What Is WCAG 1.2.7?
Standard audio description (covered under 1.2.5) works by fitting descriptions of visual content into the natural pauses in a video’s dialogue and audio. But some videos are dense — the narration barely stops, and there is simply no room to describe everything that matters visually.
1.2.7 addresses this by requiring extended audio description: a technique where the video itself is paused so the description can be spoken in full, then the video resumes. This ensures that all visual information is accessible, even in fast-paced content with minimal pauses.
This is Level AAA. It builds on 1.2.5 (Level AA audio description) and adds a solution for the hardest cases.
| Field | Details |
| WCAG Criterion | 1.2.7 |
| Conformance Level | Level AAA |
| Principle | Perceivable |
| WCAG Version | 2.1 |
| Official Reference | https://www.w3.org/WAI/WCAG21/Understanding/1-2-7 |
The Concept in Plain Terms
Think of standard audio description as fitting words between the sentences. Extended audio description is what happens when the sentences never stop — so you press pause, say what needs to be said, and press play again.
This requires producing a modified version of the video with the pauses built in. It is technically more involved than standard audio description, which is why it lives at Level AAA rather than Level AA.
The alternative version — the one with pauses — is what you offer as the extended audio description version. Users choose to watch it knowing it will take longer but will be fully described.
Who Does This Actually Affect?
- Blind and low-vision users watching visually dense video content — tutorials, training videos, complex animations, data-heavy presentations
- Anyone relying on audio description who would miss important visual information in standard description because there was no time to include it
Common Failures
Providing audio description with gaps — skipping visual information because there was no pause
This is the failure that 1.2.7 exists to fix. If your standard audio description omits meaningful visual content because there was no room, you have a problem that standard audio description alone cannot solve.
Producing a poor-quality paused version
The pausing should feel natural enough to be watchable. Abrupt pauses in the middle of words or sentences, or resuming before the description is complete, makes the experience poor.
How to Fix It
- Produce your standard audio description track first
- Identify every moment where meaningful visual information could not be included in a natural pause
- Produce a modified version of the video: insert pause points at those moments, long enough for the full description
- Record descriptions for those pauses
- Master the extended audio description version as a separate video file
- Offer it clearly: ‘Watch with extended audio description’
Edge Cases Worth Knowing
- Not every video needs this: Only videos where standard audio description is genuinely insufficient require extended audio description. Start with 1.2.5.
- The two versions: You should ideally offer both the standard and extended versions so users can choose.
How to Test for 1.2.7
- Watch the video and identify all visual information not covered in the audio
- Check whether standard audio description covers it all — if not, extended audio description is needed
- If extended audio description is provided, watch it — does the pausing feel manageable and do the descriptions cover all missing visual information?
Why This Matters Beyond a Checkbox
Fast-paced training videos, complex product demonstrations, and dense educational content are exactly the type of content that can be genuinely inaccessible to blind users even with well-intentioned standard audio description. Extended audio description is the solution that actually works.
Quick Fix Checklist
- Standard audio description assessed for completeness
- Visual information gaps identified where no natural pause existed
- Extended audio description version produced with built-in pauses
- Both standard and extended versions offered to users
- Extended version clearly labelled
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this required for Level AA compliance?
No. 1.2.7 is Level AAA. If you meet 1.2.5 (standard audio description), you satisfy the Level AA requirement.
How do I produce the paused video version?
This is a video editing task. You export a modified version of the video with additional still frames or pauses inserted at the points where extended description is needed. Most video editing tools support this.
Does this make the video very long?
For dense content, yes — the extended version may be meaningfully longer than the original. This is accepted. The user chooses to watch it knowing it includes full description.
Is this ever required by law?
Some national accessibility regulations go beyond WCAG AA and reference AAA criteria in specific contexts, particularly for government and public sector content. Check applicable regulations for your sector and jurisdiction.