Should People with ADHD Get Blue Badges? The Debate Everyone's Talking About
Applications have tripled but the answer isn't as simple as yes or no
The Blue Badge scheme has been making headlines recently, with reports that permits issued for hidden disabilities have tripled since 2021. Much of the coverage has focused on ADHD and anxiety, with Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander clarifying that a diagnosis alone should not automatically qualify someone for a Blue Badge.
This is an important conversation, but it is also a nuanced one. At Blue Badge Co, we believe the current debate highlights exactly why the Blue Badge scheme works the way it does: assessing each person's individual circumstances rather than making blanket decisions based on diagnostic labels.
What the Headlines Are Saying
According to recent reports, the number of Blue Badges issued for hidden disabilities has jumped from 18,000 in 2021 to 55,000 in 2025. This surge follows the 2019 extension of the scheme to include people with non-visible disabilities, a change that was designed to support people with conditions like dementia, Parkinson's disease, autism, and severe anxiety disorders.
The concern being raised is whether some people are obtaining Blue Badges when their condition does not genuinely affect their ability to walk or travel safely. Videos on social media coaching people on how to word their applications have added to these worries, with some experts suggesting the system may be drifting from its original purpose.
Conservative Shadow Transport Secretary Richard Holden described the situation as abuse of the system. Dr Becky Spelman, who has ADHD herself, told media outlets she would never apply for a Blue Badge, calling it an advantage rather than an accommodation for people without profound mobility limitations.
The Reality Is More Complex
Whilst concerns about misuse are valid and important, the situation is more nuanced than headlines suggest. The truth is that some people with ADHD, anxiety, or other neurodevelopmental conditions genuinely do experience severe difficulties that make journeys genuinely dangerous or impossible without closer parking.
The key word here is some. Not all. Not most. But some.
This is precisely why the Blue Badge scheme does not grant automatic eligibility based on diagnosis. Instead, it assesses how a condition affects an individual's specific ability to walk or travel safely.
What Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander Said
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander has been clear on the government's position: a diagnosis of ADHD does not automatically qualify someone for a Blue Badge. Eligibility is based on how a condition affects a person's ability to get around - not on a diagnosis alone.
She emphasised that Blue Badges provide a vital lifeline for disabled people, but that misuse undermines support for the very people the scheme was set up to help. Local councils are responsible for assessing each application on its own merits, with powers to investigate and tackle misuse.
When ADHD or Anxiety Might Genuinely Qualify Someone
It is important to understand that whilst a diagnosis of ADHD or anxiety alone does not qualify someone for a Blue Badge, the functional impacts of these conditions sometimes can.
The Blue Badge scheme recognises that some people experience psychological distress or behavioural challenges so severe that they pose genuine safety risks during journeys. This might include:
- Severe impulsivity that causes someone to walk into traffic without warning
- Intense anxiety attacks in car parks or crowded spaces make it impossible to walk from a distant parking space
- Executive function difficulties so profound that navigating from a car to a destination becomes genuinely dangerous
- Sensory processing challenges combined with spatial awareness difficulties create serious safety risks
- Frequent episodes where the person loses behavioural control near roads or vehicles
These are not typical experiences for most people with ADHD or anxiety. But for those who do face these severe challenges, the Blue Badge scheme exists to help them.
Real Examples of Genuine Need
Consider a child with severe autism and ADHD who bolts into traffic without warning when overwhelmed. Their parent cannot park 200 metres away in a busy supermarket car park because by the time they walk that distance, the child may have run into the road. This is a genuine safety risk, and a Blue Badge allows the family to park closer, reducing danger.
Or an adult with severe anxiety and agoraphobia whose panic attacks in open car parks are so intense they cannot physically move. If parking closer to building entrances significantly reduces the psychological distress and makes leaving the house possible, that person may legitimately qualify.
These situations are real. They are also not the norm for most people diagnosed with ADHD or anxiety.
Why Case-by-Case Assessment Matters
The Blue Badge scheme deliberately avoids automatic entitlement based on diagnosis because disabilities affect people differently. Two people with the same condition can have vastly different functional abilities and support needs.
One person with ADHD might manage daily life independently with no mobility difficulties whatsoever. Another might experience such severe impulsivity and spatial awareness issues that they pose a constant danger to themselves near traffic. The label is the same, but the functional impact is completely different.
This is why local councils assess applications individually, looking at medical evidence, functional difficulties, and real-world impact. They ask questions like:
- Can this person walk safely from a distant parking space?
- Do they pose a danger to themselves or others near vehicles?
- Would parking closer genuinely reduce risk or distress in a meaningful way?
