Miro Accessibility

Diverse teams build better products. Miro makes sure everyone can collaborate with confidence on the canvas.
Woman sitting at a desk by a window, reviewing a diagram on her laptop and taking notes in a notebook

Space for every great idea

Bring your team's best ideas to the table with inclusive design and collaboration tools.

Our mission

Our goal is simple: Everyone should be able to collaborate in Miro without barriers. That’s why we test every new feature to make sure they are accessible to people with disabilities.

Smiling woman using sign language during a video call on her laptop in a cozy home office

Our approach

Our Accessibility team works closely with the disability community to identify and remove barriers. We strive to meet WCAG 2.2 AA standards, while delivering a great customer experience. We also update our ACR/VPAT every year. To get the latest copy or share feedback, please get in touch at accessibility@m.turbidity.top.

Man with a hearing aid working on a laptop in a modern open office space

Working with our users

We don't just audit Miro's accessibility — we work directly with users to validate and improve it. From testing with screen reader users to gathering feedback from neurodiverse individuals, we’re always refining our user experience and adding new features based on your input.

Three colleagues in a casual office setting, collaborating around a table with laptops and documents

Accessible capabilities for all

Inclusive design for a better user experience

Miro's command palette open with options like Timer, Frame, Mind map, and more, supporting keyboard navigation for quick access

Keyboard navigation

The most popular actions are accessible through a command palette and keyboard navigation across the board.

Miro board with sticky notes under “Accessibility,” showing tools like JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, and Voice Control. A tooltip explains how to edit a selected note using keyboard shortcuts.

Assistive technology experience

Board objects are perceivable and editable for screen reader and voice control users.

Miro board showing a yellow sticky note with the color picker open. Each color has a name label, like “Dark Green,” to support accessible color selection.

Color accessibility

Colors in color pickers are named to make accessing and reusing colors easier for everyone.

Miro settings menu open under Preferences, showing “Reduce motion” toggle enabled to minimize animations for accessibility.

Reduced motion

Animations and transition effects are removed for a streamlined viewing experience.

Board creator experience

We know your teams care about accessibility as much as we do. So we've created tools to help them bring their own boards up to speed.

Accessibility checker

The Miro Accessibility checker scans your boards to identify accessibility issues and offers clear, actionable tips to make your content better for everyone.

Alternative text for images

Provides text alternatives and/or descriptions for any complex visuals.

AI alternative text suggestions

Miro AI can generate alt text for your images to quickly offer text alternatives and/or descriptions for visuals.

Miro Accessibility changelog

Stay up to date on our latest accessibility improvements as we make Miro even more inclusive, empowering your teams to work better together.

Read the latest Accessibility updates

For detailed Miro Accessibility product changes, access our changelog.

Go to changelog
Person using a refreshable braille display with both hands, positioned above a computer keyboard.

Learn more about Miro Accessibility

Learn how to inclusively collaborate across your organization, and review the Help Center for more information.