惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

The Cloudflare Blog
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
C
Check Point Blog
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
H
Help Net Security
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
博客园 - 【当耐特】
爱范儿
爱范儿
I
InfoQ
V
Visual Studio Blog
O
OpenAI News
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
S
Security Affairs
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
雷峰网
雷峰网
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
Latest news
Latest news
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
S
Schneier on Security
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
T
Tor Project blog
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
Security Latest
Security Latest
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
B
Blog RSS Feed
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
P
Privacy International News Feed
S
Securelist
C
Cisco Blogs
博客园_首页
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
P
Proofpoint News Feed
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
S
Secure Thoughts

Inside Nutrient

A guide to the invisible work behind documents Introducing Nutrient Documents for Salesforce: Native document generation and signing Document AI vs. traditional OCR: Choosing between OCR, AI, and hybrid pipelines PDF SDK compliance and security evaluation checklist for enterprise teams (2026) Invariant Corp replaces paper processes with Nutrient Workflow and scales without limits What is process mapping? A complete guide Nutrient vs. Conga Composer for Salesforce document generation (2026) Document routing: How to automate document distribution The CTO’s AI playbook: Why accountability architecture beats orchestration Compliance workflow automation: Why built-in compliance is table stakes Workflow diagrams: Examples, symbols, and how to build one that actually runs Digital forms: Replace paper forms with automated workflows Approval workflow software: How to automate approvals Why document-centric automation is different The CEO’s AI playbook: Why decision architecture beats model selection Nutrient SDK product updates for Q1 2026 PDF redaction verification: How to prove sensitive data is permanently removed What is a VPAT? The complete guide to accessibility conformance reports What is PDF/UA? The accessible PDF standard explained Salesforce eSignatures: Generate, sign, and track documents in one flow Online document viewer: Options, tradeoffs, and how to embed one Document viewer for web apps: React, Vue, Angular (2026) Best document viewers in 2026: A buyer’s guide How to edit a PDF in Python: Add text, images, and annotations Nutrient advances Workflow platform with agentic AI for enterprise-grade speed and consistency in document-heavy operations How to create a Salesforce quote template from opportunity data The business case for accessibility: Five ways it drives enterprise value Python PDF library comparison (2026): 7 libraries for developers Why your AI agent hallucinates PDF table data PDF.js limitations: When to upgrade to a commercial PDF SDK How Subject scaled 5× with Nutrient’s PDF SDK without rebuilding its document layer I replaced our sales training with an AI coach that runs in Slack — here’s what broke Redirecting to: https://securitybuzz.com/cybersecurity-news/why-enterprise-permissions-are-ais-most-dangerous-inheritance/ Nutrient .NET SDK vs. iText Core: Complete comparison for .NET developers DocuVieware: Support’s most frequently asked setup questions Introducing Nutrient Workflow How to convert PDF to Word in C# (.NET) When email and spreadsheets stop working: Work order approval workflows for field teams on the move Compliance with confidence: Why document-centric automation is the foundation of your mission Nutrient expands AI Assistant, automating multistep document workflows inside any application What is document generation? A developer’s guide to PDF generation Document Converter data flow and how real-time watermarks skip the queue PDF/UA compliance guide: Requirements, standards, and best practices Computers still can’t understand you How Athena Intelligence built AI agents for regulated enterprises with Nutrient’s document infrastructure How to convert HTML to PDF (2026): 4 methods from browser print to SDK How to build a document extraction pipeline with Nutrient Vision API OCR vs. intelligent document processing: Choosing the right document extraction engine Beyond OCR: How document intelligence eliminates manual processing in regulated industries Nutrient vs. IronPDF: Complete comparison for .NET developers Nutrient vs. Aspose.PDF: Complete comparison for .NET developers Redirecting to: https://fortune.com/2026/02/19/openclaw-who-is-peter-steinberger-openai-sam-altman-anthropic-moltbook/ Lufthansa Systems uses Nutrient to deliver reliable, scalable PDF rendering for pilots worldwide Nutrient vs. Syncfusion: Complete comparison for .NET developers React’s useTransition: The hook you’re probably using wrong First City Monument Bank streamlines banking processes with Nutrient Workflow Redirecting to: https://www.sdcexec.com/warehousing/automation/article/22957364/nutrient-workflow-automation-the-missing-link-in-supply-chain-efficiency The complete guide to digital signatures: PAdES, CAdES, and XAdES explained Nutrient Python SDK: Production-grade document processing for Python Introducing agentic document editing for web applications with AI Assistant Nutrient vs. QuestPDF: Complete comparison for .NET developers How we fixed the GdPicture license expiration (and what to do if you’re affected) Red team security testing with agentic AI The future of healthcare document automation Best healthcare workflow software compared Nutrient SDK product updates for Q4 2025 How Harvey scaled legal document workflows 50 percent MoM without rebuilding infrastructure HIPAA-compliant document management in hospitals How we optimized rendering performance while handling thousands of annotations in React — Part 2 Automated PII removal with Nutrient API Redirecting to: https://www.devopsdigest.com/2026-low-code-no-code-predictions Redirecting to: https://www.kmworld.com/Articles/Editorial/ViewPoints/Leaders-predict-AI-to-continue-permeating-all-aspects-of-KM-in-2026-172594.aspx What are deep agents and how do they solve complex problems? Whipping up document magic: Your easy-bake recipe for Vue and Nutrient Web SDK 🧁 What I’ve learned about product iteration planning while building SDKs Passwordless document signing: Three-layer security guide New zip folder functionality streamlines file management in Document Automation Server The keyboard shortcuts playbook: Taking control of keyboard events in Nutrient Web SDK From experienced engineer to AI beginner: My unexpected journey AI-assisted manual testing: Handling Safari’s PDF rendering and UI quirks How to keep a 20-year-old SDK up to date How we optimized rendering performance while handling thousands of annotations in React — Part 1 Nutrient announces new executive hires to accelerate next phase of growth High performance UI using web workers Automate document conversion at scale with Python and Nutrient DCS From curiosity to PLG (and AI): My journey to understanding product-led growth Prost to progress: One year as Nutrient Pigeon usage at Nutrient: Bridging native SDKs to Flutter Modernizing CI build servers: How to migrate from Chef to Ansible Unix man pages: AI-friendly documentation since 1971 Consistent hashing for even load distribution Best AI redaction APIs: Complete comparison guide for 2025 Why AI document redaction matters for modern security From coding to coordinating: How AI transformed my workflow What is intelligent document processing (IDP)? A complete guide Enterprise PDF SDKs: Best PSPDFKit (now Nutrient) alternatives Nutrient SDK product updates for Q3 2025 GdPicture support best practices Redacting sensitive data with Nutrient AI redaction API How AI is transforming the customer experience at Nutrient: From instant answers to intelligent support
How to make a PDF accessible with Nutrient (WCAG and Section 508)
Hulya Masharipov · 2025-02-05 · via Inside Nutrient

