Why disability inclusion isn’t just ‘nice to have’ – it’s essential for business

Workplace wellness & culture
Estimated read time: 6 mins
Last updated: 07/11/2025

Let’s be direct: disability inclusion isn’t a ‘nice to have.’ It’s not a corporate social responsibility box to tick, a compliance exercise to get through, or a feel-good initiative that sounds impressive in annual reports.

It’s a fundamental business advantage that affects innovation, talent acquisition, employee retention, market reach, and your bottom line.

Here’s the reality: 1 in 5 people in the UK have a disability – that’s over 14 million people. Your customers include disabled people. Your potential employees include disabled people. And yes, your current team almost certainly includes disabled people, whether you know it or not (many disabilities are invisible).

Yet the disability employment gap remains stubbornly wide. Only 53.2% of disabled people are in employment, compared to 82% of non-disabled people. That’s not because disabled people can’t work – it’s because too many workplaces haven’t removed the barriers that prevent them from thriving.

This isn’t about charity. It’s about recognising that building an inclusive workplace – one that works for people with diverse needs, abilities, and experiences – makes you a better, more competitive, more innovative business.

Let’s talk about why disability inclusion is essential, what it actually looks like in practice, and how workspace design plays a bigger role than most businesses realise.

The business case for disability inclusion (it’s stronger than you think)

1. You’re missing out on top talent

The unemployment rate for disabled people is nearly double that of non-disabled people – not because disabled people lack skills or qualifications, but because recruitment processes, workplace cultures, and physical environments create barriers.

When you build an inclusive hiring process and accessible workspace, you tap into a highly skilled, deeply underutilised talent pool. Disabled employees bring:

  • Problem-solving skills honed through navigating inaccessible systems daily
  • Resilience and adaptability
  • Diverse perspectives that challenge groupthink
  • Loyalty (inclusive employers earn it)

Companies serious about “hiring the best” can’t afford to exclude 20% of the population before they even walk through the door.

2. Inclusive companies outperform their competitors

Research from Accenture found that companies leading on disability inclusion achieved:

  • 28% higher revenue
  • 2x higher net income
  • 30% higher profit margins

Why? Because inclusive cultures drive innovation, improve decision-making, reduce turnover, and strengthen employee engagement across the board – not just among disabled employees.

Inclusion isn’t a cost centre. It’s a competitive advantage.

3. Your customers are watching (and choosing)

The Purple Poundthe spending power of disabled people and their families in the UK – is estimated at £274 billion annually. Globally, it’s over $8 trillion.

Disabled customers and their networks actively choose brands that demonstrate genuine inclusion. They also avoid brands that don’t. When your workplace culture reflects inclusivity, it shows up in your marketing, customer service, product design, and brand reputation.

If you’re not accessible, you’re leaving money on the table.

4. It’s the law (and ignoring it is expensive)

The Equality Act 2010 requires UK employers to make “reasonable adjustments” for disabled employees and job applicants. Failure to comply can result in:

  • Employment tribunals
  • Financial penalties
  • Reputational damage

But legal compliance is the baseline – the bare minimum. True inclusion goes far beyond avoiding lawsuits.

5. Universal design benefits everyone

Here’s the thing about accessibility: when you design for people with disabilities, you make things better for everyone.

Ramps help wheelchair users – but also parents with prams, delivery drivers with trolleys, and anyone with a temporary injury. Closed captions help deaf people – but also commuters watching videos on mute, people in noisy environments, and non-native English speakers.

Accessible, inclusive design is simply good design. It makes your workplace more functional, flexible, and human for everyone.

What disability inclusion actually looks like in the workplace

Inclusion isn’t one thing – it’s an ecosystem of policies, culture, physical environment, and everyday practices that work together. Here’s what it involves:

1. Accessible physical environments

This is where workspace design becomes critical. An inclusive office includes:

  • Step-free access (lifts, ramps, automatic doors)
  • Wheelchair-accessible desks, meeting rooms, and facilities
  • Adjustable furniture (standing desks, ergonomic chairs)
  • Clear, wide pathways (no clutter, easy navigation)
  • Accessible toilets (with appropriate support rails, space, signage)
  • Sensory considerations (controllable lighting, quiet spaces, reduced noise)
  • Visual accessibility (high-contrast signage, large print options, Braille where needed)

At Work.Life, accessibility isn’t an afterthought – it’s built into every location. Our spaces include disabled access, adjustable workstations, private phone booths for sensory breaks, and varied environments to suit different needs.

