Skip to content

Headings

Headings play a critical role in communicating the structure of a page. Find out why they're critical and how to create an accessible hierarchy in your pages.

Overview

Headings play a critical role in communicating the structure of a page. Heading levels range from <h1> to <h6>.

Best practices

  • Avoid skipping heading levels. <h1> should be followed by <h2> and so on.
  • Do not use heading elements solely for resizing text.
  • Avoid setting more than one <h1> per page. <h1> should be reserved to describe the page as a whole, similar to a page <title>. (Dialog headings are excepted from this rule.)

Why?

A correct heading structure is critical for enabling users to navigate quickly within a page. Headings are by far the most common navigation technique for screen reader users. 67.7% of surveyed screen reader users responded that they are first likely to navigate via the headings when trying to find information on a lengthy web page. A proper heading structure also allows sighted users to visually scan and find what they want on a page quickly.

An improper heading structure can cause a confusing navigation experience.

Guidelines

For designers

In your designs, annotate the heading level. Properly labeled headings are one of the most important things a designer can do for developer handoff.

For engineers

As you're developing a page, use tools like Accessibility Insights and HeadingsMap to verify the heading structure. You may also inspect the DOM structure of your page using the browser inspector, but using an extension will surface heading levels more easily.

Examples

Do

Do follow a clear heading hierarchy

A GitHub discussions page with sequential, h1, h2, h3, and h4 headings
Don’t

Don't use multiple h1s, skip over heading hierarchy for visual effect, or forget to label sections of information with headings

A GitHub discussion page with two h1 headings, which display an h3 before h2 headings

Additional resources