aria-roles
// Use when reviewing rendered HTML, interactive components, or design-system patterns related to Use valid ARIA role values. Check native semantics first, then inspect keyboard behavior, focus flow, accessible names, and screen-reader output where relevant.
Use valid ARIA role values
Invalid or misspelled ARIA roles are ignored by browsers and assistive technologies, rendering the intended accessibility features useless and potentially confusing users.
Quick Reference
- Use only standard ARIA roles defined in the W3C specification
- Avoid typos or non-existent roles (e.g., use
checkbox, notcheck-box) - Ensure roles are applied to appropriate HTML elements
- Prefer native HTML controls over custom ARIA widgets whenever possible
Check
Search for any role attributes that use non-standard or misspelled ARIA role values.
Fix
Replace invalid ARIA roles with the correct, standard values from the WAI-ARIA specification. When a native <button>, <input>, <select>, or other semantic element can replace the custom widget, prefer that change over adding more ARIA.
Explain
Explain why using standardized ARIA roles is critical for ensuring that assistive technologies can interpret and announce elements correctly, and why native HTML controls are usually more reliable than recreating them with ARIA.
Code Review
Review the rendered markup and interactive states that affect Use valid ARIA role values. Flag exact elements, roles, labels, focus behavior, or keyboard interactions that violate the rule, and note how to verify the fix with browser accessibility tooling or assistive tech.
For full implementation details, code examples, and framework-specific guidance,
see references/rule.md.
Rule page: https://frontendchecklist.io/en/rules/accessibility/aria-roles