Accessibility audit with react-axe and eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y

Your React site must be accessible to be progressive. Audit for accessibility during development to find and address any issues before you push your application into production.

react-axe is a library that audits a React application and logs any accessibility issues to the Chrome DevTools console. It uses the open-source axe testing library to flag any issues and their severity.

eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y is an ESLint plugin that identifies and enforces a number of accessibility rules directly in your JSX. When used in combination with a tool that tests the final rendered DOM, such as react-axe, you can find and fix any accessibility concerns on your site.

Why is this useful?

It's crucial to build websites that are accessible to all users, including those with disabilities. By using an accessibility audit library, such as react-axe and eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y, you can find accessibility issues as you build your application, so you can fix them before going to production.

Use eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y

React already supports writing accessible HTML elements within JSX syntax. For example, use the htmlFor attribute instead of for to add a label to a form element within a React component.

<input id="promo" type="checkbox">
<label htmlFor="promo">Receive promotional offers?</label>

The React accessibility documentation covers the nuances of handling accessibility concerns within a React component. To more easily spot these issues, Create React App (CRA) includes the eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y plugin.

To enable pre-configured linting provided by CRA:

  1. Install the ESLint plugin for your code editor.
  2. Add a .eslintrc.json file to your project
{
 
"extends": "react-app"
}

Once configured, common accessibility issues can be found.

Image accessibility warning in linter

To check for more accessibility rules, modify .eslintrc.json to include all of the plugin's recommended rules:

{
 
"extends": ["react-app", "plugin:jsx-a11y/recommended"]
}

For an even stricter subset of rules, switch to strict mode:

{
 
"extends": ["react-app", "plugin:jsx-a11y/strict"]
}

Label accessibility error in linter

The project documentation provides information on the differences between recommended and strict mode.

Use react-axe

eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y can help you find any accessibility issues in your JSX, but it does not test any of the final HTML output. The react-axe library conducts testing by adding a React wrapper around the axe-core testing tool by Deque Labs.

  1. Install the library as a development dependency: bash npm install --save-dev react-axe
  2. Initialize the module in index.js: js if (process.env.NODE_ENV !== 'production') { import('react-axe').then(axe => { axe.default(React, ReactDOM, 1000); ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root')); }); } else { ReactDOM.render(<App />, document.getElementById('root')); }

A dynamic import loads the library, as long as it's not in production, before rendering and booting up the root App component. This ensures that the it's not included in the final production bundle if it's unnecessary.

When you run the application during development, issues are surfaced directly to the Chrome DevTools console.

React Axe in Chrome DevTools

A severity level is also assigned for each violation. These levels are:

  • Minor
  • Moderate
  • Serious
  • Critical

Conclusion

Include accessibility audits early in your workflow to catch problems as you build your React applications.Use eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y to add accessibility checks into your linting workflow. CRA already includes it, but you can switch to either the recommended or strict mode.

In addition to local development testing, include react-axe in your application to catch any issues on the final rendered DOM. Don't include it into your production bundle.