2. Flexible working arrangements

Flexibility is an access need for many disabled people. That might mean:

  • Remote or hybrid working to manage health conditions or avoid inaccessible commutes
  • Flexible hours to accommodate medical appointments, fatigue, or medication schedules
  • Part-time options for people with fluctuating conditions

Flexible workspace supports this naturally. Members can access coworking spaces across multiple locations, work during off-peak hours for reduced sensory overload, or book private offices for days when open-plan feels overwhelming.

3. Inclusive communication and technology

  • Screen readers and assistive technology supported across all digital platforms
  • Closed captions on video calls (should be standard, not optional)
  • Multiple formats for information (written, verbal, visual)
  • Clear, plain language (avoids jargon, prioritises clarity)

4. Recruitment and onboarding processes

  • Application processes that don’t rely solely on CVs (which can disadvantage people with gaps due to health or barriers)
  • Interview adjustments offered proactively (extra time, alternative formats, accessible venues)
  • Clear, accessible job descriptions that focus on outcomes, not arbitrary requirements
  • Disability confidence in hiring managers (training to reduce unconscious bias)

5. Workplace culture and attitudes

This is the hardest part – and the most important. Inclusion fails when:

  • Disabled people feel they have to hide or minimise their needs
  • Adjustments are treated as “special treatment” rather than levelling the playing field
  • Disability is only mentioned during awareness days or diversity reports

True inclusion means:

  • Psychological safety to request adjustments without stigma
  • Representation in leadership, not just entry-level roles
  • Authentic allyship from non-disabled colleagues
  • Listening to disabled employees as the experts on their own needs

How flexible workspace supports disability inclusion

Traditional office leases often lock businesses into fixed layouts, long-term commitments, and expensive fit-outs. If accessibility isn’t designed in from day one, retrofitting can be prohibitively costly.

Flexible workspace providers like Work.Life remove these barriers by:

1. Accessibility built in from the start

Every Work.Life location includes disabled access, accessible facilities, and varied workspace types to suit different needs. You’re not starting from scratch – you’re moving into a space that’s already designed with inclusion in mind.

2. Multiple space types for different needs

Not everyone thrives in open-plan coworking. Some people need:

  • Private offices for reduced sensory input
  • Quiet phone booths for focused work or managing anxiety
  • Breakout areas for recharge time
  • Meeting rooms with AV equipment for accessible presentations

Choice is access.

3. Flexibility to adapt as your team grows

Your team’s needs will change. Someone might need remote work for a period, then return part-time. Another person might need a private office temporarily while managing a health condition.

Flexible workspace scales with you – no need to renegotiate leases or pay for unused space.

4. Multiple locations reduce commute barriers

For many disabled people, long or inaccessible commutes are a major employment barrier. Work.Life’s locations across London, Manchester, and Reading mean teams can work closer to home, reducing fatigue and increasing accessibility.

Where to start: Practical steps for building an inclusive workplace

If you’re ready to move beyond good intentions, here’s where to begin:

Step 1: Audit your current accessibility

  • Is your office physically accessible (ramps, lifts, accessible toilets)?
  • Are your digital tools and platforms compatible with screen readers?
  • Can people request adjustments without jumping through hoops?

Don’t guess – ask disabled employees and accessibility experts.

Step 2: Make flexibility the default

Remote work, flexible hours, and varied workspace options shouldn’t require special permission. They should be standard practice.

Step 3: Train your team (especially managers)

Unconscious bias training isn’t enough. Managers need practical training on:

  • How to have conversations about adjustments
  • Recognising ableism in workplace culture
  • Supporting employees with fluctuating or invisible disabilities

Step 4: Listen to disabled people

If you’re making decisions about disability inclusion without involving disabled people, you’re doing it wrong. Hire disabled employees, consult disabled-led organisations, and actually listen to feedback.

Step 5: Choose workspace that supports inclusion

If you’re looking for office space, prioritise accessibility from the outset. Flexible workspace with built-in accessibility features means you can focus on culture and people – not expensive retrofits and inflexible leases.

The bottom line

Disability inclusion isn’t about ticking boxes or meeting quotas. It’s about building a workplace where talented people can do their best work, regardless of their disability.

When you remove barriers – physical, cultural, systemic – you don’t just benefit disabled employees. You build a more innovative, resilient, higher-performing business that attracts top talent, serves a broader customer base, and outperforms competitors.

Inclusive workplaces aren’t “nice to have.” They’re essential.

And the best time to start building one? Today.

Ready to create a more inclusive workspace?

Work.Life’s flexible offices and coworking spaces across London, Manchester, and Reading are designed with accessibility built in – step-free access, adjustable workstations, varied environments, and the flexibility to adapt as your team’s needs evolve.

Book a tour and see how inclusive workspace supports your team’s success.

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