AODA Training Requirements for Employers in Ontario (2026)

Ontario law is specific about what employers must do when it comes to AODA training. This page sets out who must be trained, what that training must cover, when it must happen, and — for larger organizations — what records must be kept.

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Ontario law is specific about what employers must do when it comes to AODA training. It is not enough to run a training session once and move on. The Act sets out who must be trained, what that training must cover, when it must happen, and — for larger organizations — what records must be kept.

This page covers all of that. If you are an employer in Ontario trying to understand exactly what the law requires, this is your reference.

AODA training obligations come from two sources within the Act:

1. The Customer Service Standard

Ontario Regulation 429/07 requires every organization with at least one employee to train all staff on accessible customer service. This has been in force for private-sector businesses since January 1, 2012. There is no organization in Ontario with employees that is exempt from this requirement.

2. The Integrated Accessibility Standards Regulation (IASR)

Ontario Regulation 191/11 extends training requirements further. Under the IASR, organizations must also train staff on the contents of the regulation itself and on the Ontario Human Rights Code as it relates to persons with disabilities. The IASR applies to all organizations in Ontario with at least one employee, though the scope of obligations depends on size.

Both regulations apply to you

Most employers focus only on the Customer Service Standard. But the IASR training requirement is equally mandatory. Organizations that have only delivered Customer Service training — without IASR training on the Human Rights Code — are partially out of compliance.

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Who you are required to train

Both the Customer Service Standard and the IASR apply the training requirement broadly. You must train:

Third-party contractors are worth flagging specifically. If you outsource customer-facing services — reception, delivery, cleaning, IT support — you are responsible for ensuring those contractors have completed the required training. The compliance responsibility sits with your organization.
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What AODA training must cover

Customer Service Standard training content

Under the Customer Service Standard, training must cover:

Important:
Generic off-the-shelf training does not satisfy the requirement unless it includes content about your organization’s specific accessibility policies. If using a third-party training course, it needs to either incorporate your policy content or be supplemented by a policy briefing.

Customer Service Standard training content

Under the IASR, training must cover:

Training content summary by role
All staff

Customer Service Standard training + IASR training (including Human Rights Code content)

Managers and HR

All of the above + Employment Standard training (Individual Accommodation Plans, accessible recruitment, return-to-work)

Content, IT, and digital teams

All of the above + Information & Communications training (WCAG 2.0 Level AA, accessible documents, accessible formats)

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When AODA training must be delivered

Timing is one of the most commonly misunderstood aspects of AODA training compliance. The standard is “as soon as practicable” — which regulators consistently interpret to mean before the person begins performing their role, or on their first day at the latest.

Trigger When training must be delivered
Existing employees (all sizes) Already required. If not yet completed, you are currently non-compliant.
New employee hired Before they begin, or as soon as reasonably practicable after starting. No formal grace period exists in the legislation.
Volunteer starts Same as new employees. Must be trained before or shortly after they begin.
Contractor engaged Before they begin delivering services on your behalf.
Accessibility policy changes Training must be updated to reflect the change and re-delivered to all affected staff.
Staff member changes roles If their new role has different accessibility responsibilities, role-specific training must be updated.
AODA regulations updated Training must be updated to reflect regulatory changes.
The policy-change trigger catches organizations out repeatedly. Many businesses trained their staff years ago, updated their accessibility policies a few times since then, and never re-delivered training. Each of those policy updates should have triggered a training refresh for the affected staff.
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Training obligations by organization size

Requirement 1–19 employees 20–49 employees 50+ employees
Customer Service Standard training ✓ Required ✓ Required ✓ Required
IASR training (inc. Human Rights Code) ✓ Required ✓ Required ✓ Required
Training records Recommended Recommended ✓ Required by law
Written accessibility policy Recommended Recommended ✓ Required — publicly available
Multi-year accessibility plan Not required Not required ✓ Required — posted publicly
AODA compliance report filing Not required ✓ Every 3 years ✓ Every 3 years
Individual Accommodation Plan process If applicable If applicable ✓ Documented process required

What counts as compliant AODA training?

AODA does not prescribe a specific training format, duration, or delivery method. It sets out what training must cover, not how it must be delivered. Acceptable formats include:

Common compliance gaps — what does NOT count
  • A training session run once when AODA first came into force, with no refreshers since
  • Generic accessibility awareness training that does not reference the Customer Service Standard or IASR
  • Training that covers the Standard but does not include your organization's specific policies
  • Training completed by some staff but not others — partial completion is non-compliance
  • A policy document handed to staff to read, with no verification that they read or understood it
  • Training records that show a date but do not identify what was covered

Keeping AODA training records

For organizations with 50 or more employees, maintaining training records is a legal requirement. At minimum, your training records should show:

For organizations with fewer than 50 employees, the law does not require records — but the same practical logic applies. Without records, you are relying on staff memory to prove something that happened months or years ago. Most online AODA training platforms handle record-keeping automatically.
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Consequences of not meeting AODA training requirements

The Ontario government enforces AODA through the Accessibility Directorate of Ontario. Enforcement happens through audits (both random and complaint-triggered), compliance orders, and fines.

$100,000/day

Maximum fine for non-compliant organizations

$50,000/day

Personal liability for directors and officers

AODA non-compliance is not just a corporate risk — it is a personal one for the people running the organization. If a director knew or ought to have known about the training requirement and failed to ensure it was met, they face individual liability regardless of their employment status with the organization.

Frequently asked questions

Is AODA training a legal requirement for all Ontario employers?
  • Yes. Every Ontario organization with at least one employee must train its staff on the Customer Service Standard and the IASR. There is no size threshold, industry exemption, or revenue minimum. The obligation applies from the moment you hire your first employee.
  • Technically, training should happen before or on the day they start. If a new employee interacts with a customer before completing AODA training and there is a complaint, your organization is exposed. The law uses the phrase “as soon as practicable” — the expectation is that training is part of your onboarding, not something scheduled weeks later.
  • Possibly, but not automatically. The Ontario government’s free AccessForward training covers the Customer Service Standard requirements for most employees. However, free courses typically do not include your organization’s specific accessibility policies — which is a required element of the training. If you use a free course, you need to supplement it with a policy briefing specific to your organization.
  • No, not on an annual cycle. The law requires retraining when your accessibility policies change, when staff move into roles with different obligations, or when the government updates accessibility regulations. Annual review of your training content is best practice — but mandatory retraining is triggered by changes, not by the calendar.
  • Yes. Remote employees are employees. Their physical location does not change the fact that they work for an Ontario organization and are covered by AODA. Online training makes this straightforward — remote staff can complete their training through the same platform as on-site staff.

Make sure your organization meets the requirements

If you are not confident that every current employee, volunteer, and contractor has completed compliant AODA training — and that new hires are trained as part of onboarding — that is where to start.