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For the home

Disabled Facilities Grant

Up to £30,000 (England) for home adaptations to help a disabled person live more independently — ramps, stairlifts, downstairs bathrooms, level-access showers and more. Means-tested for adults; free for under-19s.

Official linksLast verified 27 April 2026

Who it helps

Disabled people of any age living in the home — owner, tenant or family member. Adaptations must be "necessary and appropriate" (Occupational Therapist's call) and "reasonable and practicable" (council's call). Children under 19 face no means test.

The full picture

A Disabled Facilities Grant (DFG) is a council-paid grant for adapting a home so a disabled person can keep living there. The grant pays the contractor directly once the council has approved the works.

Maximum grant by nation: - England: £30,000 - Wales: £36,000 (Physical Adaptations Grant) - Northern Ireland: £25,000 - Scotland: variable — Care and Repair grants and the local authority Scheme of Assistance fund similar adaptations

Common adaptations covered: - Ramps and widened doors for wheelchair access - Stairlifts or through-floor lifts - Walk-in showers and accessible bathrooms - Kitchen adaptations for wheelchair users - Heating and lighting changes for sensory needs - Specialist door entry systems

How it works: 1. Contact the council's Housing or Adaptations team 2. An Occupational Therapist visits and writes a Schedule of Works 3. The council means-tests adult applicants on income and savings 4. Approved contractors quote; the council picks the work 5. The grant pays the contractor on completion

Under-19s face no means test — the grant is automatic if the OT recommends adaptations. Adults are means-tested but the grant doesn't have to be paid back unless the home is sold within 10 years and the equity gained from the adaptation exceeds £15,000.

Renters can apply, including in private rentals — you'll need written landlord consent but the grant pays the council, not the landlord.

Worth knowing before you apply

  • England max £30,000; Wales £36,000; Northern Ireland £25,000
  • Scotland uses Care and Repair grants instead — amounts and eligibility vary by local authority
  • Means-tested for adults aged 19+ on household income, savings and composition
  • Free for under-19s — no means test
  • Adults may have to repay part of the grant if they sell the home within 10 years and gain over £15,000 from the adaptations
  • Works must be "necessary and appropriate" (OT) and "reasonable and practicable" (council); the council can refuse or modify the brief
  • Tenants need written landlord consent before applying
  • Wait times vary widely — OT triage, contractor scheduling and approval can extend the timeline to 6+ months
  • Smaller adaptations (under £1,000) are often provided free outside the DFG by social services

How to claim

Contact your local council's Housing or Adaptations team. They'll arrange a free Occupational Therapy assessment. The OT writes the brief, the council means-tests adult applicants on household income and savings, then the grant funds approved works. In Scotland, contact your local Care and Repair organisation or ask the council about the Scheme of Assistance.

Last verified 27 April 2026
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