Updated June 25, 2026 Quick answer: Disability Pride Month is observed every July to celebrate disability identity and community, mark the anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and push for full inclusion in everyday life. The 2026 theme is “The World Works Better With Us.” Key Facts More than 1 in 4 U.S. […]
https://thearc.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Sean-Smiling-on-Street-375x400-1.jpg400375The Arc/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/ArcLogo_Color_Rev_PNG_WEB.pngThe Arc2025-05-19 13:30:592026-06-25 12:06:11Disability Pride Month 2026: What It Is, the 2026 Theme, and How to Celebrate
Barbara’s son Jake is a medically complex young adult living at home with his parents. Jake relies on Medicaid to provide the services he needs to be medically safe and supported at home, including ...
Cassie is a mother, former educator, and co-founder of Michigan Advocates to End Seclusion and Restraint (EndSaR). She is a passionate advocate against the use of seclusion and restraint in schools, f...
When her seven-year-old son was in first grade, Michigan mom Amanda got an unexpected call from the new school principal. Her son, who has autism, had kicked the principal, and Amanda was being asked ...
Written by: Terri, a Massachusetts mom to a son with Down syndrome
Fifteen years ago, within days of being born, we learned that our son had Down syndrome. This sent us into a flurry of information...
Written by: Bob, a New Jersey dad to two daughters with developmental disabilities
Medicaid saved my daughters’ lives, and I am eternally grateful for it.
Annika and Maya were born 19 years ag...
If testers are stripped of standing, the result will be less private enforcement of the ADA, a less accessible society, and the continued exclusion of people with disabilities from community life.
Wa...
For 33 years, the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) has protected the civil rights of people with disabilities.
We recently talked to disability rights lawyer Sean Pevsner about why the ADA mat...
“It’s like a tornado has devastated us. But no one is coming to help.”
By Grace from New York
I have twin sons who have autism spectrum disorder and intellectual and developmental disabiliti...
There has never been a more influential and monumental moment in disability rights than when the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) passed in 1990. This legislation transformed the lives of million...