Accessibility in Financial Applications: The Hidden Challenge in KYC and Digital Onboarding

Over the past few months, while working extensively on accessibility audits and remediation across multiple financial applications, one pattern has become impossible to ignore: smaller organizations are adapting faster, while large financial institutions—banks, AMC managers, and loan providers—are struggling to make meaningful progress.

This is not due to lack of intent. In fact, most large institutions have already acknowledged the importance of accessibility. The real issue lies deeper—in complexity, legacy systems, risk aversion, and one of the most critical bottlenecks in the ecosystem: the KYC (Know Your Customer) process.

As a team deeply involved in accessibility implementation and remediation, we at D2i Technology have seen firsthand how digital accessibility, WCAG compliance, inclusive design, screen reader compatibility, and accessible forms intersect—and often clash—within financial workflows.

This blog explores those challenges, especially around KYC, and why solving them is not just a compliance requirement, but a business and ethical necessity.

The Reality of Accessibility in Financial Systems

Financial platforms are among the most complex digital systems. They handle:

  • Sensitive user data
  • Multi-step workflows
  • Regulatory compliance
  • Real-time validation
  • Security layers

Now add accessibility into this mix.

What should ideally be a straightforward implementation of WCAG compliance becomes a layered challenge involving:

  • Legacy UI frameworks
  • Fragmented APIs
  • Multiple stakeholders
  • Strict compliance requirements

Interestingly, smaller fintech players—with fewer dependencies and modern tech stacks—are often able to fix accessibility issues faster. They:

  • Move quickly
  • Have simpler workflows
  • Can redesign flows without heavy approvals

In contrast, large institutions operate in tightly controlled environments where even a small UI change requires:

  • Risk assessments
  • Legal approvals
  • Compliance validation
  • Multiple stakeholder sign-offs

And nowhere is this more evident than in KYC flows.

KYC: The Biggest Accessibility Roadblock

KYC is the backbone of digital onboarding in financial systems. It involves:

  • Identity verification
  • Document uploads
  • OTP validations
  • Face recognition or video KYC
  • Data validation

From an accessibility standpoint, this is one of the hardest flows to get right.

Why KYC Fails Accessibility

1. Complex Multi-Step Forms

Most KYC journeys involve long, multi-step forms. These often lack:

  • Proper labels
  • Logical tab order
  • Clear instructions

This directly impacts screen reader compatibility, making it difficult for visually impaired users to navigate.

2. Poor Error Handling

One of the most common issues we’ve observed during audits: Banks intentionally avoid showing clear error messages.

Why?

Because they fear:

  • Increased drop-offs
  • User frustration
  • Abandonment during onboarding

But this creates a bigger problem.

For users with disabilities:

  • Errors are not announced properly
  • Users don’t know what went wrong
  • They get stuck in loops

This violates core principles of accessible forms and inclusive design.

3. CAPTCHA and OTP Challenges

Security measures like CAPTCHA and OTP are essential—but often inaccessible:

  • CAPTCHA images without alternatives
  • OTP timers not announced to screen readers
  • No option for voice-based verification

This becomes a major barrier in achieving digital accessibility.

4. Document Upload Barriers

Uploading documents is a critical KYC step, but:

  • Buttons are not labeled correctly
  • File formats are not explained
  • Errors are silent or unclear

Users relying on assistive technologies struggle to complete this step independently.

5. Video KYC Limitations

Video KYC is increasingly common, but:

  • No captions or instructions for hearing-impaired users
  • No alternative for users with speech disabilities
  • Lack of clear guidance

This completely excludes a segment of users.

The Bigger Problem: Lack of Clear Strategy

When we engage with financial institutions, one recurring challenge emerges:

They don’t have a clear answer to this question:
“How will we onboard users with disabilities?”

This is not just a technical issue—it’s a strategic gap.

Many organizations:

  • Focus on compliance checklists
  • Fix surface-level UI issues
  • Miss end-to-end user journeys

Accessibility is not about fixing buttons—it’s about ensuring complete task success.

And in financial systems, the most critical task is onboarding.

