ARIA: form role

The form role can be used to identify a group of elements on a page that provide equivalent functionality to an HTML form. The form is not exposed as a landmark region unless it has an accessible name.

html
<div role="form" id="contact-info" aria-label="Contact information">
  <!-- form content -->
</div>

This is a form that collects and saves a user's contact information.

Warning: Use an HTML <form> element to contain your form controls, rather than the ARIA form role, unless you have a very good reason. The HTML <form> element is sufficient to tell assistive technologies that there is a form.

Description

A form landmark identifies a region of content that contains a collection of items and objects that, as a whole, combine to create a form when no other named landmark is appropriate (e.g. main or search).

Note: Using the <form> element will automatically communicate a section of content as a form landmark, if it is provided an accessible name. Developers should always prefer using the correct semantic HTML element over using ARIA.

Use the HTML <form> element if possible. The <form> element defines a form landmark when it has an accessible name (e.g. aria-labelledby, aria-label or title). Make sure to have a unique label on each form in a document to help users understand the purpose of the form. This label should be visible to all users, not just assistive technology users. Use the search landmark instead of the form landmark when the form is used for search functionality.

Use the role="form" to identify a region of the page; do not use it to identify every form field. Even if you are using the form landmark instead of <form>, you are encouraged to use native HTML form controls like <button>, <input>, <select>, and <textarea>.

Associated WAI-ARIA Roles, States, and Properties

No role specific states or properties.

Keyboard Interactions

No role specific keyboard interactions

Required JavaScript features

onsubmit

The onSubmit event handler handles the event raised when the form is submitted. Anything that is not a <form> cannot be submitted, therefore you would have to use JavaScript to build an alternative data submission mechanism, for example with fetch().

Examples

html
<div role="form" id="send-comment" aria-label="Add a comment">
  <label for="username">Username</label>
  <input
    id="username"
    name="username"
    autocomplete="nickname"
    autocorrect="off"
    type="text" />

  <label for="email">Email</label>
  <input
    id="email"
    name="email"
    autocomplete="email"
    autocapitalize="off"
    autocorrect="off"
    spellcheck="false"
    type="text" />

  <label for="comment">Comment</label>
  <textarea id="comment" name="comment"></textarea>

  <input value="Comment" type="submit" />
</div>

It is recommended to use <form> instead.

html
<form id="send-comment" aria-label="Add a comment"></form>

Accessibility concerns

Use sparingly

Landmark roles are intended to identify larger overall sections of the document. Using too many landmark roles can create "noise" in screen readers, making it difficult to understand the overall layout of the page.

Inputs are not forms

You do not need to declare role="form" on every form element (inputs, text areas, selects, etc.). It should be declared on the HTML element that wraps the form elements. Ideally, use the <form> element as the wrapping element and do not declare role="form".

If a form is used to search, you should use the more specialized role="search" value.

Labeling landmarks

Each <form> element and form role that needs to be exposed as a landmark must be given an accessible name. This name will allow an assistive technology user to be able to quickly understand the purpose of the form landmark.

Use an aria-labelledby, aria-label or title on the same element that was given the role="form" to provide it an accessible name.

Using role="form"

html
<div role="form" id="gift-cards" aria-label="Purchase a gift card">
  <!-- form content -->
</div>

Redundant descriptions

Screen readers will announce the type of role the landmark is. Because of this, you do not need to describe what the landmark is in its label. For example, a declaration of role="form" with an of aria-label="Contact form" may be announced redundantly as, "contact form form".

Best practices

Prefer HTML

Using the <form> element will automatically communicate a section has a role of form. If at all possible, prefer using it instead.

Specifications

Specification
Accessible Rich Internet Applications (WAI-ARIA)
# form
Unknown specification

See also