WCAG 1.3.5 — Identify Input Purpose
What this criterion requires
“Identify Input Purpose”
This criterion belongs to the Perceivable principle (1.3 Adaptable) and corresponds to WCAG Level AA. Level AA is required by the European Accessibility Act and most national legislation.
How to test this criterion
- 1
Identify relevant elements
Browse the page and locate all elements related to the “Perceivable” principle. Use the browser inspector to examine the HTML code.
- 2
Verify compliance
For each identified element, verify it meets the conditions described by the criterion. Test with a screen reader (NVDA, VoiceOver) if necessary.
- 3
Document findings
Note each non-conformity with precise location in the code, a description of the issue, and the recommended fix.
What Scrutia detects
Scrutia automatically tests criterion 1.3.5during every audit. Our AI engine analyzes the HTML code, ARIA attributes, keyboard navigation and dynamic interactions to detect non-conformities related to the “Perceivable” principle.
The generated report includes for each detected issue: the exact location in the DOM, an accessible explanation of the problem, and a copy-paste code fix.
Does your site meet this criterion?
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Test your siteOther criteria in the “Perceivable” principle
- 1.1.1A
Non-text Content
- 1.2.1A
Audio-only and Video-only (Prerecorded)
- 1.2.2A
Captions (Prerecorded)
- 1.2.3A
Audio Description or Media Alternative (Prerecorded)
- 1.2.4AA
Captions (Live)
- 1.2.5AA
Audio Description (Prerecorded)
- 1.3.1A
Info and Relationships
- 1.3.2A
Meaningful Sequence
- 1.3.3A
Sensory Characteristics
- 1.3.4AA
Orientation
- 1.4.1A
Use of Color
- 1.4.2A
Audio Control
- 1.4.3AA
Contrast (Minimum)
- 1.4.4AA
Resize Text
- 1.4.5AA
Images of Text
- 1.4.10AA
Reflow
- 1.4.11AA
Non-text Contrast
- 1.4.12AA
Text Spacing
- 1.4.13AA
Content on Hover or Focus