Disability Discrimination: Recognizing and Pursuing Legal Remedies

Disability discrimination — being denied a job, housing, education, or public service because of a disability — is prohibited under federal law in the United States, yet enforcement depends almost entirely on individuals knowing what the law covers and how to use it. This page explains what legally constitutes disability discrimination, how federal protections operate in practice, the most common situations where violations arise, and the factors that determine whether a complaint is likely to move forward.


Definition and scope

The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, commonly called the ADA, is the broadest federal statute governing disability discrimination. It covers employment (Title I), state and local government services (Title II), and private businesses open to the public (Title III). The ADA National Network describes the law as protecting individuals who have a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, those with a record of such an impairment, and those who are regarded as having one — a three-part definition that deliberately extends protection beyond formally diagnosed conditions.

The Rehabilitation Act of 1973, specifically Section 504, applies the same nondiscrimination principle to any program or activity receiving federal financial assistance — meaning public schools, universities, and hospitals that accept Medicare or Medicaid funding fall under its reach even if they are technically private institutions. The regulatory context for disability created by these overlapping statutes means a single employer or institution may be simultaneously subject to ADA Title I, Section 504, and state civil rights laws.

Discrimination under these frameworks is not limited to overt refusal. It encompasses failure to provide reasonable accommodations, applying discriminatory qualification standards, and associating with a person who has a disability — a form of "associational discrimination" explicitly recognized by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).


How it works

Federal disability discrimination law functions through an enforcement architecture that requires the aggrieved party to initiate a complaint, rather than proactively monitoring compliance. The EEOC handles employment complaints under ADA Title I. The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ Civil Rights Division) enforces Titles II and III. The U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights (OCR) handles complaints in educational settings covered by Section 504 and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).

For employment cases, the process follows four discrete phases:

  1. Charge filing — A complaint must be filed with the EEOC within 180 days of the discriminatory act, or within 300 days if a state or local agency also has jurisdiction over the claim (EEOC charge filing).
  2. Investigation — The EEOC investigates, which may include requesting documents, interviewing witnesses, and conducting site visits.
  3. Conciliation or right-to-sue — If the EEOC finds reasonable cause, it attempts voluntary resolution. If no resolution is reached, or if the EEOC declines to pursue the case, it issues a "right-to-sue" letter.
  4. Litigation — The complainant may then file a lawsuit in federal court, typically within 90 days of receiving the right-to-sue letter.

The ADA caps compensatory and punitive damages based on employer size, ranging from $50,000 for employers with 15–100 employees to $300,000 for employers with more than 500 employees (42 U.S.C. § 1981a), though back pay and reinstatement are not subject to these caps.


Common scenarios

The disability rights landscape documented in federal agency data points to five recurring fact patterns where discrimination claims arise most frequently:


Decision boundaries

Not every adverse outcome connected to a disability constitutes actionable discrimination. The legal analysis turns on a set of specific threshold questions that determine whether a claim has legal footing:

Coverage — Is the individual covered by the ADA or Rehabilitation Act? The impairment must substantially limit a major life activity. Since the ADA Amendments Act of 2008 (ADAAA, Pub. L. 110-325), courts interpret "substantially limits" broadly, and the comparison class is the general population, not a specific occupational group.

Qualification — For employment cases, the person must be a "qualified individual" — meaning able to perform the essential functions of the job with or without reasonable accommodation. An employer who reassigns essential functions under the guise of accommodation has not necessarily satisfied the standard.

Nexus to disability — The adverse action must be causally connected to the disability or the request for accommodation. Timing matters: an adverse action taken shortly after an accommodation request can establish an inference of retaliation, which is separately prohibited under the ADA.

Accommodation versus undue hardship — The distinction between reasonable accommodation and undue hardship is factual, not categorical. Courts weigh the nature and cost of the accommodation against the employer's overall financial resources and operational structure. A modification that imposes genuine difficulty on a 12-person firm may be entirely reasonable for a multinational corporation.

Direct threat — An employer may lawfully exclude an individual who poses a "direct threat" to the health or safety of others — but the threat must be based on objective medical evidence, not generalized fear or stereotype. The EEOC specifies that the threat must be significant, imminent, and not reducible by reasonable accommodation.


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