UNDERSTANDING DISABILITY DEFINITIONS
Who is Protected Under the ADA?
Navigate disability definitions with confidence
Last Updated: December 2025
One of the most common questions HR professionals ask about the Americans with Disabilities Act is surprisingly complex: “Does this person have a disability under the ADA?” Understanding who is protected under the law is critical for compliance, but the answer isn’t always straightforward. This comprehensive guide breaks down the ADA’s definition of disability, helping you navigate gray areas with confidence.
Table of Contents
WHY THE DEFINITION OF DISABILITY MATTERS
Before we dive into the details, let’s understand why getting this right is so important:
For Compliance
You must comply with the ADA for individuals who meet the definition of disability. Failing to provide reasonable accommodations to someone covered by the ADA exposes your organization to discrimination claims, EEOC investigations, and potential lawsuits.
For Avoiding Over-reach
Conversely, you need to understand the boundaries. Not every medical condition triggers ADA obligations, and knowing when you’re not required to accommodate helps you maintain consistent policies.
For Focusing Your Energy
The 2008 ADA Amendments Act (ADAAA) made it clear that Congress wants employers to spend less time debating whether someone has a disability and more time on the interactive process of identifying reasonable accommodations.
The key insight: The definition of disability is intentionally broad. If you’re spending hours debating whether someone is covered, you’re probably missing the point. When in doubt, engage in the interactive process.
THE THREE-PART DEFINITION: AN OVERVIEW
Under the ADA, an individual has a disability if they meet any one of these three criteria:
Actual Disability
A physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities.
Example
An employee with Type 1 diabetes that affects their endocrine system has an actual disability.
Record of Disability
A history of, or having been misclassified as having, an impairment that substantially limited a major life activity.
Example
An employee who was successfully treated for cancer five years ago has a record of disability, even if they’re currently healthy.
Regarded As Having a Disability
Being subjected to a prohibited action because of an actual or perceived impairment (unless the impairment is both transitory and minor).
Example
An employer doesn’t promote an employee because they assume their facial scars will make clients uncomfortable. The employee is protected even if the scars don’t actually limit any major life activity.
Critical point: An individual only needs to satisfy ONE of these three prongs to be protected. They don’t need to prove all three.
PRONG 1: ACTUAL DISABILITY
The first prong is what most people think of when they hear “disability”—someone who currently has an impairment that substantially limits a major life activity.
The Three-Part Analysis
To determine if someone has an actual disability, you analyze:
Does the person have a physical or mental impairment?
Does that impairment affect one or more major life activities?
Does it substantially limit those activities?
All three elements must be present for Prong 1 coverage.
UNDERSTANDING “PHYSICAL OR MENTAL IMPAIRMENT”
Physical Impairments
Physical impairments include any physiological disorder or condition affecting body systems:
Neurological:
Epilepsy, MS, Parkinson’s, Cerebral palsy, Brain injuries, Chronic migraines
Musculoskeletal:
Arthritis, Back conditions, Carpal tunnel, Muscular dystrophy, Amputations
Cardiovascular/Respiratory:
Heart disease, Asthma, COPD, Cystic fibrosis
Endocrine:
Diabetes (Type 1 & 2), Thyroid disorders
Other:
Cancer, HIV/AIDS, Lupus, Crohn’s disease, IBS, Cosmetic disfigurement
Mental Impairments
Mental impairments include any mental or psychological disorder:
Mood Disorders:
Major depression, Bipolar disorder, Seasonal affective disorder
Anxiety Disorders:
GAD, Panic disorder, Social anxiety, PTSD, OCD
Psychotic Disorders:
Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective disorder
Cognitive/Developmental:
Intellectual disabilities, Autism spectrum, ADHD, Learning disabilities
Other:
Eating disorders, Dementia, TBI with cognitive effects, Substance use disorder (past)
What Is NOT Considered an Impairment
The ADA explicitly excludes certain conditions:
- Physical characteristics (height, weight, eye/hair color)
- Personality traits (poor judgment, quick temper, irresponsibility)
- Cultural, economic, or environmental disadvantages
- Age itself (though age-related conditions may be)
WHAT ARE MAJOR LIFE ACTIVITIES?
The ADA defines “major life activities” broadly, and the 2008 amendments expanded the definition significantly.