The Business Impact of Ignoring Accessibility

Let’s address a misconception:

Accessibility is often seen as a “compliance requirement.”

In reality, it directly impacts:

  • Customer acquisition
  • Conversion rates
  • Brand trust
  • Legal risk

1. Lost Customers

If a user cannot complete KYC:

  • They abandon the application
  • They switch to competitors

This is not a small segment. Millions of users require accessible experiences.

2. Increased Support Costs

When users cannot complete flows independently:

  • They call support
  • They visit branches
  • They escalate issues

This increases operational costs significantly.

3. Legal & Compliance Risks

Global regulations are tightening:

  • WCAG guidelines are becoming mandatory
  • Accessibility lawsuits are increasing

Ignoring WCAG compliance is no longer an option.

Why Smaller Players Are Winning

From our experience, smaller fintech companies succeed because they:

  • Build accessibility into design
  • Use modern frameworks
  • Test with real users
  • Iterate quickly

They treat inclusive design as a core principle, not an afterthought.

What Large Financial Institutions Need to Do

The solution is not simple—but it is achievable.

1. Rethink KYC from an Accessibility Lens

Instead of patching existing flows:

  • Redesign KYC journeys with accessibility in mind
  • Simplify steps
  • Provide alternatives

2. Prioritize Clear Communication

Every action must be:

  • Announced
  • Explained
  • Confirmed

Especially:

  • Errors
  • Success states
  • Instructions

Remember:
Hiding errors reduces drop-offs temporarily, but increases failure for accessibility users.

3. Build Truly Accessible Forms

To meet accessible forms standards:

  • Use proper labels
  • Provide instructions before inputs
  • Announce errors dynamically
  • Ensure logical navigation

4. Improve Screen Reader Compatibility

Test with:

  • NVDA
  • JAWS
  • VoiceOver

Ensure:

  • All elements are readable
  • Focus order is correct
  • Dynamic content is announced

5. Provide Alternatives for Critical Steps

For KYC:

  • Alternative to CAPTCHA
  • Voice-based OTP options
  • Assisted onboarding
  • Manual verification options

Accessibility is about choice and flexibility.

6. Align Business and Accessibility Goals

This is crucial.

Instead of thinking:
“Will this increase drop-offs?”

Think:
“Will this allow more users to complete the journey?”

Accessible experiences increase completion rates in the long run.

The Role We Play at D2i Technology

At D2i Technology, we work closely with financial institutions to:

  • Conduct detailed accessibility audits
  • Identify real user challenges
  • Remediate complex workflows
  • Improve KYC journeys
  • Align platforms with WCAG compliance

But more importantly, we help organizations shift mindset:
From compliance-driven to user-centric accessibility

Because accessibility is not about ticking boxes—it’s about enabling access.

The Future of Accessibility in Finance

The financial industry is at a turning point.

With increasing digital adoption:

  • Physical branches are reducing
  • Self-onboarding is becoming the norm

This makes digital accessibility even more critical.

If KYC remains inaccessible:

  • A large segment of users will be excluded
  • Financial inclusion goals will fail

Accessibility is not optional—it is foundational.

Final Thoughts

The challenges in making financial applications accessible—especially KYC—are real. Large institutions are not failing due to lack of effort, but due to complexity and legacy constraints.

However, the path forward is clear:

  • Embrace inclusive design from the start
  • Ensure strong screen reader compatibility
  • Build truly accessible forms
  • Align with WCAG compliance
  • Focus on end-to-end digital accessibility

Most importantly:
Stop designing for drop-offs, and start designing for completion.

Because when accessibility is done right, it doesn’t just help users with disabilities—it improves the experience for everyone.

If you’re working on financial platforms and struggling with accessibility or KYC challenges, this is the right time to rethink your approach.

At D2i Technology, we’re actively helping organizations bridge this gap—one accessible experience at a time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Make Your Financial Platform Truly Accessible

Ready to improve accessibility across your KYC and digital onboarding flows? D2i Technology helps financial institutions identify critical gaps, enhance user journeys, and achieve WCAG compliance—ensuring more users can complete onboarding without barriers.