- Is their difficulty walking, or is it something else that could be supported differently?
These questions cannot be answered by a diagnosis alone. They require individual assessment.
What the Rules Actually Say
Blue Badge eligibility for non-visible disabilities requires that a person:
- Cannot walk at all, or finds walking extremely difficult due to physical or mental health conditions
- Experiences very considerable psychological distress during journeys
- Poses a substantial risk to themselves or others near vehicles or in car parks
- Has severe difficulties with planning or following journeys (10+ points in PIP 'planning and following journeys' descriptor)
The focus is on functional impact, not diagnostic labels. This is deliberate and appropriate.
The Problem With Social Media Coaching
One concerning element of the recent news coverage is the emergence of social media content coaching people on how to word their Blue Badge applications to secure approval.
Videos on platforms like TikTok provide templates and specific phrasing designed to meet eligibility criteria, with some encouraging parents to apply for Blue Badges for children with ADHD or autism regardless of whether mobility difficulties exist.
This is troubling for several reasons. Firstly, it encourages people to apply when they may not genuinely need the support, potentially overwhelming councils with applications. Secondly, it risks people exaggerating or misrepresenting their circumstances. Finally, it undermines the people who genuinely do need Blue Badges and may contribute to scepticism about legitimate applications.
If someone genuinely meets the eligibility criteria, they should not need coaching or templates. The evidence should speak for itself.
The Risk of Overcorrection
Whilst concerns about misuse are valid, there is also a risk of overcorrecting. If councils become overly cautious about hidden disabilities following negative media coverage, people with genuine needs may be refused Blue Badges unfairly.
This would be deeply unjust. The 2019 extension of the Blue Badge scheme was a significant step forward in recognising that mobility difficulties are not always visible. People with severe autism, dementia, Parkinson's disease, anxiety disorders, and other conditions that cause genuine difficulties deserve fair access to the support they need.
The solution is not to retreat from supporting hidden disabilities. It is to ensure rigorous, fair assessment that distinguishes between genuine need and inappropriate applications.
Both Things Can Be True
It is possible to hold two thoughts simultaneously:
- Some people with ADHD, anxiety, and other neurodevelopmental conditions genuinely do experience severe difficulties that qualify them for Blue Badges
- The scheme is also being misused by some people who do not meet the eligibility criteria
The answer is not to eliminate access for those with hidden disabilities. It is to ensure councils apply the criteria consistently and fairly, assessing each application on its individual merits.
What Should Happen Now
The current debate highlights the need for clearer guidance and more consistent application of eligibility criteria across councils. Several measures could help:
Stronger oversight of application assessment: Councils need clear, consistent guidance on assessing hidden disabilities, with training for staff conducting assessments.
Robust investigation of suspected misuse: Where evidence suggests someone obtained a Blue Badge inappropriately, councils should investigate and take action. Misuse is a criminal offence carrying fines up to £1,000.
Better public education: Clear information about what Blue Badges are for and when hidden disabilities do and do not qualify would help reduce inappropriate applications.
Continued individual assessment: Maintaining the case-by-case approach rather than creating blanket rules based on diagnosis protects both the integrity of the scheme and access for those who genuinely need it.
Addressing social media misinformation: Platforms should consider whether content coaching people to obtain benefits they may not be entitled to violates their terms of service.
If You Are Considering Applying
If you have ADHD, anxiety, or another condition and are wondering whether you should apply for a Blue Badge, ask yourself these honest questions:
- Do I have significant difficulty walking from a standard parking space to my destination?
- Does my condition create a genuine safety risk when walking through car parks or near traffic?
- Would parking closer meaningfully reduce serious distress or danger?
- Can I provide medical evidence that supports these functional difficulties?
If the answer to these questions is genuinely yes, you may well qualify, and you should apply. The Blue Badge scheme exists to support you.
If the answer is no - if you can walk safely from standard parking spaces without significant difficulty - then a Blue Badge is not appropriate, regardless of your diagnosis.
Applying when you do not meet the criteria takes resources away from assessing applications from people who genuinely need support. It also contributes to the scepticism that makes life harder for people with hidden disabilities who do qualify.
If You Have a Blue Badge
Whether your disability is visible or hidden, protect your Blue Badge with our UK-made holders. Keep it clearly displayed, safe from damage, and compliant with parking regulations.
A System That Works - When Applied Correctly
The Blue Badge scheme is fundamentally well-designed. By assessing functional impact rather than diagnosis, it allows for nuance and individual circumstances. This approach protects people with hidden disabilities from being excluded whilst also preventing automatic entitlement based purely on having a particular condition.
