A comprehensive guide to disability employment in the UK โ covering the Equality Act 2010, Access to Work, Disability Confident, the disability employment gap, welfare reform impacts, and practical guidance for UK employers.
UK Disability Employment: The Complete Landscape
The UK Disability Employment Gap
The UK disability employment gap โ the difference between employment rates of disabled and non-disabled people โ has been stubbornly persistent:
Year
Non-disabled employment
Disabled employment
Gap
2013
76.4%
45.6%
30.8pp
2018
80.7%
51.7%
29.0pp
2023
82.5%
53.7%
28.8pp
Despite government targets and multiple programmes, the gap has narrowed by only 2 percentage points in a decade. At this rate, parity would take over 140 years.
Key statistics (ONS, 2023):
4.4 million disabled people are in employment
2.3 million disabled people are economically inactive (want to work but face barriers)
Disabled workers earn on average 12.2% less than non-disabled workers (the disability pay gap)
Disabled people are twice as likely to be unemployed as non-disabled people
Legal Framework
Equality Act 2010
The Equality Act is the primary legislation protecting disabled workers:
Key provisions:
Section 6: Definition of disability โ "physical or mental impairment that has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities"
Section 13: Direct discrimination โ treating someone less favourably because of disability
Section 15: Discrimination arising from disability โ treating someone unfavourably because of something arising from their disability (e.g., penalising absence caused by disability)
Section 19: Indirect discrimination โ provisions, criteria, or practices that disadvantage disabled people
Section 20โ21: Duty to make reasonable adjustments โ the employer must take reasonable steps to remove barriers. This is an anticipatory duty (must plan ahead, not just respond to requests).
Schedule 8: Work-specific provisions, including occupational requirements
Reasonable adjustments โ what is "reasonable" depends on:
Effectiveness of the adjustment
Practicability
Cost (relative to employer size and resources)
Disruption to the business
Availability of financial support (e.g., Access to Work)
Public Sector Equality Duty (Section 149)
Public bodies must:
Eliminate unlawful discrimination
Advance equality of opportunity
Foster good relations between disabled and non-disabled people
This requires proactive action, not just avoiding discrimination. Public bodies should conduct equality impact assessments, set equality objectives, and publish equality information.
Government Programmes
Access to Work
The UK's flagship workplace accommodation fund:
What it covers:
Assistive technology and equipment
Support workers (readers, communicators, job coaches)
Travel to work (where public transport is not accessible)
Mental health support service (since 2019)
Communication support at interview (since 2021)
How it works:
Application to DWP (Department for Work and Pensions)
Assessment of needs by approved assessor
Award typically for 1โ3 years, renewable
Employer contributes a cost-sharing element (varies by employer size)
Maximum award: approximately ยฃ66,000/year (2023/24)
Challenges:
Processing times: 4โ12 weeks is common; can delay job starts
Complexity: Application process is not accessible for many disabled applicants
Cap concerns: Maximum award may be insufficient for deaf people needing full-time BSL interpreters
Awareness: Many small employers have never heard of Access to Work
Disability Confident
Three-tier employer accreditation:
Level 1 โ Committed: Sign up, commit to actions
Level 2 โ Employer: Self-assessed against criteria including inclusive recruitment, reasonable adjustments, supporting existing employees
Participation: ~22,000 organisations registered (2023), but only ~200 at Leader level
Criticism:
Self-assessed (Levels 1โ2) โ no verification that practices match claims
Companies can be "Disability Confident" while having minimal disability representation
No requirement to publish disability employment data
Minimal consequences for non-compliance with stated commitments
Supported Employment
IPS (Individual Placement and Support): Growing NHS-funded programme for people with mental health conditions. Evidence-based, effective, but coverage is patchy.
Work and Health Programme: Replaced Work Programme in 2017. Voluntary for disabled participants. Contracted to private providers. Mixed outcomes.
Intensive Personalised Employment Support (IPES): For people furthest from the labour market. Small scale.
Welfare Reform and Disability Employment
UK welfare reform has significantly impacted disabled people's employment:
Work Capability Assessment (WCA)
Assessment determining eligibility for Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) or Universal Credit limited capability for work (LCW/LCWRA)
Conducted by contracted assessors (currently Maximus)
Controversy: High initial denial rates, high appeal success rates (70%+), assessment quality concerns, reports of assessors lacking disability expertise
Stressful process that can worsen mental health conditions and deter employment attempts
Universal Credit
Replaced six legacy benefits with a single payment
Work allowances allow some earnings before benefits taper โ in theory encouraging employment
Problems for disabled people: Monthly assessment period conflicts with fluctuating conditions; digital-first system excludes some disabled people; conditionality requirements may be inappropriate; sanctions risk discourages employment attempts
The Tension
Government simultaneously:
Wants to reduce the disability employment gap (get more disabled people working)
Wants to reduce the disability benefit bill (restrict who qualifies)
These goals conflict: punitive benefit assessments, sanctions threats, and benefit removal create fear of the system that deters employment engagement. People who lose benefits if work attempts fail have rational reasons to avoid trying.
What UK Employers Should Do
Immediate Actions
Get Access to Work educated: Understand what it covers, who can apply, and how long it takes. Build it into your onboarding timeline.
Reasonable adjustments process: Create a clear, simple, fast process for requesting and implementing adjustments. Target: decision within 2 weeks, implementation within 4.
Workplace Adjustments Passport: Adopt the government's portable adjustment passport โ a document recording agreed adjustments that follows the employee between roles/managers.
Disability pay gap analysis: Calculate your disability pay gap. The UK may mandate reporting; getting ahead of this is wise.
Strategic Actions
Set targets: Commit to specific disability employment targets (representation at each level)
Publish data: Voluntarily publish disability workforce data โ transparency builds trust and accountability
Review recruitment: Every stage of your recruitment process should be accessible (application, assessment, interview, offer)
Manager training: Reasonable adjustments training for all line managers โ most adjustments are agreed at manager level
Disability network: Fund and empower a disability Employee Resource Group
Supply chain: Include disability employment in procurement criteria
Resources
GOV.UK: Access to Work application
Equality and Human Rights Commission: Reasonable Adjustments guidance