Accessibility Minute - May 2026
Welcome to our January issue of the Accessibility Minute Newsletter! This newsletter is produced by the 91传媒 Digital Accessibility Office (DAO) and covers one accessibility skill or topic per month. Please visit the DAO website to access past newsletters. As always, thank you for taking a minute (or two) to read.
Meaningful Link Text
Continuing with our 鈥渂ack to basics鈥 series, this month鈥檚 newsletter will discuss meaningful link text. Link text is text that鈥檚 tied to a hyperlink/URL. Meaningful link text accurately describes where a link will take a user when selected or opened.
Why is Meaningful Link Text Important?
Link text is accessible when it clearly describes the link destination. Assistive technology users often skip from link to link (bypassing static text) to navigate quickly through a document or webpage. When doing so, assistive technologies announce link text out of context (of a document or webpage), meaning users only hear the link text. Without meaningful and descriptive link text, a screen reader user, for example, may hear a list of link text that reads, 鈥渃lick here, click here, read more, more information,鈥 and so on. If you heard or read that list of link text, you probably wouldn't know where those links would take you. So, let鈥檚 talk about ways we can ensure we create accessible link text for all end users.
How to Write Meaningful and Accessible Link Text
Describe the Destination
Write link text that you can understand if you read it on its own without any context. Imagine you have two options to choose from: 鈥 to visit the beach鈥 and 鈥 to visit the swamp.鈥 Now imagine all of the surrounding context is removed and you鈥檙e left with 鈥渃lick here鈥 and 鈥渃lick here.鈥 Assuming we鈥檇 all prefer a beach vacation, how would we know which option to choose to get you to the beach? If we used meaningful link text instead, such as 鈥溾 and 鈥 ,鈥 we鈥檇 know exactly which option to select to reach our desired destination!

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Avoid Writing Out Full URLs
As mentioned, link text should clearly describe the destination. As you can imagine, copying and pasting a full URL is not descriptive of the link destination and can be confusing and difficult to understand, especially those using screen readers.
- Bad example:/digital-accessibility/captioning/captioning-social-media
- Good example:DAO's captioning on social media guidance
An exception to this rule is if the URL is very short or users are expected to memorize the exact URL, such as Canvas.Colorado.EDU or an email address. Instead of writing undescriptive link text such as 鈥渆mail us,鈥 write out and link to the email address.
Use Unique Link Text
Avoid using the same link text for links that lead to different destinations. For example, rather than writing 鈥渨e have a guide for Word accessibility and a guide for PowerPoint accessibility,鈥 you could write 鈥渨e have a Word accessibility guide and a PowerPoint accessibility guide.鈥
If you do have multiple links leading to the same destination, this is when you should use the same link text to ensure consistency.
Identify the Destination Type
We often assume links will open a new webpage. If you鈥檙e linking to something other than another webpage, such as a file or video, include that information directly in your link text. This lets users know what to expect when they open the link and prevents unexpected downloads.
Examples:
- Schedule a training consultation (creates email)
- Watch Elle鈥檚 explanation of
- Review the
Final Thoughts
Writing meaningful link text is a simple but powerful way to make your content more accessible and user-friendly. By clearly describing destinations, avoiding vague phrases and long URLs, using unique and consistent wording, and noting when links open files or videos, you help all users navigate with confidence.
- May 2026 - Meaningful Link Text
- April 2026 - Visual Style
- March 2026 - Title II Update
- February 2026 - Advanced Table Accessibility
- January 2026 - What Makes a Table Accessible?
- December 2025 - Using Styles for Proper Heading Structure in Microsoft Office
- November 2025 - Heading Structure
- October 2025 - Disability Awareness Month 2025
- September 2025 - The Difference Between Alt Text and Image Captions
- August 2025 - Design for Cognitive Accessibility
- July 2025 - Captions and Subtitles: What's the Difference?
- June 2025 - Speech-to-Text
- May 2025 - Global Accessibility Awareness Day 2025
- April 2025 - Rethinking Your Use of PDFs
- March 2025 - 2024 Accessibility and Usability Testing Summary
- January 2025 - Reflecting on the Journey of the Digital Accessibility Office
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