Accessible PDFs

Last updated on Jun 2, 2026

Learn how structured tagging and alternative text in Adobe InDesign allow screen readers and search engines to process PDF documents.

Accessible PDFs are designed for all readers, including those using assistive technologies such as screen readers. In InDesign, accessibility features ensure content is structured, readable, and navigable beyond visual layout.

Key elements include tagged content, logical reading order, structured headings, and alternative text for images. These help assistive technologies interpret and present content accurately. Accessible PDFs also improve overall document quality, making them easier to navigate, search, and reuse across devices.

How accessibility works in PDF documents

An accessible PDF includes structure and meaning that define how content should be interpreted, not just how it looks. It uses tags (such as H1 and H2) to identify elements like lists and tables and follows a logical reading order so assistive technologies can present content correctly.

Alternative text adds descriptions for images and other non-text elements, ensuring all meaningful content is accessible.

How InDesign supports accessible PDFs

InDesign supports an accessibility-first workflow by building structure directly into the source document, reducing the need for post-export fixes. This approach makes it easier to update content and regenerate accessible PDFs. A strong foundation relies on structured content and a defined reading order:

  • Paragraph styles: Organize content into a clear hierarchy and map to PDF tags (such as headings and paragraphs) so assistive technologies can understand it.
  • Reading order: Use the Articles panel to define a logical content flow, independent of visual layout.
  • Anchored objects: Position images within the text flow so they appear at the correct point in the reading sequence.
  • Alternative text: Add descriptions to images to ensure non-text content is accessible.

By applying these elements during the design process, you create PDFs that retain structure, meaning, and accessibility when exported.

Essential accessibility components

Accessible PDFs rely on multiple elements working together: