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U.S. Federal Disability Rights Laws

Disabled Americans are protected by a framework of federal civil rights laws. These laws exist because disabled people fought for them—through protests, lawsuits, and decades of organizing.

This page summarizes the major federal disability rights laws. For detailed information on specific laws, see the dedicated pages linked throughout.


Disability rights in the U.S. are protected by multiple overlapping laws:

LawYearWhat It Covers
Rehabilitation Act (Sections 501, 503, 504)1973Federal programs, contractors, recipients of federal funding
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)1975/1990/2004K-12 education
Fair Housing Act (as amended)1988Housing discrimination
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)1990Employment, public accommodations, state/local government, transportation, telecommunications
Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA)1986Air travel
ADA Amendments Act (ADAAA)2008Expanded ADA’s definition of disability

These laws work together—if one doesn’t cover your situation, another might.


The ADA is the most comprehensive civil rights law for disabled people. It prohibits discrimination based on disability in:

Title I: Employment (employers with 15+ employees)

  • Prohibits discrimination in hiring, firing, promotion, pay, and other terms of employment
  • Requires reasonable accommodations
  • Prohibits retaliation

Title II: State and Local Government

  • All state and local government services, programs, and activities must be accessible
  • Includes public transportation, courts, voting, public buildings, websites

Title III: Public Accommodations

  • Private businesses open to the public must be accessible
  • Includes restaurants, stores, theaters, hotels, doctors’ offices, private schools
  • Requires removal of barriers where “readily achievable”

Title IV: Telecommunications

  • Requires telephone relay services
  • Requires captioning on federally funded public service announcements

Title V: Miscellaneous

  • Prohibits retaliation and coercion
  • Addresses relationship to other laws

Under the ADA (as amended in 2008), a person with a disability:

  • Has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities
  • Has a record of such an impairment
  • Is regarded as having such an impairment

The ADAAA made clear that “disability” should be interpreted broadly.

  • Employment (Title I): File with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
  • Government (Title II): File with the Department of Justice or relevant federal agency
  • Public Accommodations (Title III): File with DOJ or file a private lawsuit
  • Deadlines vary: Check specific requirements for each title

For detailed information, see: Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)


Section 504 prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.

This covers:

  • Public schools and universities (federal education funding)
  • Hospitals receiving Medicare/Medicaid
  • Public housing authorities
  • Nonprofits receiving federal grants
  • Many more
  • Section 504 has no minimum employer size—covers all entities receiving federal funds
  • Predates the ADA (passed in 1973)
  • Some protections overlap with ADA; some are broader or narrower depending on context

File with the federal agency providing funding (e.g., Department of Education, HHS)

For detailed information, see: Section 504


Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)

Section titled “Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)”

IDEA guarantees a free appropriate public education (FAPE) to children with disabilities. Key provisions:

  • Child Find: Schools must identify students who may need special education
  • Evaluation: Comprehensive assessment of suspected disabilities
  • Individualized Education Program (IEP): Tailored plan for each eligible student
  • Least Restrictive Environment (LRE): Students should be educated with non-disabled peers to the maximum extent appropriate
  • Procedural Safeguards: Parents have rights to participate and dispute decisions

Children ages 3-21 (or until graduation) with disabilities in specific categories:

  • Autism
  • Deaf-blindness
  • Deafness
  • Emotional disturbance
  • Hearing impairment
  • Intellectual disability
  • Multiple disabilities
  • Orthopedic impairment
  • Other health impairment
  • Specific learning disability
  • Speech or language impairment
  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Visual impairment including blindness
  • Internal school district processes
  • State complaint procedures
  • Due process hearings
  • Federal complaints to Department of Education

For detailed information, see: IDEA


The Fair Housing Act prohibits housing discrimination based on disability. It requires:

  • Non-discrimination: Can’t refuse to rent/sell because of disability
  • Reasonable accommodations: Changes to rules, policies, or services (e.g., allowing service animals in no-pet housing)
  • Reasonable modifications: Physical changes to units (tenant may pay cost in some cases)
  • Accessible design: New multifamily buildings (4+ units) must meet accessibility standards

People with disabilities (physical or mental) and people associated with them.

