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Activity Alliance Annual Disability and Activity Survey (June 2023)

Download Activity Alliance Annual Survey 2022-23 full report

Activity Alliance’s Annual Disability and Activity Survey report 2022-23 reveals a growing need to reduce disabled people’s cost of living and loneliness to improve activity levels.

Activity Alliance releases its fourth Annual Disability and Activity Survey report for 2022-23. The survey is the primary source of insight for organisations working to achieve fairness for disabled people in sport and activity.  

This year’s results show we are not seeing enough positive trends in disabled people’s perceptions and experiences of being active. Greater effort is needed to tackle inequalities that affect disabled people, especially to reduce loneliness and the impact of the rising cost of living.

The survey was conducted by IFF Research. 998 disabled people and 976 non-disabled people aged 16+ took part. 28 disabled people also took part in a series of online workshops to discuss the findings and explore ideas for action. This survey complements Sport England’s Active Lives Adult Survey. It provides greater detail on issues of importance to disabled people.

If you would like more information or support on how to access, interpret and use the data. Email research@activityalliance.org.uk or call 01509 227750. 

Key findings:

  • Disabled people were more likely to say they wanted to be more active compared to non-disabled people (77% vs 54%). This “activity gap” has remained consistent in previous years, showing an ongoing unmet need.
  • Four in ten disabled people (37%) said the cost-of-living crisis has affected how active they are, versus three in ten non-disabled people (32%).
  • Six in ten disabled people (60%) also reported that the increase in cost of living has reduced how much they socialise.
  • There is a clear spending gap for what disabled people are spending and want to spend on physical activity. Disabled people reported spending an average of £13.40 less than non-disabled people in being active each month. Disabled people want to spend more than non-disabled people on being active (34% vs 27%), whereas non-disabled people were more likely to want to spend less (27% vs 19%).
  • However – many disabled people fear that being more active will result in their benefits or financial assistance being removed (37%).
  • Almost two-thirds (64%) of disabled people said the government should focus on making activities affordable to help more people to be active.
  • Disabled people are nearly three times more likely than non-disabled people to feel lonely always or often (23% vs 8%).
  • Over the last four years, there has been an upward trend in disabled people feeling lonelier, while non-disabled people reported steady or decreasing levels of loneliness. Since the start of the pandemic, disabled people were more likely to feel isolated (54% vs 30%).
  • Nearly two-thirds of disabled people who felt lonely agreed that being active could help them feel less lonely (65%).
  • Disabled people were also significantly less likely to report high satisfaction with their life (5% vs 17%).
  • Younger disabled people and people with five or more impairments were most likely to say the cost-of-living crisis has reduced how active they are (58% and 56%) and how much they socialise (74% and 75%).

Please visit our Annual Survey page to download the executive summary of key findings and to view accessible communication formats. Here, you will find a summary of key findings in easy read format and a BSL translation video. 

If you require further support to access the Annual Disability and Activity Survey reports, or would like to request an accessible Word copy, please email research@activityalliance.org.uk or call 01509 227750.