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A design system is a library of styles, components, and patterns used by product teams to consistently and efficiently launch new pages and features. A good system has accessibility embedded throughout and includes documentation, guidelines and implementation notes for accessibility.
There are several benefits of an accessible design system for you, your team, your organisation, and the people using your products.
By embedding accessibility in your design system, your team reduces the need to repeat accessibility work, freeing them to focus on new things. For example:
As the Inclusive Design Principle, be consistent says:
Use familiar conventions and apply them consistently.
By documenting accessibility for styles, patterns and components, your team reduces the risk of designing and building inconsistent experiences for people with disabilities. For example:
By increasing accessibility efficiency and consistency, your team can build inclusive products faster and at scale. For example:
By considering accessibility as integral to your design system, you improve the user experience for everyone as many accessibility requirements improve usability for all. For example
By embedding accessibility in a design system, you are one step closer to sustainable accessibility across your products and within your product development process. An accessible design system contributes to:
Design systems vary, but an accessible design system can include style guides, components, patterns, and accessibility documentation.
Accessibility must be embedded throughout the design system. This means there is general guidance for accessibility and specific accessibility guidance for all styles, components, and patterns.
The general accessibility guidance can include:
Specific accessibility documentation is then included with each style, component or pattern.
A visual style guide documents the look and feel of a brand. What is included can vary but should always include:
Editorial guidelines apply to all copy, this includes both visible copy and hidden copy that screen reader users access. It should cover readability and copy patterns for:
An accessible editorial style guide will also document inclusive language guidelines for your organisation. This includes preferred language for:
A component library documents re-usable components such as menus, tab panels, accordions, buttons and so on.
Each component is designed, built, and tested for accessibility before it is added to the design system. Each component should include accessibility documentation so designers and developers using the component don't break the accessibility when they add it to a page.
For example, a component should include implementation advice on:
The last item, expected user experience, is a good way of helping people using your design system understand what the expected outcome is for people browsing with different assistive technologies.
The BBC News team have a guide on How to document the screen reader user experience which includes seven steps for designers to consider. There is also an accompanying screen reader UX poster (PDF, 67kb)

A pattern library documents how two or more components can be combined to help people complete a task or process. This can be content structure, layouts, page templates, forms, status messages, or other combinations of UI elements.
As with the components, including the expected user experience for people browsing with assistive technologies and various disabilities is key.
An accessible design system is for use by product teams.
When it comes to who is responsible for accessibility in the design system, the short answer is that everyone who works on it is responsible.
If you have a design system team, the team should include at least one person from each discipline. For example a UX researcher, content creator, interaction designer, visual designer, a developer, a QA tester and product owner.
Each team member is responsible for the accessibility of what they design, code, test, or write. This means making the styles, components, and patterns accessible as well as documenting accessibility implementation specifications for each.
How your team manages this process will vary but ultimately, it is a collaborative process. No individual role in the team should work in isolation; multiple roles will have input on what you do:
If you don't have a design team, you can create your system on a small scale by documenting established accessible style, components and patterns for re-use. This is an investment of time, but it is time you will immediately win back as you evolve your product.
You can also look at adopting or adapting an existing accessible design system, component library, or pattern library. This can be as large or as small as you need:
Tip: regardless of whether you are using a third party to host your design system, or you are hosting it on your platform, it must also be accessible.
If using a third party platform, check to see if they have an Accessibility Conformance Report (ACR). You will need to make sure that both the front-end is accessible as well as the back-end so that people with disabilities in your product teams can use and contribute to the design system.
There will be times when product teams can't find the component, style, or pattern they need, or it doesn't do exactly what they need it to do.
When this happens, there is a risk of people adapting styles, creating their own components, or ignoring the design system and doing their own thing. This runs the risk of accessibility becoming compromised or broken.
Put a design system governance process in place where people can request or suggest updates. All new content added to your design system must then pass a design system accessibility assessment before it can be added. All new styles, components, and patterns should meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA and include accessibility implementation guidance, as well as include accessibility documentation.
As well as maintaining accessibility, this has the added benefit of ensuring your design system can evolve and innovate with accessibility being a driver for good.
When you want your design system to be the best it can be, our design system accessibility service gives you the information you need to build accessibility into the core of your products and services taking you one big step closer to sustainable accessibility.
Updated 13 January 2023.
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