HomeInsightsEuropean Commission publishes Evaluation Roadmap to review the Web Accessibility Directive (2016/2102/EU)

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The Web Accessibility Directive aims to harmonise the Internal Market for web accessibility products and services, and increase digital and social inclusion by making the websites and mobile applications of public sector bodies (PSBs) more accessible for citizens, especially those with disabilities, based on common accessibility requirements.

Under Article 13 of the Directive, the Commission must review the application of the Directive by 23 June 2022. Accordingly, it has published an Evaluation Roadmap.

The purpose of the evaluation is to review the application of the Directive and related Commission Implementing Decisions in order to assess the extent to which the Directive has achieved:

  1. more accessible digital content being provided by PSBs and thus better digital and social inclusion; and
  2. the harmonisation of the internal market.

The results will inform possible future policy developments.

The evaluation will assess the effectiveness, efficiency, relevancy, coherence and EU added value of the Directive. It will cover the Directive’s scope (the bodies covered, content exclusions) and obligations (the required level of accessibility, rules for the accessibility statement, enforcement, monitoring, reporting to the Commission, and additional measures such as training, awareness-raising and stakeholder involvement). It will also consider related policy areas covering digital accessibility, including the Audiovisual Media Services Directive, the European Electronic Communications Code and the European Accessibility Act).

The evaluation will cover the period from September 2018 (transposition deadline) to December 2021. The geographical scope covers all Member States, the UK and the EEA EFTA States.

The consultation phases of the evaluation will collect information and views on:

  • the accessibility requirements under the Directive and the added value of accessibility statements;
  • the level of accessibility of PSB websites and mobile apps;
  • the impact of the Directive on the availability of public online content;
  • national enforcement;
  • additional measures taken by Member States (feedback mechanisms, training, awareness-raising);
  • developments on the internal web accessibility market; and
  • relevant technological advances in digital accessibility.

An open public consultation will be launched in the first half of 2021, for a 12-week period.

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