UK Ofcom turns accessibility into streaming’s next compliance mandate
The UK government is bringing major video-on-demand services, including Netflix, Disney+ and Amazon Prime Video, under Ofcom “enhanced regulation” via a new VoD accessibility code. The forthcoming rules would require minimum accessibility coverage across catalogues, including targets of at least 80% subtitled content, 10% audio description, and 5% signed content, aligning VoD services with requirements applied to traditional broadcasters. The policy is framed as benefiting over 18 million UK residents with sight or hearing-related disabilities and also applies to UK broadcaster VoD services such as ITVX and Channel 4.
Key Takeaways
- UK ministers will legislate a new VoD accessibility code enforced by Ofcom.
- Mainstream VoD services would need to hit minimum coverage targets: 80% subtitles, 10% audio description, 5% signing across total catalogues.
- Rules also apply to UK broadcaster VoD services like ITVX and Channel 4’s on-demand offering.
- Compliance shifts accessibility from “nice-to-have” to measurable catalogue-level KPI, with operational and cost implications for content pipelines.
Why It Matters
Accessibility is becoming the next global “table stakes” regulation for streaming—less about headline content and more about industrial-scale content operations. Catalogue-level targets force streamers to invest in localization, QC, metadata, and vendor capacity across long-tail libraries (not just new originals). For executives, this is a margin and workflow story: the cost of compliance will show up in post budgets, supply-chain tooling, and release readiness metrics. For the ecosystem, expect the meme to spread: if the UK can standardize accessibility KPIs, other markets will copy-paste—and accessibility becomes a competitive moat and a procurement requirement.
Read full article at uniladtech.com