Getting Hired With a Disability

The ADA doesn’t require employers to hire applicants with disabilities, but it does prohibit discrimination against them.

By Lisa Guerin , J.D. · UC Berkeley School of Law Updated 8/18/2023

If you have a disability and are searching for a job, you should know how the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) protects you in the hiring process. The ADA prohibits discrimination against employees and job applicants with disabilities. It also requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations for your disabilities—even during the application process (42 U.S.C. § 12112(a)).

Whether it's illegal for an employer to reject a job applicant with a disability depends on the reasons for the employer's decision. If you can do the job, it's illegal for an employer to choose not to hire you because you use a wheelchair or have another disability. But it's not unlawful for an employer to hire the best-qualified candidate—even if that's someone with no disabilities.

Below, we explain who the ADA protects, how the law works, and some common issues that might come up for job applicants with disabilities.

Does the ADA Protect Everyone With a Disability or Medical Condition?

The ADA covers employers with 15 or more employees. Smaller employers aren't required to comply with ADA rules. (But your state might have a law that applies to smaller employers.)

And the ADA only protects you if both of the following are true:

The ADA doesn't have a list of particular diseases or conditions that "automatically" qualify as disabilities. Instead, the law looks at how your impairment affects your ability to function.

You have a disability under the ADA if you have a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits your major life activities, such as:

For example, there are many reasons why someone might use a wheelchair, including illnesses and injuries. But under the ADA, the reason you use a wheelchair is less important than the fact that you're substantially limited in your ability to walk—a major life activity. Unless it's on a very temporary basis, having a condition that keeps you from walking meets the ADA's definition of disability.

Both Congress and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the federal agency responsible for interpreting and enforcing the ADA, have said that the ADA is intended to protect as many people as possible from discrimination and that it should be interpreted broadly (42 U.S.C. § 12101 (note)).

When Is a Disabled Applicant Qualified for the Job?

The ADA doesn't require employers to hire applicants with disabilities. Instead, it prohibits discrimination against qualified applicants with disabilities. If you're qualified for the job, an employer can't choose to not hire you simply because you have a disability.

You're qualified for a job if you meet the job requirements, such as education, licensing, experience, and skills (fluency in a foreign language, for example).

An employer isn't obligated to consider your application if you don't meet the hiring criteria and you can't do the essential functions of the job.

Can You Perform the Essential Functions of the Job?

You must be able to perform the job's "essential functions." Essential functions are the fundamental duties of the job—not the extra tasks an employee does that aren't directly related to the position. For example, a package delivery driver must be able to lift boxes.

An employer isn't required to take away an essential function of a position so you can do the job, even if you have a disability. You must be able to do the primary job duties of the position for which you're applying, with or without a reasonable accommodation. An employer does have to work with you to provide a reasonable accommodation if you need it to do an essential function of the job.

You're also protected from discrimination if there are nonessential duties that you can't perform. For example, an office receptionist might be responsible for replacing heavy water cooler bottles once or twice a month. Lifting the water bottles isn't an essential function of the receptionist's job because there are other people in the office who can do it. So, an applicant for the receptionist job who has a lifting restriction still qualifies for protection under the ADA.

But an applicant or employee who can't perform an essential job function—even with a reasonable accommodation—isn't qualified for the job as a matter of law. The ADA only protects qualified job applicants.

What Are the Essential Functions of a Job?

A job duty is essential if any of the following is true: