A detailed guide for people with disabilities considering self-employment or entrepreneurship, covering grants and funding by country (US, UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, Netherlands), accessible business tools, maintaining benefits while earning, business planning, and tax implications.
Self-Employment and Entrepreneurship with a Disability: Grants, Tools, and Success Strategies
Introduction
Self-employment is an increasingly popular career path for people with disabilities, and for good reason. Research from the Office for National Statistics (UK) and the US Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that people with disabilities are more likely to be self-employed than their non-disabled peers. Self-employment offers something that many traditional employment settings struggle to provide: complete control over your work environment, schedule, and the accommodations you need.
Whether you are considering freelancing, starting a small business, launching a social enterprise, or monetizing a passion project, this guide covers the practical steps, funding opportunities, and tools available across six countries: the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Germany, and the Netherlands.
---
Benefits of Self-Employment for People with Disabilities
Flexibility and Accommodation Control
The most frequently cited advantage of self-employment for people with disabilities is the ability to design your own working conditions:
Schedule control: Work during your peak energy hours. Take breaks when needed. Adjust your hours around medical appointments, therapy sessions, or symptom fluctuations without needing permission.
Environment control: Create a workspace that meets your sensory, physical, and cognitive needs — whether that means a quiet home office, adjustable lighting, or specialized equipment.
Pace control: Set your own deadlines and workload. Scale up during good periods and scale back during flare-ups without the pressure of employer expectations.
Elimination of commuting: For many people with disabilities, commuting is the most exhausting and inaccessible part of the workday. Self-employment can eliminate it entirely.
Additional Advantages
No accommodation negotiation: You do not need to disclose your disability, justify your needs, or navigate an interactive process with an employer.
Leveraging lived experience: Many successful disabled entrepreneurs build businesses directly from their disability experience — accessibility consulting, adaptive product design, disability coaching, peer support, and advocacy services.
Income flexibility: Self-employment allows you to control your income level, which can be important for managing interactions with disability benefits programs.
---
Business Grants and Funding by Country
United States
SSDI Plan to Achieve Self-Support (PASS): If you receive Supplemental Security Income (SSI), a PASS plan allows you to set aside income and resources to fund a business startup without reducing your SSI payment. PASS can cover business equipment, supplies, training, marketing materials, and other startup costs. Contact your local Social Security office to develop a PASS plan.
Small Business Administration (SBA) loans and programs: The SBA does not have disability-specific loan programs, but people with disabilities are eligible for all SBA programs, including microloans (up to $50,000), the 8(a) Business Development Program, and SBA-backed loans through community banks.
Vocational Rehabilitation (VR) self-employment services: Many state VR agencies fund self-employment as a vocational goal, covering business plan development, startup equipment, assistive technology, and initial operating costs.
Disability-owned business certification: The US Business Leadership Network (now Disability:IN) offers a Disability-Owned Business Enterprise (DOBE) certification, which can help secure corporate and government contracts.
Tax credits: The Disabled Access Credit (IRC § 44) provides small businesses with a tax credit of up to $5,000 per year for accessibility expenditures.
United Kingdom
New Enterprise Allowance (NEA): Available to people claiming certain benefits (including disability-related benefits), the NEA provides a weekly allowance for up to 26 weeks while you start your business, plus access to a business mentor and a startup loan of up to £25,000 at a reduced interest rate.
Access to Work — self-employment: Access to Work grants are available to self-employed people with disabilities. The scheme can cover assistive technology, support workers, travel costs, and other disability-related business expenses.
Start Up Loans: Government-backed personal loans of £500-£25,000 at a fixed interest rate of 6%, available to anyone starting or growing a business in the UK, including people with disabilities.
Disability-specific grants: Organisations such as the Shaw Trust, Leonard Cheshire, and Scope sometimes offer small grants or business mentorship for disabled entrepreneurs.
Social enterprise support: If your business has a social mission, organisations like UnLtd and the School for Social Entrepreneurs provide grants and support programs.
Canada
Opportunities Fund for Persons with Disabilities: Federal funding for self-employment activities, including business plan development, skills training, and startup costs.
Provincial self-employment programs: Most provinces offer self-employment assistance programs. For example, Ontario's Second Career program, British Columbia's Self-Employment Program, and Quebec's Measure de soutien au travail autonome.
Community Futures: A network of community development organizations across Canada providing business planning, coaching, and access to loans for entrepreneurs, including people with disabilities.
Canadian Small Business Financing Program: Government-backed loans for startup costs, equipment, and leasehold improvements.
Social enterprise grants: Organizations like the Canadian Centre for Social Entrepreneurship support businesses with social impact goals.
Australia
New Enterprise Incentive Scheme (NEIS): A government program providing accredited small business training, mentoring for up to 52 weeks, and income support (NEIS allowance and rental assistance) for eligible participants starting a business. People on Disability Support Pension are eligible.
Employment Assistance Fund (EAF): Available to self-employed people with disabilities. Covers assistive technology, workplace modifications for your home office, Auslan interpreters for business meetings, and disability awareness training for contractors or clients.
