In the past, accessibility meant buying expensive third-party apps that broke with every OS update. Today, accessibility is a core OS feature, not an afterthought.
Windows 11 includes built-in tools for a range of visual needs, from severe vision loss to daily eye strain.
The Central Hub: Accessibility Settings
Microsoft redesigned its Accessibility menu (formerly “Ease of Access”). Press Win + U to open it instantly.
Key Vision Tools
1. The Magnifier
When standard text scaling isn’t enough, Windows Magnifier zooms in on your screen.
- How to use it: Press Win + Plus (+) to turn it on and zoom in. Press Win + Minus (-) to zoom out.
- Customization: Magnify the full screen, use a lens that follows your mouse, or dock the view at the top of the screen. It helps when reading small print or analyzing detailed graphics.
2. Narrator: The Built-in Screen Reader
Narrator is the built-in screen reader. While power users often rely on third-party options like JAWS or NVDA, Narrator has become a capable alternative.
- How to use it: Toggle it on or off instantly with Win + Ctrl + Enter.
- Natural Voices: Windows 11 replaces older robotic voices with realistic, AI-generated speech, making long listening sessions much more comfortable.
3. High-Contrast and Custom Pointers
Sometimes contrast matters more than size.
- Contrast Themes: Found in the Accessibility settings, these strict color palettes (like bright yellow or cyan text on a pure black background) increase visibility for users with light sensitivity or color blindness.
- Mouse Pointer Customization: You can increase the pointer’s size and change its color to high-visibility neon green or pink. This helps everyone keep track of their cursor across multiple monitors.
By integrating these tools, Microsoft ensures basic accessibility works out of the box on every Windows machine. It’s no longer an add-on; it’s foundational.