The current controversy does not mean the system is broken. It means the system needs to be applied consistently and fairly, with robust assessment and appropriate action against misuse.
People with ADHD, anxiety, autism, dementia, Parkinson's disease, and countless other conditions deserve fair access to Blue Badges when their circumstances genuinely warrant it. They should not be dismissed or treated with suspicion because of media coverage or concerns about misuse.
Equally, the Blue Badge scheme exists to support people with serious mobility difficulties or safety risks. It is not a general convenience or a reward for having a diagnosis. Treating it as such undermines the people who genuinely need it.
The Bottom Line
Blue Badge eligibility is about function, not labels. Some people with ADHD or anxiety genuinely qualify. Most do not. Every application must be assessed on its own merits, based on how a condition affects that individual's ability to walk or travel safely. This is not a flaw in the system - it is exactly how the system should work.
The debate around Blue Badges and hidden disabilities is important, but it must be handled with care. Blanket statements about who should or should not qualify risk harming vulnerable people who rely on these permits to live independent lives.
The solution is not to restrict access based on diagnosis. It is to ensure fair, consistent assessment that distinguishes genuine need from inappropriate applications. When councils do this well, the Blue Badge scheme serves exactly the people it was designed to help.
Based on reporting from LBC, The Telegraph, Department for Transport statements | May 2026

32 comments
I agree with some of the comments and issues raised, there does need to be more in place to get people for the badges. However it causes a lot of trepidation to see such blanket statements thrown around that only wheelchairs can have the spaces. When there are a lot of other issues someone may require a disabled space.
Yes I am aware as one person pointed out the universal sign for disabled is a wheelchair, however we now live in a time where other illnesses and disabilities are now getting treated with less stigma, in places…
I suffer from a list of illnesses: fibromyalgia, ms, me, debilitating migraines that I sometimes pass out from, endo, degeneration on my spine that causes intense sciatica that sometimes cripples me to the point I need a wheelchair, other times I can walk almost without it being noticeable how much pain I am in. I try to keep my mobility going for as long as I can as I am still young, I know as I am aging I will be permanently wheelchair bound at some point.
I also suffer massively with mental health that causes extreme anxiety, that I cannot leave a car if in a tight space, even in a disabled spot if the car has gone over the hashlines I feel unsafe. With the disabled spot I feel I have safety and room to breathe, especially if I need to get back to the car due to pain or anxiety attacks fast.
I think we do need more procedures in place to stop people who don’t need it but I do believe we need to look at each individual case on its own merit (with medical evidence of course) as it is clear even amongst the disabled community there is still judgment and prejudice for those who use the spaces without a wheelchair and honestly if you knew my full story you wouldn’t be judging me at all.
I agree with Charlotte that there should be a two tier system.
I have a blue badge and use a walker( mobility and balance issues ) and can’t walk very far . The badge allows me to retain an element of independence. If a disabled parking space is not available I am not able to park in a ’ normal’ parking bay due to walking distance and requirement to open door wide.
I have been a blue badge holder for over 20 years and receive PIP for both mobility and care (formerley DLA). I take the considered view that the issue of Blue badges should be solely based using mobility as the criteria. To my mind the issue of badges for “hidden” disabilities is a can of worms which has been opened only through political interference by Theresa May as an attempt to placate disabled people (which she redefined) following crticism by the UN of Britains’ perse ution of the disabled (Ian Duncan Smith’s cost cutting exercise)
I cannot see a reason to issue a badge to someone who could represent a “threat?” (problem?) to others because of their debility, but by themseves are mobile.
On a functional level the assessment process for blue badge qualification has now become inherently unweildy and is, in that sense, hydra headed and self propagating. At some point there has to be rationale introduced to this current time and resource consuming process
All the people with a Blue badge no matter what should park in designated spaces. The ones that really annoy me are the ones that park up the passenger gets out and driver sits there listening to the radio or reading. Taking up a space that they don’t need. The scheme is great when everyone abides by the rules. I’ve personally had to park in a normal bay because of people waiting in a bay and I struggle to get in and out of my vehicle in a normal bay. I don’t begrudge anyone who actually needs to use a bay a hidden or seen disability. I think more enforcement of parking would be better. Shops actually needed to move people out from the bays if waiting.
I am a blue badge holder with genuine mobility issues.
I am in favour of people with hidden heart and breathing difficulties being elegible, but to open it up to anyone with ADHD, and anxiety is going to leave the system wide open to abuse. Will councils be providing many more disabled parking spaces, or will it, as I suspect, just become much more difficult for genuine people with mobility problems, to find a disabled parking space
.