Summary
A 10-week Digital Accessibility Challenge launched in January 2026 and will end in April 2026. Signups are open through the end of February 2026. This initiative isn’t just about meeting the April 2026 Title II Federal Regulations deadline – it’s about building skills, fostering inclusive design, and creating digital spaces where everyone belongs.
Participants will receive 1,000 Wellbeing Points at the conclusion of the challenge.
Get ready to strengthen your skills!
Remove content you do not need to share right now and delete content you no longer need.
Use accessibility checker tools whenever you create or revise digital content.
Page Retired: Headings
Structure your digital content with paragraph styles in documents or heading tags in web pages.
Page Retired: Links
Write links that are concise, descriptive, and meaningful out of context.
Page Retired: Contrast
Make sure foreground and background colors and other visual indicators contrast each other.
Page Retired: Alternative Text
Add alternative text, or “alt text,” to every meaningful image in digital content.
Page Retired: Tables
Simplify tables and include a header row and/or column and a summary, either in a caption or alt text.
Page Retired: Video and Audio
Include both human-edited captions and audio descriptions in videos and transcripts in audio-only recordings.
Make your digital documents scannable, searchable, legible, and readable.
Create new content with digital accessibility in mind.
This site is produced by the Office of Information Technology (OIT) with guidance from the Office for Equity and Diversity (OED) and the Accessible U Committee. We use a mix of person- and identity-first language (access our Style Guide).