such as Arch Black or deep grayscale tones.
-
Avoid placing body text over lightly tinted reds or pale neutrals unless you confirm they meet contrast guidelines.
UGA provides RGB and HEX values for all brand colors. To test color combinations, use the TPGi Color Contrast Analyzer, which offers a simple, reliable way to check whether your text and background meet WCAG contrast requirements.
Automated tools are not perfect, but they are a helpful first step in identifying issues such as missing alt text, unclear link text, and table structure problems. Always combine automated checks with a short manual review to make sure your document is clear and follows a logical structure.
Run the Accessibility Checker
The Accessibility Checker provides a list of issues and suggestions to help make your document more usable. It flags Errors, Warnings, and Tips.
- Go to the Review tab.
- Select Check Accessibility.
- The Accessibility pane opens on the right side of the screen.
- Review issues labeled as Errors and Warnings, and follow Word’s recommended actions.
Select Check Accessibility on the Review tab to open the Accessibility pane.
What to look for in the Accessibility pane
Word organizes issues into categories based on their impact. Pay close attention to:
- Missing alt text on images.
- Unclear or duplicate link text.
- Tables without header rows or with merged cells.
- Improper heading structure.
- Color or formatting issues that may reduce readability.
The Accessibility Checker lists issues and provides steps to resolve them.
Do a quick manual review
Automated results are a starting point, but manual review is essential for confirming clarity and usability.
- Navigation Pane: On the View tab, open the Navigation Pane and check that headings form a logical outline.
- Keyboard tab order: Press Tab to move through links or form fields (if any) and make sure the order makes sense.
- Read Aloud or Immersive Reader: Use Read Aloud (View tab) or Immersive Reader to listen for missing context or sections that sound confusing or out of order.
These steps help ensure your document is usable for people who rely on screen readers, read-aloud tools, keyboard navigation, or other assistive technologies.
If you need to share a PDF version, always start from an accessible Word document and export it in a way that preserves tags and structure. Avoid Print to PDF options, which usually remove accessibility information such as headings, alt text, and reading order.
Exporting properly helps ensure that the PDF continues to meet UGA’s accessibility standards and WCAG 2.1 AA requirements.
Word on Windows
Windows users may see one of two export tools depending on whether Adobe Acrobat is installed. Both methods can produce accessible PDFs when configured correctly.
A. When Adobe Acrobat PDFMaker appears
- Go to File > Save As.
- Choose PDF as the file type.
- Select Options… to open the Acrobat PDFMaker dialog.
- Ensure the following options are selected:
- Enable Accessibility and Reflow with tagged Adobe PDF
- Convert document information
- Create Bookmarks
- Convert Word Headings to Bookmarks
- Select OK, then choose Save.
When Acrobat PDFMaker appears, select Enable Accessibility and Reflow with tagged PDF
to preserve headings, alt text, and reading order.
B. When using Word’s built-in PDF export
- Go to File > Save As (or Save a Copy).
- Choose PDF (*.pdf) as the file format.
- Select More options…, then choose Options….
- Under Include non-printing information, select:
- Document structure tags for accessibility
- Create bookmarks using: Headings
- Select OK, then Save.
Word’s built-in PDF export also supports accessible PDF creation when
Document structure tags for accessibility is enabled.
Word on Mac
Word for Mac uses a different export workflow, but it can still create a fully tagged and accessible PDF when the correct settings are selected.
How to export an accessible PDF
- Go to File > Save As….
- Choose where you want to save the file.
- Select PDF from the File Format menu.
- Select the option labeled Best for electronic distribution and accessibility.
- Select Export.
In Word for Mac, choose Best for electronic distribution and accessibility
to export a tagged PDF with headings, lists, and alt text preserved.
Tip: Verify your PDF after export
When possible, open the exported PDF in Adobe Acrobat Pro and run the Accessibility Checker to confirm:
- Headings appear correctly in the Tags panel.
- Reading order follows the structure of the original Word document.
- Images and figures include alt text.
- Tables have header rows and proper structure.
- Document title and language are set correctly.
These checks help ensure your PDF remains accessible for screen reader users and aligned with UGA’s digital accessibility expectations.