Higher contrast makes it easier for everyone to read text and images. When there is low contrast, everyone has difficulty viewing content.

Color blindness affects over 300 million people worldwide: 1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women.

Higher contrast helps people with color blindness and low vision, or anyone that views a screen in bright sunlight.

Visit Colour Blind Awareness to learn more about the effects of color blindness.

WCAG suggests these minimum contrast ratios:

  • 4.5:1 for small text
  • 3:1 for large text (at least 14 pt bold/18 pt regular)

Consider the following contrast examples:

  • Poor contrast

  • Better contrast

  • Best contrast

Exercise: Choose colors with sufficient contrast

Complete the following exercise to practice measuring sufficient color contrast:

  1. In a separate browser window, open the Contrast Checker by Web Accessibility In Mind (WebAIM).
  2. In the contrast checker, enter the following Hex colors to find out which foreground-background ratios meet contrast requirements. Record the contrast ratios on a notepad or separate document to compare your answers with the possible answers.

  1. First rectangle:
  • Foreground: #148695
  • Background:#fd9c32
  1. Second rectangle:
  1. Third rectangle:
  • Foreground: #128697
  • Background:#eaeaea

Click the icon to see the expected answers.

Use minimum contrast guidelines to ensure that everyone can see your content.