Writing Good Alternative (Alt) Text

Modified on Mon, 23 Jun, 2025 at 10:58 AM

What is alternative(alt) text?

Alt text is a short description added to an image, which is not visible on the webpage but is read aloud by screen readers for visually impaired users. It also serves as a fallback if an image fails to load.

How do I write good alt text?

Be Descriptive and Concise

Alt text should clearly describe the image’s content and purpose in 1-2 sentences.

  • Good: “SIDEARM University quarterback throws a pass during the second quarter against State College.”

  • Bad: “A football player”

Highlight Key Details relevant to Athletics

Include sport-specific context, such as 

  • Player names (if known and relevant)

  • Coach names

  • Team names

  • Game situation (“during warm-ups” or “celebrating a win”)

  • Action (“spiking the ball,” “crossing the finish line”)

Consider the Purpose of the Image

Ask yourself, Why is this image here?

  • Promotional (season ticket promo image, sponsor logos) images must have all the text in the image as the alt text. (“Football season tickets on sale now!” “Jersey Mike’s subs”)

  • Informational (game highlights) images should describe the action and the context.

  • Portraits (headshots) should describe what the person looks like. For example, a picture of me could have the alt text “White woman with brown hair and a fringe/bangs, wearing brown glasses and a burgundy t-shirt”

Avoid Redundancy

Don’t repeat information already in nearby text or captions.

  • If a caption says, “The Redbirds celebrate their championship win,” the alt text could be, “Players lifting the trophy and cheering on the field.”

  • This is why we encourage describing the person in headshot images, their name is already available in text right next to the image.

Think like a Fan or Recruit

What would a visually impaired fan or prospective athlete want to know?

  • Ex. “Women’s Track athlete crossing the finish line with arms raised in victory.”

Technical Tips

  • Keep it under 125 characters when possible

  • Don’t start the alt text with “Image of…” or “Picture of…”

  • Don’t include “logo” in the alt text

  • Don’t use the file name as the alt text

  • Spell check your alt text so it’s read correctly by a screen reader

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