We celebrate Disability Pride Month every July. It’s an important moment for disabled people to come together as a community. An opportunity to share experiences and start conversations.
It’s a celebration of the creativity, resilience, and achievements of disabled people.
Disability Pride Month is for anyone who is disabled – or anyone who wishes to show their allyship by celebrating their disabled communities, like businesses.
It's a time for embracing disability identity positively. And challenging the negative attitudes that hold disabled people back.
1. Where did Disability Pride Month come from?
Disability Pride Month began in Boston, USA, in 1990 – the same year the Americans with Disabilities Act was passed. Since then, it’s grown into a global movement. Scope has proudly supported the growth of Disability Pride Month in the UK since 2009.
2. Is it the same as LGBTQ+ Pride?
No. Disability Pride is a separate celebration, focused on disability identity and rights. Some people identify with both communities and both movements are about visibility, inclusion, and challenging negative attitudes.
3. Why does Disability Pride matter?
Because disabled people still face unfair treatment and harmful stereotypes.
3 in 4 disabled people say they’ve experienced negative attitudes.
Disability Pride helps change the conversation. It’s a chance to speak up, be proud, and create change.
4. How to set up a fundraising page and pay in your fundraising money
Set up an online fundraising page
You can set up a fundraising page for Disability Pride Month so people can easily donate and support you. Online fundraising is a simple way to reach more people and raise more money for Scope. Simply set up an online fundraising page through Just Giving.
Pay in your fundraising money
You can pay in your fundraising money online, by phone or by post. The simple steps of how to pay in your money can be found here
Send fundraising donations raised by an organisation by bank transfer
You can easily make a bank transfer to Scope if you have collected fundraising donations through your organisation. Please email partnerships@scope.org.uk to make a bank transfer from your organisation.
The Disability Pride Flag was designed by Ann Magill. The rainbow of colours on the disability pride flag represents the various experiences and needs within the disabled community. Such as non-visible, sensory, physical, developmental and mental impairments and conditions.
The banded arrangement of the colours represents the barriers many disabled people face and have to navigate through.
This is what each colour represents:
Physical impairments and conditions
Neurodiversity
Non-visible and undiagnosed impairments and conditions
Emotional and psychiatric conditions, including mental health, anxiety and depression
Hearing impaired, vision impaired, audio processing and all other sensory impairments and conditions
The charcoal background is to represent people in the community who have experienced ableism, and to protest against this
Join a growing community of organisations celebrating disability pride with Scope.
Disability Pride Month 2026 is your chance to be part of a powerful national movement that celebrates the diversity, creativity and strength of the UK’s 16 million disabled people.
Our partners help raise awareness, amplify disabled voices, and create meaningful change across workplaces and communities.
Partnering with Scope means you’ll have the tools, guidance and support to make Disability Pride Month meaningful across your organisation.
Together, we can put Disability Pride Month on the map and create an equal future with disabled people.
If your organisation is ready to help raise awareness, raise money, and celebrate disabled people this July, we’d love to work with you.
To become a Disability Pride Month 2026 partner, contact us at: partnerships@scope.org.uk