Simulador de daltonismo

Veja como as cores aparecem para pessoas com diferentes tipos de deficiência de visão de cores. Aproximadamente 8% dos homens e 0,5% das mulheres têm alguma forma de daltonismo.

#

Sobre a deficiência de visão de cores

Daltonismo vermelho-verde

O tipo mais comum, afetando ~8% dos homens. Inclui protanopia (sem cones vermelhos) e deuteranopia (sem cones verdes). Pessoas com estas condições têm dificuldade em distinguir vermelhos de verdes.

Daltonismo azul-amarelo

A tritanopia afeta menos de 0,01% da população. Pessoas com esta condição têm dificuldade em distinguir azuis de amarelos.

Dicas de design

Não dependa apenas da cor para transmitir informações. Use padrões, rótulos e contraste suficiente. Teste os seus designs com este simulador para garantir a acessibilidade.

Diretrizes WCAG

O WCAG 2.1 requer uma razão de contraste mínima de 4,5:1 para texto normal e 3:1 para texto grande. Use nossa ferramenta Verificador de contraste para verificar a conformidade.

Abrir Verificador de contraste →

Perguntas frequentes

Color vision deficiency affects approximately 8% of males and 0.5% of females of Northern European descent — roughly 300 million people worldwide. The most common type is deuteranomaly (reduced green sensitivity, ~5% of males), followed by protanomaly (reduced red sensitivity, ~1%). Total color blindness (achromatopsia) is extremely rare, affecting about 1 in 33,000 people.
Deuteranopia and protanopia (red-green color blindness) should be your top priority since they affect the largest population — combined, roughly 7-8% of males. If your design passes accessibility checks for deuteranopia, it will typically work for protanopia too, as both affect the red-green perception axis. Always also test tritanopia for designs that rely heavily on blue-yellow distinctions.
Never use color as the only way to convey information. Supplement color with patterns, icons, labels, or underlines. For charts and graphs, use distinct shapes or textures alongside colors. Maintain sufficient contrast ratios (WCAG AA minimum 4.5:1 for text). Avoid problematic combinations like red/green, green/brown, blue/purple, and green/gray. Use this simulator to verify your designs look clear under all types.
Red-green color blindness (protanopia and deuteranopia) affects the long and medium wavelength cones, making reds and greens appear similar — often as brownish or yellowish tones. Blue-yellow color blindness (tritanopia) affects the short wavelength cones, making blues appear greenish and yellows appear pinkish. Red-green is far more common (8% of males) than blue-yellow (less than 0.01% of the population).
This tool simulates individual colors rather than full images. To test how an entire image or illustration appears under color blindness, you can check each key color from your design. For full-image simulation, browser extensions like ChromeLens or built-in developer tools in Chrome (Rendering panel > Emulate vision deficiencies) can simulate color blindness on entire web pages.

Artigos relacionados