Table of contents

    How to make a PDF accessible with Nutrient (WCAG and Section 508)

    TL;DR

    An accessible PDF uses tags, alt text, a logical reading order, and proper form labels so assistive technologies can interpret the content. Three standards govern PDF accessibility: WCAG 2.2(opens in a new tab), Section 508(opens in a new tab), and PDF/UA. This guide walks through each requirement and shows how Nutrient SDKs handle accessibility across web, iOS, and Android so you can ship compliant PDF applications without building everything from scratch.

    If your application serves PDFs, those documents need to be accessible. Screen reader users, keyboard-only users, and people relying on assistive technologies need to read and interact with your PDFs — and regulations like the ADA(opens in a new tab), Section 508(opens in a new tab), and the European Accessibility Act (EAA)(opens in a new tab) require it.

    The challenge is that PDF accessibility involves multiple standards, platform-specific behaviors, and ongoing testing. Nutrient SDKs handle the heavy lifting across web, iOS, and Android — so you can focus on your application, not accessibility plumbing.

    The standards you need to meet

    Four standards define the rules for PDF accessibility. Here’s what each one covers and where it applies.

    WCAG 2.2

    The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.2(opens in a new tab) apply to all web content, including PDFs. Most regulations reference Level AA, which requires text contrast ratios of 4.5:1, keyboard operability, and meaningful content structure. WCAG 2.2 also added criteria for focus appearance and dragging movements, which is relevant for interactive PDF viewers.

