Southern New Hampshire University

Accessible Tables in Microsoft Word

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Creating Accessible Tables

Why Use Table Header Rows?

Appropriately marking a table header row or column telling screen reader users how to read the table. They can navigate table cells and hear which column they are currently in. This turns random data into meaningful data (the top row of the table should be a header of the data that will fall underneath it).

Year Amount of rain in New York Amount of rain in Boston Header Cell Example
2018 5' 12' Data cell example number 1
2019 10’  15’ Data cell example number 2

Repeat Heading Cells

Select the header cells.

A table with "Year", "Raine inches NY", "Rain inches in Boston", "Header Cell Example" columns, all of them highlighted.

Right-click "table properties..."

Right click menu with "Table Properties..." boxed in.

Under the "Row" options, check off "repeat as header row at the top of each page." Also, uncheck the "allow the row to break across pages." Finally, select "OK".

The "Table Properties" pop-up settings, with "Allow row to break across pages" option unchecked and "Repeat as header row at the top of each page" option checked and the "OK" button boxed in.

Add Alt. Text to The Table

In the table's properties, select "Alt Text." Finally, choose "OK" to save the alt. text.

Alt. Text example in the "Description" box.

Avoid Changing Tables into Images

A table with text and a table with an image with the label "Do not use image-based tables if possible."

Keep Tables "Simple" so Screen Readers can go through the data within them. If it is only an image, the only portion it can access is the Alt-Text.

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