Asana's commitment to accessibility

See how we’re working to make Asana inclusive and accessible—so all teams can achieve their best results.

View our VPATContact sales
Asana "My Tasks" dashboard with a screen reader window.

Our approach

We’re on a multi-year journey to bring our web app into conformance with WCAG 2.1 AA guidelines, with many fundamental user flows already conforming. 

Throughout the product development processes, we build and test across a diverse set of assistive technology users—including people who use screen readers, screen magnifiers, alternative navigation, and more.

Accessibility-focused features

Color-blind mode

Turn on color-blind mode and the app will color-map our existing palette to one that is color-blind accessible and put overdue task dates in bold.

Dark mode

Enable dark mode for a color scheme that uses a dark background with lighter text, so you can view Asana according to your own display preferences.

Adjusting zoom levels

Increase text size to maintain content readability while ensuring you don’t lose any visibility or functionality.

Confirmation pop-up management

Change the duration of temporary pop-up notifications for project-related activities so you don’t miss key information.

“Skip to main content” navigation

Skip the keyboard navigation noise and get right to the important parts of your project.

Accessibility is not about just checking boxes. It's about sitting down with the full range of disabled users and seeing what it's like...I'm a big fan of the work that the Asana design and dev team has done.
Konstantino (and Abide)Fable accessibility tester and service animal
FAQ

Still have questions? We have answers.

We provide full support for NVDA on the latest version of Google Chrome. We test with JAWS and NVDA screen reader users. 

We’re open to any questions or feedback. Please visit our survey and include details about our site, web app, desktop app, or mobile apps you’re trying to access and the kind of assistive technology you’re using (e.g., VoiceOver on Mac).

A majority of Asana’s fundamental features are navigable primarily by keyboard. There are a few exceptions which can be seen in our VPAT report at security.asana.com

We work with Fable to test across a diverse set of assistive technology users, including users who use screen magnification, JAWS, NVDA, VoiceOver, and alternative navigation.

We’re building and testing with accessibility experts and users with disabilities throughout the design and product development processes. Our designers and developers are trained on how to design and develop accessible experiences. We validate that our experiences are accessible and usable across a diverse set of assistive technology users—including people who use screen readers, screen magnifiers, and alternative navigation.

We’ve built a multi-year roadmap to improve accessibility on more of Asana’s key experiences. Please contact our sales team to learn more.

Join us on our journey to inclusivity

Contact sales