State and territory grants: Many states offer small business grants or interest-free loans. Check your state's small business development service.
NDIS: For participants with NDIS plans, capacity-building supports may include funding for self-employment skill development and related assistive technology.
Germany
KfW Gründerkredit (KfW Startup Loan): KfW, Germany's state-owned development bank, provides startup loans with favorable interest rates. People with disabilities are eligible on the same basis as other applicants.
Eingliederungshilfe (Integration Assistance): Under SGB IX, people with severe disabilities (GdB 50+) may be eligible for grants or loans to support self-employment, including startup costs, equipment, and workplace modifications.
Integrationsamt support: Integration Offices can provide grants for workplace equipment and modifications for self-employed people with severe disabilities.
Gründungszuschuss: If you are receiving Arbeitslosengeld I (unemployment benefit), you may qualify for a startup subsidy covering living expenses and social security contributions for up to 15 months while establishing your business.
Existenzgründungsberatung: Free or subsidized business startup consulting through chambers of commerce (IHK) and chambers of crafts (HWK).
Netherlands
Municipality support (Participatiewet): Under the Participatiewet, your municipality (gemeente) can provide support for starting a business, including startup loans, coaching, and continued benefit payments during the startup phase. Contact your local UWV or gemeente work-coaching office.
Bbz (Besluit bijstandverlening zelfstandigen): A national scheme providing interest-free or low-interest loans and income support for self-employed people, including those with disabilities starting a business. Available through your municipality.
UWV reintegration support: If you receive WIA (disability benefits) from the UWV, you may be eligible for reintegration instruments that support self-employment, including coaching, training, and equipment.
Kamer van Koophandel (KvK) advisory services: The Dutch Chamber of Commerce provides free business advice, workshops, and networking events for new entrepreneurs.
Social impact funds: Organizations like Start Foundation and Social Enterprise NL provide funding and support for socially oriented businesses.
---
Accessible Business Tools
Choosing accessible tools from the start saves time and frustration. Here are recommended tools evaluated for accessibility:
Website Builders
WordPress with accessible theme: WordPress powers over 40% of the web and offers a wide range of accessible themes. The platform itself is largely keyboard-navigable and screen reader compatible. Choose a theme that meets WCAG 2.1 AA standards.
Squarespace: Offers clean, modern templates with good built-in accessibility. More limited customization but lower technical barrier.
Shopify: For e-commerce, Shopify provides accessible storefront themes and an accessible admin interface.
Invoicing and Accounting
Wave: Free accounting and invoicing software with a clean, accessible interface. Good screen reader compatibility.
FreshBooks: Simple invoicing with good accessibility. Monthly subscription pricing.
Xero: Popular in the UK, Australia, and New Zealand. Reasonable accessibility, though some advanced features are less screen-reader-friendly.
QuickBooks: Widely used in the US and Canada. Accessibility is improving but varies by feature.
Project Management
Notion: Flexible project management and documentation tool with strong keyboard navigation.
Todoist: Clean, simple task management with good screen reader support and keyboard shortcuts.
Trello: Visual project management with some accessibility limitations for screen reader users; Trello has been improving accessibility since 2020.
Asana: Project management with a dedicated accessibility team; regularly publishes VPAT documents.
Communication
Zoom: Strong accessibility features including automatic captions, sign language interpreter spotlight, keyboard shortcuts, and screen reader support.
Microsoft Teams: Excellent accessibility features, real-time captions, and immersive reader for chat.
Slack: Good keyboard navigation and screen reader support; supports text-based communication for those who prefer it.
---
Maintaining Benefits While Earning
One of the most significant concerns for people with disabilities considering self-employment is the potential impact on disability benefits. The rules are complex and vary by country:
United States
SSI: Earned income from self-employment reduces SSI payments, but the PASS plan can shelter startup income. The Substantial Gainful Activity (SGA) threshold for 2025 is $1,620/month (non-blind) or $2,700/month (blind). The Trial Work Period allows you to test your ability to work for 9 months without losing SSDI benefits.
SSDI: The Trial Work Period (TWP) allows 9 months of unlimited earnings while retaining full benefits. After the TWP, the Extended Period of Eligibility provides 36 months of continued eligibility. Impairment-Related Work Expenses (IRWE) can be deducted from earnings calculations.
Medicaid: Many states offer Medicaid Buy-In programs that allow working people with disabilities to retain Medicaid coverage with income significantly above standard limits.
United Kingdom
Universal Credit: Self-employment income is reported monthly. The Minimum Income Floor (MIF) assumes you earn at least minimum wage for your expected hours after 12 months of self-employment, but there is a startup exception period and exemptions for people with limited capability for work.
PIP (Personal Independence Payment): PIP is not means-tested and is not affected by self-employment income.
Access to Work: Available to self-employed people and can cover disability-related business costs.
Canada
CPP Disability: Earning above a threshold may trigger a review, but there is a trial period and automatic reinstatement provisions.
