What is the Disabled Students' Allowance and Why Does It Matter?
The Disabled Students' Allowance (DSA) is a vital non-repayable grant provided by the UK government to support students in higher education who have a disability, long-term health condition, or mental health issue. For the 2026/27 academic year, eligible students can receive up to £27,783 to cover extra study costs that arise specifically from their disability. This funding helps level the playing field, enabling disabled students to access university courses on par with their peers.
DSA covers four main categories: specialist equipment like adapted computers or software, non-medical help such as specialist mentors or note-takers, travel costs for disability-related journeys, and other expenses like printing for proof-reading. Unlike standard student loans, DSA is not means-tested and does not affect benefit entitlements. In 2023/24, it supported over 88,000 students at a cost of £203 million, reflecting a significant rise in demand as more disabled individuals enter higher education.
Universities across the UK, from Russell Group institutions like Oxford and Cambridge to post-1992 universities, rely on DSA to supplement their own reasonable adjustments under the Equality Act 2010. Without it, many disabled students would face barriers to participation, continuation, and achievement. Recent data shows disabled students are less likely to complete degrees without tailored support, underscoring DSA's role in boosting retention rates.
Non-Medical Help: Proven Support That Empowers Students
Non-medical help (NMH), a core DSA component, provides human assistance like specialist study skills tutors, academic mentors, library support, and proofreading services. Unlike equipment, NMH addresses cognitive, organizational, and practical challenges through one-on-one guidance.
A comprehensive Department for Education research report highlights NMH's effectiveness. Students reported high satisfaction, with many crediting it for improved independence, time management, and academic performance. For instance, specialist one-to-one study skills support was rated highly for building long-term strategies, helping students transition from dependence to self-reliance. The study, involving surveys and interviews, found NMH particularly valuable for neurodivergent students with dyslexia, ADHD, or autism, who form the largest DSA recipient group.
Key benefits include personalized strategies for note-taking, exam preparation, and workload management. Satisfaction levels exceeded 80% in areas like tutor expertise and flexibility, with students noting enhanced confidence and reduced dropout risk. Despite these positives, NMH spending reached £58.5 million in 2021/22 for undergraduates alone, prompting scrutiny amid budget pressures.
- Specialist study skills: Builds essay writing and research skills step-by-step.
- Mentoring: Offers emotional and academic guidance tailored to individual needs.
- Proofreading: Ensures clarity without altering content, vital for dyslexic students.
- Library support: Assists with resource navigation and organization.
DfE's Controversial Proposals: Targeting Assistive Software
In March 2026, the Department for Education (DfE) launched a consultation closing June 18, proposing sweeping changes to DSA-funded assistive software. The plan shifts from standard funding to 'exceptional circumstances' for most categories, citing free alternatives like Microsoft tools and university provisions.
Affected software includes text-to-speech for dyslexia and ADHD (now exceptional, unlike vision impairments), mind mapping, note-taking apps, captioning tools, and time management programs. Needs assessors would recommend only the lowest-cost option from a DSA catalogue, with no brand choice unless justified.
Rationale focuses on value for money: free web-based tools allegedly match paid software functionality, reducing 'overwhelm' from multiple options. However, critics argue this ignores user experience—free tools lack advanced features like layout preservation in OCR or seamless screen reader integration.
Why Cuts Persist Despite NMH Success Stories
Despite evidence of NMH's efficacy, DfE presses ahead, linking software reforms to broader DSA sustainability. Costs have surged with neurodivergent applications, and free AI tools like ChatGPT raise questions about funding generative aids amid academic integrity concerns.
Universities are expected to provide baseline inclusive tech, but many lack resources amid their own financial crises—40 English institutions at risk of insolvency. The proposals assume equivalence between free and paid tools, but student feedback reveals gaps in reliability and customization.
Real-world cases illustrate NMH's impact: A dyslexic engineering student at Manchester University credited DSA-funded study skills tutor with raising grades from 2:2 to first-class, gaining employment confidence. Another at Leeds Beckett used mentoring to manage anxiety, completing a nursing degree.
Photo by Junseong Lee on Unsplash
Stakeholder Reactions: Outcry from Universities and Students
Universities UK and the National Union of Students (NUS) warn the changes override professional needs assessments, shifting burdens to underfunded providers. Wonkhe analysis calls it a 'diagnostic hierarchy' disadvantaging neurodivergent students, who comprise most recipients (68% female undergraduates).
Disability charities like the Down's Syndrome Association and National Association of Disability Practitioners decry lost agency, predicting higher dropout rates. Providers note free tools often fail complex needs, like ADHD executive function support.
Social media buzzes with #SaveDSA campaigns, students sharing how software enabled degree completion. Universities like UCL and Edinburgh pledge interim support but highlight capacity limits.
Statistics Revealing the Scale and Stakes
DSA uptake has grown: 88,000 students in 2023/24, with neurodivergence dominant. NMH satisfaction: over 80% rated tutors 'excellent', correlating with better attainment. Yet, disabled students' completion rates lag 10-15% behind non-disabled peers without support.
| DSA Category | 2023/24 Spend (£m) | % Recipients |
|---|---|---|
| Equipment/Software | 120 | 70% |
| Non-Medical Help | 58.5 | 45% |
| Travel/Other | 24.5 | 20% |
Proposed savings unquantified, but critics fear unintended costs like increased welfare dependency.
Case Studies: Real Impacts on UK University Students
At the University of Birmingham, a visually impaired law student relies on DSA-funded screen readers—free alternatives crash during long sessions. An autistic PhD candidate at Sheffield uses mind mapping software for thesis organization, crediting NMH mentor for publication success.
Surveys show 75% of DSA users report improved wellbeing; without it, 40% considered dropping out. Universities like Coventry report DSA enables diverse cohorts, enriching campuses.
Challenges and Broader Context in Higher Education
Cuts coincide with university funding squeezes—international fees down, domestic frozen. Reasonable adjustments strain budgets; DSA fills gaps. Neurodivergent rise (ADHD diagnoses up 20% yearly) amplifies needs.
AI potential: Tools like Otter.ai aid transcription, but ethical issues loom without training. Proposals seek views on funding AI compliant with uni policies.
Photo by Centre for Ageing Better on Unsplash
Potential Solutions and University Initiatives
Universities innovate: Inclusive Learning Platforms at Leeds, peer mentoring at Glasgow. Calls for hybrid models—DSA for exceptional needs, unis for basics with ring-fenced funds.
Advocacy pushes Equality Impact Assessments; NUS demands evidence-based decisions. Long-term: Teacher training on disability, universal design for learning.
- Ring-fence uni disability budgets.
- Needs assessor empowerment.
- AI guidelines co-developed with students.
- Monitor outcomes post-reform.
Future Outlook: Balancing Efficiency and Equity
As consultation ends June 2026, changes likely for 2027/28. Success of NMH underscores targeted support's value, but fiscal pressures drive reform. Universities must advocate, invest in accessibility.
Positive note: DSA processing improved; focus on outcomes could refine, not dismantle, system. Disabled students enrich HE—preserving access ensures diverse, innovative graduates.








