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Accessible Color Design for Fitness Apps and Wellness Platforms

Building fitness experiences that work for all bodies and all abilities — including the visual accessibility that makes your app usable for everyone.

FitnessAccessibilityWCAGWellness
Key points
Fitness apps serve users of all ages and abilities — accessibility is essential, not just for compliance but for market reach.
Timer and rep counter interfaces need to work for users with low vision who may hold their phone at different distances.

Inclusive fitness design

Fitness is for everyone, and your app's color design should reflect that. Users with low vision, color blindness, and age-related visual changes all use fitness apps. Key workout data — timers, rep counts, weight values — must meet WCAG AAA contrast (7:1) because they're often viewed in challenging conditions: dim gyms, bright outdoor settings, or at arm's length. Use ColorArchive's WCAG auditor to verify these critical text elements.

Color-blind safe workout categorization

Exercise categorization (strength, cardio, flexibility, recovery) is often color-coded. For color-blind users, supplement each color with an icon or label. Choose colors that differ in luminance, not just hue: a dark blue for strength, a light green for cardio, a medium amber for flexibility. These remain distinguishable even for users with deuteranopia or protanopia, which affect about 8% of men.

High-contrast mode for outdoor use

Outdoor fitness (running, cycling, outdoor classes) means screens in direct sunlight. Offer a high-contrast mode with pure black text on white backgrounds for maximum readability in bright conditions. This isn't a dark mode or light mode — it's an accessibility mode that maximizes contrast above all aesthetic considerations. Let users toggle it easily from workout screens.

Practical next step

Move from the guide into a concrete palette lane

Guides explain the use case. Collections prove the taste. Packs handle the export and implementation layer.

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