WCAG Color Contrast Checker

Ensure your color combinations meet WCAG 2.1 accessibility standards. Check contrast ratios instantly and create inclusive designs that everyone can use.

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Why Color Contrast Matters

Accessible design isn't optional—it's essential

1 in 5

People Have Visual Impairments

Over 2.2 billion people worldwide have vision impairment or blindness. Poor color contrast makes content inaccessible to millions of potential users.

$6.9B

Market Opportunity

People with disabilities represent a $6.9 billion market. Accessible design isn't just ethical—it's good business.

Legal

Compliance Required

ADA, Section 508, and international laws require digital accessibility. Non-compliance can result in lawsuits and damaged reputation.

Understanding WCAG Standards

What do AA and AAA actually mean?

WCAG Level AA

The Industry Standard

Normal Text: 4.5:1 contrast ratio minimum(Less than 18pt or 14pt bold)
Large Text: 3:1 contrast ratio minimum(18pt+ or 14pt+ bold)

Level AA is the legal requirement for most organizations and covers the majority of accessibility needs. It balances design flexibility with accessibility.

WCAG Level AAA

Enhanced Accessibility

Normal Text: 7:1 contrast ratio minimum(Less than 18pt or 14pt bold)
Large Text: 4.5:1 contrast ratio minimum(18pt+ or 14pt+ bold)

Level AAA provides enhanced contrast for users with more significant vision loss. While not always required, it's recommended for critical content.

How Color Contrast Works

The science behind accessible color combinations

1. Relative Luminance

First, we calculate the relative luminance of each color—a measure of how much light a color emits. This uses the RGB values with gamma correction to match human perception.

L = 0.2126 × R + 0.7152 × G + 0.0722 × B

2. Contrast Ratio Calculation

The contrast ratio is calculated by comparing the relative luminance of the lighter color to the darker color. The result is a number between 1:1 and 21:1.

(L1 + 0.05) / (L2 + 0.05)

3. WCAG Compliance Check

Finally, we compare the ratio against WCAG thresholds. The higher the ratio, the better the contrast. Pure black on white gives the maximum ratio of 21:1.

Best Practices for Accessible Color Contrast

Tips from accessibility experts

Test Early and Often

Check contrast ratios during the design phase, not after development. It's easier to adjust colors early than to refactor later.

Don't Rely on Color Alone

Use icons, patterns, or text labels in addition to color to convey information. This helps colorblind users and improves overall usability.

Mind Your States

Check contrast for hover, focus, active, and disabled states. Interactive elements must maintain sufficient contrast in all states.

Test with Real Content

Use actual text sizes and weights from your design. Lorem ipsum at 16pt might pass, but your 12pt UI text might fail.

Build a Compliant Palette

Create a color system with pre-tested combinations. Document which colors work together to ensure consistency across your product.

Consider Context

Low-contrast text might work for decorative elements, but critical information should always exceed minimum requirements.

Common Contrast Mistakes to Avoid

Learn from others' accessibility failures

❌ Gray Text on Gray Backgrounds

❌ Colored Text on Photos

❌ Thin Fonts at Small Sizes

❌ Disabled State Invisibility

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