How to Write Respectful Alt Text for Disability Nonprofit Photos

Alt text is the short description that appears when an image cannot load, and that screen readers read aloud to people who are blind or have low vision. For a disability nonprofit, alt text matters twice over – it makes your website accessible to more people, and it sets the tone for how your organization talks about the adults you serve.

This guide is for nonprofit staff, volunteers, and board members who upload photos to a website or blog. If you are publishing images of adults with disabilities, this is how to describe them with accuracy and dignity.

What Alt Text Is and Why It Matters

Alt text (short for alternative text) is an HTML attribute attached to every image on a web page. It serves three purposes:

For an organization like Lennon’s House, which serves adults and young adults with different abilities, every photo published online is a chance to model respectful, person-first communication – or to undermine it. Alt text is part of that picture.

The Core Principles of Respectful Alt Text

Before getting into specific examples, here are the principles that should guide every piece of alt text you write for a disability nonprofit:

Examples: Good vs. Poor Alt Text

Here are side-by-side examples to make the difference concrete:

Photo of a man rolling pizza dough in a kitchen.

Photo of two women laughing on a bowling lane.

Photo of a group arriving at a park.

Photo of a volunteer and a participant working on a craft project.

Notice the pattern: good alt text focuses on the action, the setting, and the details that make the moment specific. It treats the person in the photo as a person, not a category.

When and How to Mention Disability in Alt Text

Sometimes disability is relevant to the image – for example, a photo of someone using a wheelchair, a communication device, or adaptive equipment. In those cases, mention the equipment matter-of-factly, the same way you would mention someone wearing glasses or holding a cane.

What you should avoid is mentioning disability when it is not visible in or relevant to the image. If a photo shows someone smiling at a table, the alt text does not need to include their diagnosis. Describe what you see, not what you know from a file.

Practical Steps for Your Team

Making good alt text a habit takes a little structure. Here is how to build it into your workflow:

  1. Write alt text when you upload the photo, not later. If you wait, you will forget what the image shows or skip it entirely.
  2. Create a simple style guide. A half-page document with your principles and three or four examples is enough to keep everyone consistent.
  3. Audit your existing images. Go through your current website – your Impact page, your blog posts, your Activities page – and update any images that have missing or poor alt text.
  4. Assign someone to review. Before a blog post goes live, one person should check that every image has alt text and that the language is respectful and specific.
  5. Test with a screen reader. Even a quick test using the built-in screen reader on your phone (VoiceOver on iPhone, TalkBack on Android) will show you what your alt text sounds like in practice.

Alt Text and Search Visibility

Good alt text also helps your website show up in search results. When someone searches for “community activities for adults with disabilities in Morris County,” images with clear, descriptive alt text have a better chance of appearing in Google Image results – and those results link back to your site.

This does not mean you should stuff keywords into alt text. Write for the person using a screen reader first. If the description naturally includes relevant terms, that is a bonus, not the goal.

If you want to learn more about how Lennon’s House approaches accessibility and inclusion, visit the About page or reach out directly.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should alt text be?

One to two sentences, or roughly 125 characters or fewer when possible. Screen readers can handle longer alt text, but concise descriptions are easier to listen to and understand.

Should I start alt text with “Image of” or “Photo of”?

No. Screen readers already announce that an element is an image, so starting with “Image of” is redundant. Jump straight into the description.

What if I do not know the person’s name in the photo?

That is fine. Use a general description: “A woman,” “Two participants,” “A group of adults.” You do not need names to write good alt text.

Does every image on our website need alt text?

Every meaningful image needs descriptive alt text. Decorative images (background textures, divider lines) should have empty alt text (alt=””) so screen readers skip them.

Where do I add alt text in WordPress?

When you upload or select an image in the WordPress block editor, there is an “Alt Text” field in the image settings panel on the right side of the screen. Fill it in every time.


Related Lennon’s House resources