Neurodiversity Employment in the UK: Legal Protections, Employer Programmes, and the Path to Inclusion
The UK Neurodiversity Employment Picture
Neurodivergent people — including those who are autistic, have ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia, dyscalculia, Tourette's syndrome, or other neurological differences — face significant employment barriers in the UK:
Autism: Only 29% of autistic adults are in employment (ONS, 2023) — the lowest of any disability group in the UK
ADHD: Growing recognition but limited employment-specific data; estimated 60% employment rate (below non-ADHD peers)
Dyslexia: Affects ~10% of the UK population; employment rate near average but career progression lags
Dyspraxia/DCD: Underresearched employment impact but known barriers in manual and coordination-intensive roles
Legal Protections
Equality Act 2010 and Neurodivergence
- Autism: Generally meets the definition of disability under the Equality Act (substantial, long-term effect on day-to-day activities)
- ADHD: Typically meets the definition when unmedicated effects are considered (the Act assesses function WITHOUT treatment)
- Dyslexia: Usually qualifies, particularly for roles involving reading and writing
- Without formal diagnosis: The Equality Act does not require formal diagnosis — it assesses the effect of the impairment on daily activities. However, in practice, employers and tribunals often expect diagnostic evidence.
The Diagnosis Problem
- NHS autism diagnosis waiting list: average 3–5 years in many areas (some areas 7+ years)