Provincial disability benefits: Rules vary by province. Contact your provincial disability benefits office before starting a business.
Australia
Disability Support Pension (DSP): You can earn up to a threshold before the DSP is reduced. Income above the threshold reduces the DSP by 50 cents per dollar. Working Credit allows you to accumulate credit during low-income periods and draw on it during higher-income periods.
NDIS: Self-employment income does not directly affect NDIS plan funding, as the NDIS is not means-tested.
Germany
Erwerbsminderungsrente (Disability pension): You can earn up to €538/month (as of 2024) with a full disability pension without reduction. For partial disability pensions, higher thresholds apply.
Netherlands
WIA/WAO: Earnings from self-employment are assessed annually. The UWV recalculates benefit levels based on actual earning capacity.
> Important: Benefit rules are complex and change frequently. Before starting a business, consult with a benefits advisor or welfare rights service in your country to model the impact on your specific benefits package.
---
Business Planning with Disability Considerations
When writing your business plan, consider these disability-specific factors:
Capacity planning: Be realistic about your productive hours. If fatigue or pain limits you to 4-5 productive hours per day, plan your business model around that reality rather than aspiring to a schedule you cannot sustain.
Contingency planning: Build in plans for flare-ups, hospitalizations, or periods of reduced capacity. This might include identifying subcontractors who can handle work during those periods, maintaining a financial buffer, or structuring contracts with flexible deadlines.
Accessibility costs: Budget for any assistive technology, accessible business tools, or accessibility-related business expenses. Factor in available grants and funding that offset these costs.
Pricing strategy: Price your services to reflect the value you deliver, not the hours you work. Value-based pricing or project-based pricing is often more sustainable than hourly billing for entrepreneurs who manage fluctuating energy levels.
Scalability: Consider how the business can grow without proportionally increasing your personal workload. Digital products, online courses, templates, and subscription models can generate income without requiring you to trade every hour for money.
---
Tax Implications and Deductions
Self-employed people with disabilities may be eligible for specific tax deductions and credits:
United States
Impairment-Related Work Expenses (IRWE): Expenses for goods and services needed because of your disability to enable you to work are deductible and excluded from SGA calculations.
Disabled Access Credit (IRC § 44): Small businesses can claim a tax credit of up to $5,000 for making their business accessible.
Medical expense deduction: Self-employed individuals can deduct health insurance premiums and medical expenses exceeding 7.5% of adjusted gross income.
Home office deduction: If you work from home due to your disability, the home office deduction applies to a dedicated workspace.
United Kingdom
Business expenses: All disability-related business expenses (assistive technology, interpreter fees, accessible transport) are deductible business expenses.
Capital allowances: Claim capital allowances on assistive technology and equipment purchases.
Australia
Tax deductions: Disability-related work expenses are deductible, including assistive technology not covered by the EAF.
Small business instant asset write-off: Immediate deduction for business assets up to the applicable threshold.
Germany
Behinderten-Pauschbetrag: An annual lump-sum tax deduction for people with disabilities, ranging from €384 (GdB 20) to €7,400 (GdB 100 with specific conditions).
Business expense deductions: Disability-related business expenses are fully deductible.
---
Success Strategies
Start small and test: Begin as a side project or part-time venture before committing full-time. This reduces financial risk and allows you to test demand.
Build a support team: Identify an accountant, a business mentor, and a benefits advisor early. Many of these services are available free through the programs listed above.
Connect with other disabled entrepreneurs: Organisations like Disability:IN (US), the Valuable 500, and national disability business networks provide community, mentorship, and business opportunities.
Invest in accessibility from day one: Make your own business accessible — your website, your documents, your client communications. This is good ethics, good business, and demonstrates your values.
Track your energy, not just your time: Use energy management tools and techniques (such as pacing, the spoon theory model, or structured rest periods) to maintain sustainable productivity.
---
Resources
[PASS Plan Information (US Social Security)](https://www.ssa.gov/disabilityresearch/wi/pass.htm) — Guide to Plan for Achieving Self-Support
[SBA Entrepreneurship Resources](https://www.sba.gov/) — US Small Business Administration
[New Enterprise Allowance (UK)](https://www.gov.uk/new-enterprise-allowance) — UK startup support
[Access to Work (UK)](https://www.gov.uk/access-to-work) — Grants for self-employed disabled people
[NEIS (Australia)](https://www.dewr.gov.au/self-employment-new-business-assistance-neis) — Australian new business assistance
[JobAccess Self-Employment (Australia)](https://www.jobaccess.gov.au/) — Self-employment support for Australians with disabilities
[KfW Gründerkredit (Germany)](https://www.kfw.de/) — German startup loans
[KvK Starten (Netherlands)](https://www.kvk.nl/starten/) — Dutch Chamber of Commerce startup resources
[Disability:IN (US)](https://disabilityin.org/) — US disability business network
[Ticket to Work (US)](https://choosework.ssa.gov/) — Working while receiving disability benefits