  • File with HUD (Department of Housing and Urban Development)
  • File with state/local fair housing agency
  • File a lawsuit

For detailed information, see: Fair Housing Act


The ACAA prohibits discrimination against passengers with disabilities by airlines. It requires:

  • Accessible aircraft and airport facilities
  • Assistance boarding and deplaning
  • Accommodations for mobility devices
  • Seating accommodations
  • Service animal policies (recent changes have limited which animals qualify)
  • File complaint with airline first
  • File with Department of Transportation
  • Limited private legal action

For detailed information, see: Air Carrier Access Act


Establishes disability benefits programs:

  • SSDI (Social Security Disability Insurance): For workers who’ve paid into Social Security
  • SSI (Supplemental Security Income): Needs-based program
  • Medicare: Health insurance connected to SSDI
  • Medicaid: Health insurance connected to SSI and for others who qualify

See: Benefits section

Multiple laws protect disabled voters’ rights:

  • Help America Vote Act (HAVA): Requires accessible voting systems
  • ADA Title II: Covers voting as a government program
  • National Voter Registration Act: Includes accessibility requirements

Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA)

Section titled “Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act (GINA)”

Prohibits discrimination based on genetic information in employment and health insurance.

Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act

Section titled “Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act”

Requires insurance plans covering mental health to provide equivalent coverage to medical/surgical benefits.


Workplace discrimination example:

  • ADA Title I covers private employers with 15+ employees
  • Section 504 covers employers receiving federal funds (any size)
  • State laws may cover smaller employers or provide additional protections

Education example:

  • IDEA provides special education for K-12 students with IEPs
  • Section 504 covers all students with disabilities (may get 504 Plan)
  • ADA Title II covers public schools as government entities
  • ADA Title III covers private schools

Housing example:

  • Fair Housing Act is primary housing law
  • ADA Title II covers public housing
  • Section 504 covers housing with federal funding

  1. Document the discrimination: Dates, people involved, what happened
  2. Identify the right agency: Depends on the law and setting
  3. Meet deadlines: Vary by law (often 180 days to 1 year)
  4. File the complaint: Many agencies allow online filing
  5. Participate in investigation: Respond to requests, provide information
  6. Possible outcomes: Mediation, settlement, hearing, or case closure
  • EEOC: Employment discrimination (ADA Title I)
  • Department of Justice: ADA Titles II and III, Section 504
  • Department of Education Office for Civil Rights: Education discrimination
  • HUD: Housing discrimination
  • Department of Transportation: Air travel, public transit
  • Disability Rights organizations: Each state has a Protection & Advocacy (P&A) organization
  • Legal Aid: Free legal services for those who qualify
  • EEOC: Free assistance with employment complaints
  • Private attorneys: Some take disability rights cases on contingency

Federal disability rights laws are essential but imperfect. Disabled people have documented:

  • Enforcement gaps: Agencies are under-resourced; many violations go unaddressed
  • Employer accommodations requests are often denied: Process can be hostile
  • “Undue hardship” used broadly: Employers and businesses use this defense liberally
  • Slow pace of change: Many buildings, websites, and programs remain inaccessible decades after ADA
  • Employment rates remain low: Despite ADA, disabled people face high unemployment
  • Institutionalization continues: Despite CRPD and Olmstead, many disabled people remain institutionalized

The laws provide a floor—disabled people continue organizing for fuller implementation and additional protections.


ADAPT has fought for disability rights since the 1980s, from accessible transportation to community living.

Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF) provides legal advocacy and policy work.

National Council on Independent Living (NCIL) represents Centers for Independent Living nationwide.

Autistic Self Advocacy Network (ASAN) advocates on policy affecting autistic people.

National Disability Rights Network (NDRN) coordinates the Protection & Advocacy system.

Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law focuses on rights of people with mental disabilities.


  • EEOC: eeoc.gov or 1-800-669-4000
  • Department of Justice ADA Information Line: 1-800-514-0301
  • HUD: hud.gov or 1-800-669-9777
  • Department of Education OCR: ed.gov/ocr
  • ADA National Network: adata.org (regional ADA centers)
  • Disability Rights organizations by state: ndrn.org/about/ndrn-member-agencies
  • Job Accommodation Network: askjan.org
  • Disability Rights Advocates: dralegal.org
  • DREDF: dredf.org
  • Legal Aid in your area: www.lawhelp.org

Have you navigated federal disability rights laws? Filed complaints? Won or lost cases?

Share your knowledge: Contribution Form

We especially welcome:

  • First-person experiences with enforcement
  • Tips for filing effective complaints
  • Information on how laws work in practice

This page centers disabled people’s expertise. Federal disability rights laws exist because disabled people organized, protested, and demanded them.