    Section 508

    Section 508(opens in a new tab) is a U.S. federal law that references WCAG 2.0 Level AA. It applies to federal agencies, their vendors, and documents published on government websites. Meeting WCAG 2.2 AA satisfies Section 508.

    PDF/UA

    PDF/UA (ISO 14289) defines the technical requirements for the PDF file itself: all content tagged or marked as artifacts, a logical reading order, alt text on images, embedded fonts, and a specified language. PDF/UA-2(opens in a new tab), published in 2024, adds new structure tags and builds on PDF 2.0.

    European Accessibility Act

    The EAA(opens in a new tab), effective as of June 2025, requires businesses operating in the EU to make digital products accessible, referencing the EN 301 549(opens in a new tab) standard. PDFs published as part of digital services fall under this requirement.

    What makes a PDF accessible

    Here’s what you need to get right — and how Nutrient helps at each step.

    1. Document tags

    Tags define the structure — headings, paragraphs, lists, tables, figures. Without them, a screen reader sees flat text with no way to navigate.

    Nutrient Web SDK renders tagged PDFs and PDF/UA documents with their full structure intact, so screen readers can navigate by heading, table, or section out of the box.

    2. Reading order

    Tags must reflect how content should be read, and not where it sits on the page. A two-column layout needs tags that read left column first, then right.

    Nutrient preserves and renders the tag-defined reading order. Developers can customize focus order with the instance#setPageTabOrder() API.

    3. Alt text on images

    Every meaningful image needs a text alternative. Decorative images should be marked as artifacts so screen readers skip them.

    Replace “click here” and other vague text with text that describes the destination, e.g. “download the accessibility report” or “view WCAG 2.2 guidelines.”

    5. Color contrast

    WCAG 2.2 Level AA requires 4.5:1 for normal text and 3:1 for large text. Nutrient’s default light and dark themes meet WCAG 2.2(opens in a new tab) Level AAA for text contrast and at least AA for icons, with no custom theming required.

    6. Labeled form fields

    Every form field needs a label that screen readers can announce, and users need to Tab between fields in a logical order. Nutrient renders form fields with proper labels and supports keyboard-only interaction across all platforms. See the forms guide for more information.

    7. Document properties

    Set the document language, a descriptive title, and embed all fonts. PDF/UA requires all three.

    8. Security settings

    Some PDF encryption blocks screen readers. If you apply security, keep the accessibility permission enabled.

    9. Scanned PDFs

    Scanned documents are image-only — no text layer, no screen reader access. You need OCR to extract text before any other accessibility step applies.

    Nutrient provides OCR across Java, iOS, Android, and .NET — turning scanned pages into searchable, accessible text layers.

    How Nutrient handles accessibility for you

    Instead of building accessibility support from scratch, Nutrient SDK covers the core WCAG requirements across platforms:

    RequirementWCAG criterionWhat Nutrient does
    Screen reader support1.3.1 Info and RelationshipsWorks with NVDA, JAWS, VoiceOver, TalkBack
    Keyboard navigation2.1.1 KeyboardFull Tab/arrow key navigation, customizable focus order
    Color contrast1.4.3 Contrast (Minimum)AAA-compliant themes, light and dark mode
    Text alternatives1.1.1 Non-text ContentText-to-speech via text extraction API
    Visual presentation1.4.8 Visual PresentationReader View reformats content for easier reading
    Tagged PDF/PDF/UA1.3.2 Meaningful SequenceRenders document structure for assistive technologies
    Accessible forms1.3.1, 4.1.2 Name, Role, ValueLabeled, keyboard-navigable form fields
    Scanned documents1.1.1 Non-text ContentOCR across Java, iOS, Android, .NET

    Try Nutrient free

    Nutrient SDK simplifies the process of building accessible PDF applications with robust features for web, iOS, and Android platforms. The following sections explore our platform-specific accessibility features.

