New May 27, 2026

Accessibility question: is nesting interactive elements bad?

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I am currently writing a gallery script for myself and ran into an interesting accessibility question. I have a list of galleries with links to each of them. I also wanted to provide a checkbox to allow users to select several galleries and merge or download them. The HTML I use is the following. An unordered list with labels and checkboxes and links inside the label.


Given the right CSS and some breathing space this works well with a mouse and keyboard. You can click next to the link to check the checkbox and on the link to navigate to the gallery. It also works using a keyboard. You can tab through the list and check/uncheck using the space bar. The following screencast shows what that looks like.

Screen recording showing the interaction with the nested link inside the label using mouse and keyboard

Now, it feels wrong though. I am mixing two interaction modes here, navigation and selection, one being link based and the other form based. I am wondering if that creates any issues for screenreader users. The other thing I am wondering about is if there is an issue with nesting all in the label as some older assistive technology didn’t like that. I can work around that using for and ids:


The question though is if that is still an accessibility issue and if it doesn’t make more sense to show the navigation as links and create a toggle to switch to the selection use case? What do you think?

You can try out the demo page for yourself here.

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