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Home Blog 7 Blind Employment Statistics You Need to Know
In this infographic, we explore 7 key blind employment statistics, including the unemployment rate, adjustments at work, common barriers, misconceptions and more.
January 20, 2026
The fact that there has been no real improvement in a generation signals a systemic failure in making workplaces accessible and inclusive. Despite advances in technology and disability rights, the blind and low vision community are still not benefiting from increased employment opportunities.
These include:
Adjustments are sometimes treated as exceptions or signs of difficulty. In reality, they’re the reason people can do their jobs well. These adjustments can range from screen readers, braille displays and magnification software, to modified lighting, accessible office layouts, or reserved time for medical appointments.
However, younger people, aged 18-29, are more optimistic, with 44% believing it was likely they would have a job in the next 12 months. Three quarters of people who want to work don’t expect to be hired anytime soon. That expectation alone is damaging. It shapes confidence, career planning, and whether people even apply in the first place.
However, it’s encouraging that young blind professionals have hope, because confidence is an important asset in a job search. At the same time, it puts the onus on employers and society to validate that optimism by removing barriers and actually hiring these young candidates.
They include:
These barriers appear before day one on the job. Online application systems that don’t work with screen readers. Interviews that rely heavily on visual tasks. Assumptions made before a conversation even starts.
These findings make it clear that the ball is in the employers’ court in many ways. The call to action is for employers to examine their hiring processes critically (are they accessible by design?), provide disability awareness training, and adopt an open-minded approach focused on abilities rather than assumptions.
Companies should ensure that blind or low vision employees have access to the same career development resources as others. From training courses (with accessible materials) to stretch assignments and leadership programs. It’s also important to foster a workplace culture where managers understand how to support and evaluate a blind employee’s performance fairly.
However, despite obligations under the Equality Act to make adjustments, 23% said they would not be willing. Such an attitude in 2026 is frankly unacceptable, and it underscores the gap between policy and practice. The law might mandate equal opportunity, but if a quarter of employers are unwilling to comply, stronger enforcement and education are needed.
Underpinning many of the issues above are the misconceptions and myths that some employers (and coworkers) still hold about blindness and working. These misguided beliefs can silently influence hiring decisions and workplace interactions, even when people don’t voice them outright.
The data is clear.
Blind and low vision professionals are being held back by the same barriers year after year, and confidence is taking a hit as a result. Small tweaks will not fix this. Closing the employment gap means acting across every point we’ve covered, from recruitment and adjustments to progression and employer attitudes.
At Be My Eyes, we work to make the world more accessible for the 340 million people who are blind or have low vision by connecting them with sighted volunteers and companies through AI and video.
Now, we’re putting a stronger focus on accessibility at work… coming soon. If you want to follow what we’re building, register your interest to stay updated.
All stats/data from RNIB research