Around 1 in 7 people in the UK is neurodivergent. This guide covers autism, ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia, and dyscalculia in the workplace — practical adjustments, recruitment, management, and how to build a neuro-inclusive culture. Drawing on ACAS, BDF, and CIPD guidance.
Neurodiversity at Work: A UK Employer Guide
What Is Neurodiversity?
Neurodiversity refers to the natural variation in human brain function and behaviour. The term encompasses:
Autism Spectrum Condition (ASC) — approx. 1 in 100 people in the UK
ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) — approx. 4% of adults
Estimates suggest 1 in 7 people (15%) in the UK is neurodivergent in some way. Many people are undiagnosed.
Legal Framework
Most neurodivergent conditions qualify as disabilities under the Equality Act 2010 if they have a substantial and long-term effect on day-to-day activities. This means:
Reasonable adjustments are a legal duty, not a discretionary benefit
Neurodivergent employees must not be treated less favourably because of their condition
Indirect discrimination applies: a policy that disadvantages neurodivergent employees requires objective justification
ACAS Guidance: ACAS published updated neurodiversity at work guidance in 2023 (available at acas.org.uk).
Why It Matters for Business
Research from CIPD (2023) found:
Employers with neuro-inclusive policies report 17% higher retention among neurodivergent employees
Teams with neurodivergent members consistently score higher on creative problem-solving assessments
Companies like SAP, Microsoft, Goldman Sachs, Ford, and EY have built neurodiversity hiring programmes specifically to access this talent
Pattern recognition and systems thinking (common in autism)
Hyperfocus and creativity (common in ADHD)
Visual thinking and spatial reasoning (common in dyslexia and dyspraxia)
Common Barriers in the Workplace
Recruitment Barriers
Timed written tests disadvantage dyslexic candidates
Unstructured social interviews disadvantage autistic candidates
Group assessments and role-plays disadvantage many neurodivergent candidates
Informal networking stages exclude those who find social interaction effortful
Day-to-Day Barriers
Open-plan offices with noise and visual distractions (ADHD, autism)
Verbal-only instructions for complex tasks (dyslexia, ADHD)
Frequent task-switching (ADHD, autism)
Implicit social rules and unwritten norms (autism)
Performance reviews using vague or subjective language (autism)
Practical Adjustments
For Autistic Employees
Provide written agendas before meetings
Give advance notice of changes to routine
Offer a quiet workspace option
Use clear, direct, literal language in feedback
Allow pre-agreed social boundaries (e.g., not required to attend social events)
Offer structured 1:1 check-ins with the line manager
For Employees with ADHD
Break projects into short, concrete tasks with clear deadlines
Allow flexible working hours where possible
Provide written follow-up after verbal instructions
Minimise interruptions during high-focus work
Use project management tools (Trello, Asana) to externalise task tracking
Consider noise-cancelling headphones (may be funded by Access to Work)
For Dyslexic Employees
Provide documents in accessible formats (sans-serif fonts, larger text, coloured overlays)
Allow extra time for written work
Accept voice notes or verbal reporting as an alternative to written reports
Provide text-to-speech software (may be funded by Access to Work)
Do not penalise spelling/grammar in performance reviews
For Employees with Dyspraxia
Allow more time for tasks requiring fine motor skills
Provide ergonomic equipment
Accept digital submissions instead of handwritten documents
Allow extra time at interview for written exercises
Building a Neuro-Inclusive Culture
1. Awareness Training for Line Managers
A 2-hour workshop covering the basics of neurodivergence, common workplace barriers, and how to have a good adjustment conversation. BDF and CIPD both publish free toolkits.
2. Neuro-Inclusion Network
An internal network where neurodivergent employees (and allies) can share experiences, propose improvements, and influence policy. Often sits under a broader disability ERG.
3. Flexible-by-Default Policies
Move from "we accommodate on request" to "we design flexibly by default." Universal design (flexible hours, hybrid working, written-first communication) benefits neurodivergent employees without requiring disclosure.
4. Recruitment Process Redesign
Publish job descriptions in plain language with clear, specific criteria
Offer interviews in accessible formats (structured questions, advance interview questions where possible, written submission option)
State explicitly: "We welcome applications from neurodivergent candidates and will make reasonable adjustments at every stage"
5. Disclosure-Friendly Culture
Only 30% of autistic employees and 40% of ADHD employees disclose their condition at work (CIPD, 2022). Closing this gap requires psychological safety — visible leadership, peer champions, and clear processes for requesting support without judgment.
Key Resources
Organisation
Resource
URL
ACAS
Neurodiversity at work guidance
acas.org.uk
Business Disability Forum
Neurodiversity toolkit (member)
businessdisabilityforum.org.uk
CIPD
Neurodiversity in the workplace report
cipd.org
National Autistic Society
Employer resources
autism.org.uk/employers
ADHD UK
Workplace toolkit
adhduk.co.uk
Dyslexia Association
Employer guidance
bdadyslexia.org.uk
Sources: ACAS Neurodiversity at Work 2023, CIPD Neurodiversity at Work 2022, BDF Neurodiversity Toolkit, National Autistic Society Employer Resources, ADHD Foundation Workplace Guidance