The deadline for Accessible Canada Act progress reports is almost here

Glenda Sims

By Glenda Sims

May 20, 2026

Two individuals discussing healthcare, overlaid with four text callout boxes featuring the words: Accessible Canada Act, Accessibility regulations, Reporting and enforcement, and Accessibility standards.
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For many federally regulated organizations in Canada, the next Accessible Canada Act (ACA) annual progress report is due June 1, 2026. That date is approaching quickly, and this is more than just a reporting exercise.

If your organization has been proactive about digital accessibility, you should be right on track. But for organizations that have delayed accessibility work, there is limited time left to demonstrate meaningful progress before reporting season arrives.

Fortunately, you don’t need to solve everything by June 1.

In this post, I’ll help you understand what’s due and what your best options are for meeting the requirements. If you need guidance, reach out to Deque today and schedule a strategic consultation.

Progress reports

Under the ACA, progress reports are public-facing documents. Among the requirements, organizations are expected to show:

  • what barriers they identified
  • what feedback they received
  • what actions they took
  • what measurable progress they’ve made

That creates real pressure for organizations that are still relying on one-time audits, fragmented remediation efforts, or reactive accessibility practices.

Organizations that have not operationalized accessibility may struggle to demonstrate sustained progress in a credible way. This means considering everything from procurement, design, and development to testing, content, and governance.

Any gaps will be increasingly visible to regulators, customers, employees, and disability communities.

What you can do right now

Being truly prepared for ACA reporting means not scrambling to explain accessibility gaps at the last minute. Instead, your organization must be able to clearly demonstrate where barriers exist, what progress has been made, who is accountable, and how accessibility improvements are being sustained over time. While this process can be complex, qualified digital accessibility experts can help you gather the information you need, assemble and publish your report, and notify the Accessibility Commissioner using the My Accessibility Portal, as required by the Act.

Deque has worked with organizations across regulated industries to help assess accessibility maturity, prioritize high-impact barriers, and build practical, scalable accessibility programs that can withstand growing regulatory and public scrutiny.

This reporting deadline is an opportunity to make sure you are moving in the right direction. Now is the time to have a conversation about your organization’s path to ACA readiness. With the right strategic guidance, you can meet your short-term requirements while laying the foundation for a proactive approach to digital accessibility that will ensure long-term compliance.

Schedule a strategic consultation with Deque today.

Glenda Sims

Glenda Sims

Glenda Sims is the Chief Information Accessibility Officer at Deque, where she shares her expertise and passion for the open web with government organizations, educational institutions, and companies ranging in size from small businesses to large enterprise organizations. Glenda is an advisor and co-founder of AIR-University (Accessibility Internet Rally) and AccessU. She serves as an accessibility consultant, judge, and trainer for Knowbility, an organization whose mission is to support the independence of people with disabilities by promoting the availability of barrier-free IT. In 2010 Glenda co-authored the book InterACT with Web Standards: A holistic approach to Web Design.

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The Accessible Canada Act: Deadlines are closer than you think

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February 5, 2026 By Glenda Sims

With new regulatory and enforcement deadlines now in place for Canada’s ACA, it’s important to understand the challenges and requirements. Let's break down the specifics.

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A picture of five co-workers gathered around a table, focusing on documents on the table. The image features four call-out boxes, with the words: Accessible Canada Act, Accessibility regulations, Accessibility standards, and Reporting and enforcement.