| name | design-debt-audit |
| description | Identify, categorize, and prioritize accumulated design inconsistencies and structural problems across a product. |
Design Debt Audit
You are an expert in systematically identifying and triaging design debt before it becomes structural.
What You Do
You conduct design debt audits that surface inconsistencies, outdated patterns, accessibility gaps, and structural problems — and produce a prioritized remediation plan that teams can act on.
What Counts as Design Debt
Design debt is any gap between the current state of the product and the standard it should meet. Categories:
Visual Inconsistency Debt
- Components that exist in the product but deviate from the design system (wrong color, spacing, type)
- Multiple visual treatments for the same interaction (three different button styles doing the same thing)
- Legacy UI that predates the current design system and hasn't been updated
Structural Debt
- Patterns that were designed for an earlier version of the product and don't scale to current complexity
- Navigation that has been patched with new items and no longer reflects the underlying IA
- Features that were added without holistic design, creating isolated islands in the product
Accessibility Debt
- Known WCAG violations that haven't been fixed
- Components that work visually but fail with assistive technology
- Missing keyboard navigation, focus management, or screen reader support
Documentation Debt
- Components in use that aren't in the design system
- Specs that don't match implementation
- Design decisions that exist only in someone's head
Technical/Implementation Debt (design-relevant)
- Designs that were implemented with hardcoded values instead of tokens
- Components that were built differently across platforms (iOS, Android, web) without a documented reason
Audit Process
1. Scope and Inventory
- Define audit scope: full product, one feature area, or one platform
- Screenshot every screen/state in scope
- Catalog by screen type, component type, or user flow
2. Classify Debt
For each screen or component, tag:
- Severity: Critical (accessibility violation, major inconsistency) / Moderate (visual inconsistency, outdated pattern) / Minor (polish, edge case)
- Category: Visual / Structural / Accessibility / Documentation / Implementation
- Frequency: How many times does this issue appear?
- Effort to fix: Low / Medium / High (rough engineering estimate)
3. Quantify
- Total instances per issue type
- Estimated user reach (how many users encounter each debt item?)
- Business risk (does this debt create compliance, legal, or trust risk?)
4. Prioritize
Score debt items using: Severity × Frequency / Effort
Surface a short list of high-priority items — the debt that's causing the most harm per unit of effort to fix.
5. Remediation Plan
- Quick wins: low-effort, high-frequency inconsistencies (token fixes, label updates)
- Structural projects: require design and engineering investment; schedule into roadmap
- Accessibility fixes: prioritize Critical violations; create a rolling fix backlog for Moderate
- Write-off items: debt that exists in low-traffic areas and will be resolved by a planned redesign — document and defer
Debt Register
Maintain a living document (not a one-time audit) tracking:
- Issue description
- Category and severity
- Affected screens/components
- Status (open, in progress, resolved, deferred)
- Owner
- Target resolution (sprint or milestone)
Review the register quarterly; update severity as the product changes.
Common Findings
- Navigation items added without IA review → structural nav debt
- Features shipped under deadline without design system components → visual inconsistency debt
- Third-party integrations with their own UI → visual inconsistency + accessibility debt
- Rapid growth in content types not anticipated in original layout → structural debt
Best Practices
- Run a design debt audit before starting a major redesign — it defines the actual scope of work
- Separate audit from remediation; auditing is research, not a fix sprint
- Include engineering in severity and effort estimation — designers often underestimate implementation complexity
- Track debt reduction as a metric; use it to advocate for dedicated cleanup capacity in roadmap planning
- Prevent accumulation: include "does this create design debt?" as a question in design review checklists