Pdf Accessibility: Best Practices and Remediation
PDFs are common in online courses, but they can be one of the most difficult file types to make accessible—especially scanned PDFs, which often function as a single image and cannot be read reliably by screen readers. Before posting or remediating a PDF, start with the intention: Does this document absolutely need to be a PDF? When possible, consider more flexible formats (like Canvas Pages or source files such as Word/PowerPoint) to improve accessibility and reduce remediation work.
Key Takeaways
- Start with the intention: Ask whether the content truly needs to be a PDF or if a more accessible format would work better.
- Use the Decision Tree: Follow the Remediation Decision Tree to choose the best path based on your content and goals.
- Avoid remediating certain PDFs: Do not alter PDFs when restricted by copyright/licensing, when the PDF is publisher/database-provided, or when complex formatting (equations, scientific tables, formulas, music notation, multi-column layouts) may be disrupted.
- When a PDF is required: Create from a well-structured source document and ensure the PDF is tagged so assistive technologies can navigate it.
- Get support when needed: Contact your IDEAS liaison for consultation, and request Adobe Acrobat if remediation must be done in Acrobat (syssupport@spcollege.edu).
Start with Intention
PDF files and Accessibility
PDF files happen to be one of the most problematic ones when it comes to accessibility and WCAG guidelines. Scanned PDFs, particularly, score zero accessibility since they are, essentially, one giant image and not a text that can be recognized by screen readers.
Possible Cases Where PDFs Should Not Be Altered:
- Copyright and Licensing Restrictions (Many scholarly articles are protected by copyright)
- Publisher or Database Output is PDF-Only (Academic databases (JSTOR, ProQuest, EBSCO, ScienceDirect, IEEE, etc.))
- Complex Formatting That Doesn’t Convert Well
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- Mathematical equations
- Scientific tables
- Statistical data sets
- Chemical formulas
- Music notation
- Complex diagrams or multi-column layouts
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- Historical or Archival Documents
- Required Institutional or Government Forms
- Vendor-Provided Textbooks and Supplemental Resources
In cases mentioned above, please contact your IDEAS liaison for consultation.
IF an inaccessible file MUST be preserved and provided as a PDF and you need to fix it, you may need Adobe Acrobat. Who to contact to request Adobe Acrobat? syssupport@spcollege.edu
PDF Accessibility: Start with the Intention
For many years, the Portable Document Format (PDF) was a widely popular files provided to students, particularly when preserving precise formatting or offering a downloadable version is critical. However, PDFs are inherently rigid and introduce specific challenges for students using assistive technologies. Unlike flexible HTML pages, a simple PDF cannot be reliably read by a screen reader unless it has the correct underlying structure. Therefore, before providing PDF files to your students, please ask the Foundational Question:
“Does this document absolutely need to be a PDF?” Keep in mind that HTML (such as Canvas Pages) is often the simplest and most accessible default choice.
If the answer is “Yes, this document absolutely need to be a PDF“, then follow the guidelines below:
1. Prepare the Source Document Correctly
Creating an accessible PDF starts with the authoring software (like Microsoft Word). Accessibility is easiest when you build it in from the beginning.
- If the source Word file isn’t structured, the resulting PDF will be a “flat” image of text that a screen reader cannot navigate. Always use built-in features like Heading Styles (Heading 1, Heading 2, etc.) to organize your content hierarchy.
- Only the Windows version of Microsoft Word supports creating fully accessible (tagged) PDFs directly. PDFs created on other operating systems or basic word processors may require more manual work later.
2. Ensure the PDF is “Tagged”
Tagging is the most critical step. Tags are invisible structural markers that tell assistive technology the logical reading order and meaning of elements (e.g., “This is a heading,” “This is a table,” “This is a list”).
- Always create the PDF as a “tagged” document directly from your authoring software when exporting.
- If your document uses complex data tables, you will likely need to open the final PDF in Adobe Acrobat to manually insert and correct the appropriate table tags to define row and column headers. Doing this in Acrobat is much harder than building the structure in Word first.
Canvas Content Remediation Decision Tree
Yuja Panorama Remediation Resources
The PDF is Untagged | This video demonstrates how to fix an untagged PDF by using Adobe Acrobat’s auto-tagging tools, saving the tagged file, and reuploading it so accessibility checks can be rerun and further issues identified.
The Document Does Not Have Any Headings | This video walks through how to fix PDF accessibility issues caused by missing headers by adding and properly tagging headings in Adobe Acrobat, then reuploading the corrected file to improve the accessibility score.
Accessibility Resources by Content Type
This section provides file-specific guidance to help you identify and fix accessibility issues across common content types used in Canvas. The IDEAS team offers open labs, training sessions, and individualized support throughout the semester to help faculty meet accessibility expectations with confidence.
Click on a content type below to access step-by-step resources, best practices, and remediation support.
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02/27/26 All Day |
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04/24/26 12:00 am |
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