Hard data on the ROI of disability inclusion, featuring the Accenture study showing 28% higher revenue, retention improvements, accommodation cost realities, the $13 trillion disability market, and ESG reporting trends.
The Business Case for Disability Inclusion: ROI Data and Metrics
Beyond Compliance: Disability Inclusion as a Business Strategy
For decades, disability employment was framed primarily as a compliance obligation or a charitable act. That framing is not only outdated -- it is factually wrong. A growing body of rigorous research demonstrates that companies that actively include people with disabilities in their workforce outperform their peers on revenue, profitability, retention, and innovation.
This article presents the hard data that HR leaders and executives need to make the internal business case for disability inclusion.
The Accenture "Getting to Equal" Study
In 2018, Accenture published a landmark study analyzing 140 companies across 13 industries in the United States. The study compared companies recognized as Disability Inclusion Champions (top scorers on the Disability Equality Index) against their peers.
Key Findings
28% higher revenue compared to industry peers
30% higher profit margins on average
2x more likely to have higher total shareholder returns than the industry median
Revenue growth: Champions averaged 28% higher revenue over the 4-year study period
Net income: Champions had 200% higher net income than the average of all companies studied
Why the Correlation
The study identified several mechanisms:
Innovation: Companies that design products and services to be accessible often discover innovations that benefit all users (the "curb cut effect")
Market access: Disability-inclusive companies are better positioned to serve the 1.3 billion people with disabilities worldwide and their networks
Talent pool: By removing barriers, these companies access a larger talent pool and gain employees with unique problem-solving perspectives
Culture: An inclusive culture improves morale, engagement, and productivity across the entire workforce, not just among disabled employees
Retention and Turnover Data
Employee turnover is one of the largest hidden costs in any organization. Multiple studies demonstrate that disability-inclusive hiring significantly reduces turnover:
Key Statistics
DuPont study: Employees with disabilities had a 90% above-average job performance rating and a turnover rate that was significantly lower than the company average
Institute for Corporate Productivity (i4cp): Companies with mature disability inclusion programs reported 72% higher employee retention
Pizza Hut Australia: Reported that employees with intellectual disabilities had tenure rates 20% higher than the general workforce
Walgreens Distribution Centers: After implementing an integrated workforce model where one-third of employees had disabilities, Walgreens found these employees performed at the same or higher levels with lower turnover
Cost of Turnover
The Society for Human Resource Management estimates the cost of replacing an employee at 50-200% of annual salary when accounting for:
Recruitment and onboarding costs
Lost productivity during the vacancy and ramp-up period
Institutional knowledge loss
Training investment loss
Even a modest reduction in turnover from disability-inclusive practices translates to significant savings.
Absenteeism and Presenteeism
A common misconception is that employees with disabilities have higher absenteeism rates. Research consistently shows the opposite:
Job Accommodation Network (JAN): 86% of employers reported that workers with disabilities had average or better attendance than their non-disabled peers
DuPont: 86% of employees with disabilities rated average or better on attendance
National Organization on Disability: Companies with disability inclusion programs reported reduced overall absenteeism across their workforce
The data suggests that employees who have fought to enter and remain in the workforce are often highly motivated and reliable.
Accommodation Costs: The Reality
Fear of accommodation costs is one of the primary barriers to disability hiring. The actual data is dramatically different from employer expectations:
JAN Employer Survey Data
Based on data from the Job Accommodation Network's ongoing employer survey:
JAN found that for every $1 invested in accommodations, employers received an average return of $28 in benefits including:
Retained a valued employee ($36.58 per $1 invested)
Eliminated the cost of training a new employee
Increased the employee's productivity
Improved overall company morale
Innovation and the Curb Cut Effect
The "curb cut effect" refers to the phenomenon where accommodations designed for people with disabilities end up benefiting a much larger population. The physical curb cut, originally mandated for wheelchair users, is now used by parents with strollers, delivery workers with carts, travelers with luggage, and cyclists.
Business Examples
Closed captioning: Developed for deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers, now used by millions in gyms, airports, and for second-language learning
Voice recognition technology: Advanced partly through accessibility research, now powers virtual assistants used by billions
Flexible work arrangements: Originally accommodations for disabled employees, now standard practice that improves productivity and retention for all employees
Universal design principles: Companies that adopt these principles consistently report improved customer satisfaction and expanded market reach
The Disability Market
People with disabilities represent an enormous and underserved consumer market:
1.3 billion people worldwide have significant disabilities (WHO, 2023)
$13 trillion in disposable income controlled by people with disabilities and their households globally (Return on Disability Group)
$490 billion in disposable income among working-age adults with disabilities in the US alone
When friends and family are included, the extended disability market encompasses over 3.4 billion people who are directly influenced by disability in their purchasing decisions
Brand Loyalty
Research from the American Institutes for Research found that:
92% of consumers feel more favorable toward companies that hire people with disabilities
87% of consumers would prefer to give their business to companies that employ people with disabilities
Disability-inclusive advertising and hiring practices build significant brand loyalty among disability community members and allies
ESG, DEI, and Investor Expectations
Disability inclusion is increasingly a factor in Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) reporting and investment decisions:
Investor Trends
The Disability Equality Index (DEI) is now tracked by major institutional investors as a measure of corporate social responsibility
BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard have all signaled that workforce diversity, including disability, is a factor in their investment evaluation
The EU Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) requires reporting on workforce diversity, including disability
The US SEC has increased disclosure requirements around human capital management
The UK requires large employers to report on disability employment through the Disability Confident scheme
Companies that build disability inclusion programs now are positioning themselves ahead of regulatory requirements that are clearly trending toward mandatory disclosure.
Building Your Internal Business Case
Data You Can Gather Internally
Current turnover costs: Calculate your cost-per-hire and annual turnover rate
Accommodation spend: Track actual accommodation costs versus budget assumptions
Applicant demographics: What percentage of your applicant pool discloses a disability?
Retention comparison: If you already employ people with disabilities, compare their retention rates
Framing the Proposal
Present disability inclusion as a business strategy with measurable ROI, not as a compliance exercise or charitable initiative:
Argument
Supporting Data
Revenue growth
28% higher revenue (Accenture)
Talent acquisition
Access to untapped pool of 10+ million working-age people with disabilities (US)
Retention savings
72% higher retention in mature programs (i4cp)
Low accommodation cost
Median $300 one-time cost, 49% cost nothing (JAN)
Consumer market
$13 trillion global disposable income
Innovation
Curb cut effect drives product improvements for all users
ESG positioning
Ahead of regulatory trends and investor expectations
Setting Measurable Goals
Number of disability-inclusive job postings per quarter
Percentage of new hires who disclose a disability
Average time-to-accommodation for new hires
Retention rate comparison at 6, 12, and 24 months
Disability Equality Index score improvement year over year
Employee engagement scores among disabled employees versus overall workforce
Conclusion
The business case for disability inclusion is not theoretical. It is supported by rigorous, multi-year research from Accenture, JAN, DuPont, and dozens of other organizations. Companies that include people with disabilities outperform their peers on revenue, profitability, retention, innovation, and market access. The cost of accommodations is minimal, the return on investment is substantial, and the regulatory direction is clear.
The question is no longer whether disability inclusion is good for business. The question is how quickly your organization can implement it.
Resources
Accenture "Getting to Equal" report: accenture.com/disability-inclusion
Job Accommodation Network: askjan.org
Disability:IN and the Disability Equality Index: disabilityin.org