Reasonable Adjustments / Disability at Work

If you are struggling at work because of a physical or mental health condition, disability, neurodivergence, or long-term medical issue, the problem is not always your performance. Sometimes the real issue is that the workplace, role, process, or management approach has not been adjusted properly.

At Zain Legal & Co., we assist clients with reasonable adjustments and disability-at-work disputes by helping them understand their rights, frame adjustment requests clearly, assess employer refusals, preserve evidence, and take practical next steps. We support clients with adjustment requests, disability discrimination concerns, grievances, sickness-related problems, capability processes, ACAS early conciliation, and tribunal-focused preparation.

Handled properly, a reasonable adjustments issue is not just about asking for help. It can be central to protecting your job, reducing stress, improving performance, and preventing a workplace problem from turning into dismissal, resignation, or tribunal proceedings.

What Are Reasonable Adjustments?

Current ACAS guidance says reasonable adjustments are changes an employer makes to remove or reduce a disadvantage related to someone’s disability. They can apply during recruitment, while someone is doing the job, or when workplace processes place the disabled person at a disadvantage.

Examples can include:

• changes to duties or workload

• adjusted hours or flexible arrangements

• changes to how meetings are run

• extra equipment or software

• quiet workspace arrangements

• extra time for certain tasks

• changes to trigger points or absence procedures

• support for mental health, neurodiversity, or sensory needs

The right adjustment depends on the person, the job, the workplace, and the disadvantage being experienced. That is why a tailored approach matters.

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Who Counts as Disabled at Work?

Under section 6 of the Equality Act 2010, a person has a disability if they have a physical or mental impairment that has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on their ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities.

In practice, many workers do not immediately think of themselves as disabled, especially where the issue involves mental health, chronic illness, fluctuating conditions, or neurodivergence. Current ACAS guidance also notes that many neurodivergent people may be considered disabled under the Equality Act 2010 and can have protection against discrimination and a right to reasonable adjustments.

That is one reason why early advice matters. A client may believe they simply have a workplace problem, when legally they may have a disability-related rights issue.

Why Acting Early Matters

Reasonable adjustments disputes often worsen through delay. The employee continues struggling without support. Performance concerns build. Sickness absence increases. Capability warnings begin. The employer says the issue was never explained clearly enough. Evidence becomes harder to organise.

Acting early helps with:

• documenting the disadvantage clearly

• making a proper adjustment request

• preserving emails, OH reports, medical evidence, meeting notes and policies

• identifying whether the issue also overlaps with discrimination, harassment or dismissal risk

• challenging refusals before the position hardens

• protecting your position if the case later moves to grievance, ACAS or tribunal

In many cases, the earlier the problem is framed properly, the better the outcome.

How Zain Legal & Co. Can Help

1. Reasonable Adjustment Request Support

We help clients explain the workplace disadvantage, identify the most realistic adjustments, and present the request clearly and persuasively.

2. Employer Refusal and Failure-to-Adjust Cases

If the employer refuses, delays, or offers an inadequate response, we help assess whether the refusal is defensible and whether the issue may amount to disability discrimination.

3. Mental Health and Neurodiversity at Work

These are major current search and dispute areas. We help clients dealing with anxiety, depression, PTSD, autism, ADHD, dyslexia, and other neurodivergent or mental-health-related workplace issues where adjustments should be considered.

4. Capability, Absence and Performance Overlap

Many reasonable adjustments disputes are linked to capability processes, performance concerns, or sickness absence. We help identify whether the employer is approaching the issue fairly and lawfully.

5. Grievance, ACAS and Tribunal-Aware Support

Where internal problem-solving fails, we help structure grievances, appeals, ACAS strategy, and tribunal-focused case preparation.

6. Practical Problem-Solving

Clients often want a clear answer to one question: what should I do now? We focus on the real next step, not just a general statement of rights.

The Disability-at-Work Problems People Search About Most

The strongest search-intent concerns in this area usually include:

• what counts as a reasonable adjustment

• can my employer refuse adjustments

• disability and sickness absence problems

• mental health adjustments at work

• neurodiversity and workplace support

• failure to make reasonable adjustments claims

• Access to Work versus employer duties

• grievance support for disability discrimination

• whether I need medical evidence

• tribunal time limits

This page is written to answer those real concerns clearly and convert that traffic into informed enquiries.

Access to Work and a Common Misunderstanding

One of the most common points of confusion is Access to Work. Current GOV.UK guidance says Access to Work does not pay for reasonable adjustments that an employer is legally required to make. It can support some extra practical help, but it is not a substitute for the employer’s duty under the Equality Act.

That distinction matters because some workers are wrongly told that nothing can happen until Access to Work is involved. That is not the legal test. The employer’s own adjustment duty still matters.

What Makes Zain Legal & Co. Different

Many employment-law pages explain reasonable adjustments in a generic way. What clients usually need is practical support when they are already under pressure at work.

At Zain Legal & Co., the value is in the way the issue is handled:

• practical next-step advice

• strong written communication

• careful issue and evidence analysis

• support with requests, refusals, grievances, ACAS and tribunal preparation

• a structured and affordable service for clients who need focused help without unnecessary complication

This page should also visibly reference your five-star reviews. Disability-at-work clients often feel exhausted, anxious, and worried about losing their job. Clear trust signals matter.

Frequently asked questions

A reasonable adjustment is a change an employer makes to remove or reduce a disadvantage related to someone’s disability. The adjustment must be considered in the context of the individual and the role.
An employer may argue that a proposed adjustment is not reasonable, but a refusal is not automatically lawful. The real question is whether the adjustment duty applies and whether the refusal is justified on the facts.
You may still have protection under the Equality Act 2010. Current ACAS guidance says many neurodivergent people may be considered disabled under the Act, and mental health conditions can also amount to disabilities where the legal test is met.
Current ACAS guidance says that if an employer does not make reasonable adjustments for someone at work or a job applicant, it could be a type of disability discrimination called failure to make reasonable adjustments.
Not always in the same form, but medical or occupational health evidence is often helpful. The right evidence will depend on the issue, the adjustment requested, and the employer’s stated concerns.
No. Current GOV.UK guidance says Access to Work does not pay for reasonable adjustments that an employer is legally required to make. That is why legal review of the employer’s own duty can be important.

Book a Consultation

If you are dealing with disability-related workplace problems, a refusal of adjustments, mental health or neurodiversity issues at work, or a grievance linked to disability discrimination, do not leave the matter to drift.

Book a consultation through:

Zain Legal & Co. can review the issue, assess the legal position, and help you take the right next step with clarity and confidence.

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