Install
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Activation
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Accessibility patterns for React and Next.js — semantic HTML, ARIA attributes, form labeling, keyboard navigation, focus management, and screen reader support. Use when building any interactive UI component or form.About this skill
Frontend Accessibility Patterns
Practical accessibility patterns for React and Next.js. Covers the issues most commonly flagged in code review: missing form labels, incorrect ARIA usage, non-semantic interactive elements, and broken keyboard navigation.
When to Activate
- Building or reviewing form components (
<input>,<select>,<textarea>) - Creating interactive elements (modals, dropdowns, tooltips, tabs)
- Using
<div>or<span>withonClick - Adding
aria-*attributes to any element - Implementing keyboard navigation or focus management
- Receiving accessibility feedback from code review tools (CodeRabbit, ESLint a11y)
- Building components that must support screen readers
Form Accessibility
Missing htmlFor / id pairing and disconnected error messages are the most common issues flagged in code review.
Label Connection
// BAD: label has no connection to input — screen readers cannot associate them
<label>Email</label>
<input type="email" />
// GOOD: htmlFor matches input id
<label htmlFor="email">Email</label>
<input id="email" type="email" />
Required Fields
// BAD: visual-only asterisk conveys nothing to screen readers
<label htmlFor="email">Email *</label>
<input id="email" type="email" />
// GOOD: required enables native browser validation; aria-required signals it to screen readers
<label htmlFor="email">
Email <span aria-hidden="true">*</span>
</label>
<input id="email" type="email" required aria-required="true" />
Error Messages
// BAD: error text exists visually but is not linked to the input
<input id="email" type="email" />
<span className="error">Invalid email address</span>
// GOOD: aria-describedby connects input to its error message
// aria-invalid signals the invalid state to screen readers
<input
id="email"
type="email"
aria-describedby="email-error"
aria-invalid={!!error}
/>
{error && (
<span id="email-error" role="alert">
{error}
</span>
)}
Complete Accessible Form
interface LoginFormProps {
onSubmit: (email: string, password: string) => void;
}
export function LoginForm({ onSubmit }: LoginFormProps) {
const [email, setEmail] = useState('');
const [password, setPassword] = useState('');
const [errors, setErrors] = useState<{ email?: string; password?: string }>({});
const handleSubmit = (e: React.FormEvent) => {
e.preventDefault();
const newErrors: typeof errors = {};
if (!email) newErrors.email = 'Email is required';
if (!password) newErrors.password = 'Password is required';
if (Object.keys(newErrors).length) {
setErrors(newErrors);
return;
}
onSubmit(email, password);
};
return (
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit} noValidate>
<div>
<label htmlFor="email">
Email <span aria-hidden="true">*</span>
</label>
<input
id="email"
type="email"
value={email}
onChange={e => setEmail(e.target.value)}
aria-required="true"
aria-describedby={errors.email ? 'email-error' : undefined}
aria-invalid={!!errors.email}
autoComplete="email"
/>
{errors.email && (
<span id="email-error" role="alert">
{errors.email}
</span>
)}
</div>
<div>
<label htmlFor="password">
Password <span aria-hidden="true">*</span>
</label>
<input
id="password"
type="password"
value={password}
onChange={e => setPassword(e.target.value)}
aria-required="true"
aria-describedby={errors.password ? 'password-error' : undefined}
aria-invalid={!!errors.password}
autoComplete="current-password"
/>
{errors.password && (
<span id="password-error" role="alert">
{errors.password}
</span>
)}
</div>
<button type="submit">Log in</button>
</form>
);
}
Semantic HTML
Use the element that matches the intent. Screen readers and keyboard users depend on native semantics.
// BAD: div has no role, no keyboard support, no accessible name
<div onClick={handleClick}>Submit</div>
// GOOD: button is focusable, activates on Enter/Space, announces as "button"
<button type="button" onClick={handleClick}>Submit</button>
// BAD: non-semantic navigation
<div onClick={() => navigate('/home')}>Home</div>
// GOOD: anchor supports right-click, middle-click, and keyboard navigation
<a href="/home">Home</a>
// BAD: heading hierarchy skipped (h1 to h4)
<h1>Dashboard</h1>
<h4>Recent Activity</h4>
// GOOD: sequential heading levels
<h1>Dashboard</h1>
<h2>Recent Activity</h2>
ARIA Attributes
Use ARIA only when native HTML semantics are insufficient. Wrong ARIA is worse than no ARIA.
aria-label vs aria-labelledby
// aria-label: inline string label — use when no visible label text exists
<button aria-label="Close modal">
<XIcon />
</button>
// aria-labelledby: references another element's text — use when a visible label exists
<section aria-labelledby="section-title">
<h2 id="section-title">Recent Orders</h2>
{/* content */}
</section>
aria-describedby
// Provides supplementary description beyond the label
<button
aria-describedby="delete-warning"
onClick={handleDelete}
> Delete account
</button>
<p id="delete-warning">This action cannot be undone.</p>
aria-live for Dynamic Content
// Use aria-live to announce content that updates without a page reload
// polite: waits for user to finish current action before announcing
// assertive: interrupts immediately — use only for urgent errors
export function StatusMessage({ message, isError }: { message: string; isError?: boolean }) {
return (
<div role="status" aria-live={isError ? 'assertive' : 'polite'} aria-atomic="true">
{message}
</div>
);
}
aria-expanded and aria-controls
export function Accordion({ title, children }: { title: string; children: React.ReactNode }) {
const [isOpen, setIsOpen] = useState(false);
const contentId = useId();
return (
<div>
<button aria-expanded={isOpen} aria-controls={contentId} onClick={() => setIsOpen(prev => !prev)}>
{title}
</button>
<div id={contentId} hidden={!isOpen}>
{children}
</div>
</div>
);
}
Keyboard Navigation
Every interactive element must be reachable and operable by keyboard alone.
Custom Dropdown
export function Dropdown({ options, onSelect }: { options: string[]; onSelect: (value: string) => void }) {
const [isOpen, setIsOpen] = useState(false);
const [activeIndex, setActiveIndex] = useState(0);
const listId = useId();
if (!options.length) return null;
const handleKeyDown = (e: React.KeyboardEvent) => {
switch (e.key) {
case 'ArrowDown':
e.preventDefault();
setActiveIndex(i => Math.min(i + 1, options.length - 1));
break;
case 'ArrowUp':
e.preventDefault();
setActiveIndex(i => Math.max(i - 1, 0));
break;
case 'Enter':
case ' ':
e.preventDefault();
if (isOpen) onSelect(options[activeIndex]);
setIsOpen(prev => !prev);
break;
case 'Escape':
setIsOpen(false);
break;
}
};
return (
<div
role="combobox"
aria-expanded={isOpen}
aria-haspopup="listbox"
aria-controls={listId}
tabIndex={0}
onKeyDown={handleKeyDown}
onClick={() => setIsOpen(prev => !prev)}
>
<span>{options[activeIndex]}</span>
{isOpen && (
<ul id={listId} role="listbox">
{options.map((option, index) => (
<li
key={option}
role="option"
aria-selected={index === activeIndex}
onClick={() => {
onSelect(option);
setIsOpen(false);
}}
>
{option}
</li>
))}
</ul>
)}
</div>
);
}
Focus Management
Focus must move logically when UI state changes — especially for modals and route transitions.
Modal Focus Restoration
This example covers initial focus and restoration. For a full focus trap (Tab/Shift+Tab cycling within the modal), use a library like
focus-trap-reactwhich handles edge cases like dynamic content and nested portals.
export function Modal({ isOpen, onClose, title, children }: { isOpen: boolean; onClose: () => void; title: string; children: React.ReactNode }) {
const modalRef = useRef<HTMLDivElement>(null);
const previousFocusRef = useRef<HTMLElement | null>(null);
useEffect(() => {
if (isOpen) {
// Save currently focused element and move focus into modal
previousFocusRef.current = document.activeElement as HTMLElement;
modalRef.current?.focus();
} else {
// Restore focus to the element that opened the modal
previousFocusRef.current?.focus();
}
}, [isOpen]);
if (!isOpen) return null;
return (
<div ref={modalRef} role="dialog" aria-modal="true" aria-labelledby="modal-title" tabIndex={-1} onKeyDown={e => e.key === 'Escape' && onClose()}>
<h2 id="modal-title">{title}</h2>
{children}
<button onClick={onClose}>Close</button>
</div>
);
}
Images and Icons
// BAD: decorative icon announced as unlabeled image
<img src="/icon.svg" />
// GOOD: decorative image hidden from screen readers
<img src="/decoration.png" alt="" aria-hidden="true" />
// GOOD: meaningful image with descriptive alt text
<img src="/chart.png" alt="Monthly revenue increased 23% from January to March" />
// GOOD: icon button with accessible label
<button aria-label="Delete item">
<TrashIcon aria-hidden="true" />
</button>
Reduc
Content truncated.