    Web

    Nutrient Web SDK provides:

    • Keyboard-only annotation placement — Users can place text, note, and comment annotations using Enter, Space, and arrow keys.
    • Text-to-speech — Extract text from any PDF and pass it to the browser’s speech synthesis. See the TTS guide for more information.
    • WCAG-compliant rendering — Complies with WAI-ARIA(opens in a new tab) guidelines. Tagged PDFs and PDF/UA documents render with their full structure.
    • Localized accessibility strings — All built-in strings are localized. Customize them with the localization guide.
    • Keyboard-navigable signatures — Users can type signatures without a pointer device.
    • Accessible forms — Form fields are labeled and keyboard-navigable. See the forms guide for more information.

    For more details, read how we’re improving accessibility on Nutrient Web SDK.

    iOS

    Nutrient iOS SDK supports:

    • VoiceOver — PDF page text is exposed with intelligent paragraph separation. Bookmark lists, document information, and the comments UI all support VoiceOver.
    • Reader View — Reformats content with adjustable text sizes, including larger accessibility sizes. Helps with cognitive accessibility (WCAG 1.4.8).
    • Dynamic Type — Respects system font size preferences.
    • Dark Mode — The UI follows system Dark Mode. Page content can optionally render in inverted mode.
    • Speak Selection — iOS reads selected text aloud.
    • Hardware keyboard — Full keyboard navigation with shortcuts for annotation selection.
    • Trackpad and mouse — Enhanced pointing device support. See the trackpad guide for more information.

    Explore the iOS demo:

    Android

    Nutrient Android SDK supports:

    Explore the Android demo:

    Testing accessibility

    Building accessible PDFs is only half the work — validate with these tools:

    Test across multiple assistive technologies, since each interprets PDF structure differently.

    Conclusion

    PDF accessibility requires tagged structure, alt text, reading order, form labels, contrast, and testing — across WCAG 2.2, Section 508, and PDF/UA.

    Nutrient SDKs handle this across web, iOS, and Android with screen reader support, keyboard navigation, WCAG AAA contrast, text-to-speech, Reader View, and OCR for scanned documents. Instead of building accessibility infrastructure yourself, integrate Nutrient and ship compliant PDF applications faster.

    Ready to get started? Explore Nutrient SDK today and build accessibility-first applications. Contact our Sales team for more details, and try the product for free to see how it can benefit your project. Try Nutrient for free or explore the demo.

    FAQ

    WCAG is a set of web content accessibility guidelines published by the W3C. Section 508 is a U.S. federal law that references WCAG as its technical standard. PDF/UA is an ISO standard that defines how the PDF file format must be structured for accessibility. Meeting WCAG 2.2 Level AA generally satisfies Section 508, while PDF/UA ensures the file itself is technically accessible.

    Add document tags to define structure, include alt text on images, set a logical reading order, label form fields, check color contrast ratios, set the document language, and embed all fonts. Then validate with a tool like PDF Accessibility Checker (PAC) or a screen reader.

    PDF tags define a document’s logical structure — headings, paragraphs, lists, tables, and figures. Without tags, screen readers can’t distinguish a heading from body text or navigate a document by section. PDF/UA requires that all content is either tagged or marked as an artifact.

    Nutrient SDK provides screen reader support (NVDA, JAWS, VoiceOver, TalkBack), keyboard navigation, WCAG AAA-compliant themes, text-to-speech, Reader View, accessible form rendering, and OCR for scanned documents across web, iOS, and Android. It handles accessibility compliance so you don’t have to build it yourself.

    Use PDF Accessibility Checker (PAC) for PDF/UA conformance checks, test with screen readers like NVDA or VoiceOver, and verify color contrast with the WebAIM Contrast Checker. Testing across multiple assistive technologies is recommended since each interprets PDF structure differently.

    Yes. The European Accessibility Act (EAA), effective June 2025, requires businesses operating in the EU to make digital products and services accessible. It references the EN 301 549 standard, which maps to WCAG 2.1 Level AA. PDFs published as part of digital services fall under this requirement.

    Scanned PDFs are image-only and contain no text layer for screen readers. Run OCR to extract text from the images. After OCR processing, add document tags, set the reading order, and verify the extracted text is accurate. Nutrient provides OCR across Java, iOS, Android, and .NET.

    Explore related topics

    Try for free Ready to get started?

    Related SDK articles

    Explore more