Basic Major Life Activities
These are everyday activities that most people perform with little or no difficulty:
Self-care:
Caring for oneself, Eating, Sleeping
Physical:
Walking, Standing, Sitting, Reaching, Lifting, Bending
Sensory:
Seeing, Hearing, Speaking
Cognitive:
Learning, Reading, Concentrating, Thinking, Remembering
Social:
Interacting with others, Communicating, Working
Other:
Breathing, Performing manual tasks
Major Bodily Functions (Added by ADAAA)
The 2008 amendments explicitly included major bodily functions as major life activities. This was a game-changer because it made clear that conditions affecting internal systems are covered even if they don’t obviously affect external activities.
Functions of the immune system, normal cell growth, digestive, genitourinary, bowel, bladder, neurological, brain, respiratory, circulatory, cardiovascular, endocrine, hemic (blood), lymphatic, musculoskeletal, reproductive functions, and operation of individual organs.
Why Major Bodily Functions Matter
Before 2008, someone with well-controlled diabetes might not be considered disabled because they could perform daily activities without obvious limitation. Now, because diabetes affects the endocrine system (a major bodily function), the person clearly has a disability under the ADA—regardless of whether they can walk, work, or perform other external activities normally.
Example applications:
Cancer affecting normal cell growth = disability
HIV affecting immune system = disability
Diabetes affecting endocrine function = disability
Epilepsy affecting neurological function = disability
WHAT DOES “SUBSTANTIALLY LIMITS” REALLY MEAN?
This is where the rubber meets the road. An impairment must substantially limit a major life activity to be an actual disability.
The Pre-2008 Problem
Before the ADA Amendments Act, courts set the bar very high. The Supreme Court held that substantially limits meant an impairment must “prevent or severely restrict” a major life activity. This created absurd results where people with serious conditions were denied ADA protection.
The Post-2008 Standard
The ADAAA explicitly rejected the “prevent or severely restrict” standard. “Substantially limits” should be construed broadly in favor of expansive coverage. It is not a demanding standard.
Key Principles
1. “Substantially limits” is not a demanding standard
An impairment does not need to prevent or significantly restrict a major life activity. It needs to substantially limit it, which is a lower bar.
2. Compare to most people in the general population
The comparison is to how most people in the general population perform the major life activity, not to those with the same condition.
3. Focus on limitations, not capabilities
Don’t focus on what the person can still do. Focus on how their impairment limits them compared to most people.
4. Consider “condition, manner, or duration”
An activity can be substantially limited if the condition under which it’s performed is restricted, the manner is restricted, or the duration is restricted.
5. Effects of mitigating measures are generally ignored
When determining if someone has a disability, ignore the positive effects of medication, medical devices, assistive technology, and accommodations.
Exception: The ameliorative effects of ordinary eyeglasses or contact lenses ARE considered.
6. Episodic conditions evaluated when active
If a condition is episodic or in remission, determine if it would substantially limit a major life activity when active.
WHEN TO STOP ANALYZING AND START ACCOMMODATING
The Most Important Guidance
If you’re spending hours debating whether someone has a disability, you’re missing the point of the ADA.
The EEOC’s Message
The EEOC has been clear since the 2008 amendments: Congress wanted employers to spend less time determining who is covered and more time on the interactive process of finding reasonable accommodations.
The Practical Reality
In most cases:
It doesn’t matter whether the person fits precisely into Prong 1, 2, or 3
It doesn’t matter if the condition is temporary or permanent
It doesn’t matter if you’re 100% sure they have a disability
What matters:
Someone has a medical condition affecting their work
They’ve requested an accommodation
You can likely provide something that helps
The Low-Risk Approach
Provide reasonable accommodations even when you’re unsure about ADA coverage.
Why?
✓ Most accommodations are low-cost or no-cost
✓ Accommodations often improve productivity for everyone
✓ You avoid discrimination claims
✓ You build employee loyalty and trust
✓ You create an inclusive culture
Example:
An employee says they have carpal tunnel syndrome and asks for an ergonomic keyboard. You’re not sure if it’s “substantially limiting” their manual tasks.
Don’t:
Spend three days researching ADA definitions and requesting medical documentation.
Do:
Buy the $50 ergonomic keyboard. It helps the employee, prevents the condition from worsening, and eliminates any ADA risk.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
1. The definition of disability is broad—after the 2008 amendments, more people are covered than ever before. When in doubt, assume coverage.
2. You only need one prong—actual disability, record of disability, OR regarded as disabled. Don’t make employees prove all three.
3. Mitigating measures don’t matter—evaluate disabilities without considering medication, assistive devices, or accommodations.
4. Episodic conditions are disabilities—evaluate them when active, not during symptom-free periods.
5. Mental health counts—depression, anxiety, PTSD, and other mental health conditions are fully covered.
6. When in doubt, accommodate—spend less time analyzing disability status and more time on the interactive process.