As the world looks ahead to 2026, the Assistive Technology (AT) community continues to focus on what matters most: access, inclusion, and innovation. But beyond the devices and the software, there is the “human” side of technology—the lived experiences, the history, and the specific challenges faced by diverse communities.
Celebrating awareness days is about more than just marking a date on a schedule. It is about amplification. It is about taking specific moments to listen to the voices of people with Cerebral Palsy, blindness, spinal muscular atrophy, and other disabilities. It is about acknowledging the history of the disability rights movement and pushing for a future where technology is accessible to everyone.
If you search for “disability holidays,” you will often find static PDFs, long text lists on websites, or Excel spreadsheets that get saved to a desktop and forgotten. To avoid this problem, we have curated a 2026 Assistive Technology & Disability Awareness Calendar that is designed to live inside your daily schedule, not just on a webpage.
Why You Need an Active Calendar
This isn’t just a list to read; it’s a tool to help you take action. By importing these dates directly into your Google, Outlook, or Apple Calendar, you transform passive awareness into active engagement.
Here is how an integrated calendar changes the game:
1. Set Reminders, Don’t Just “Remember”
Static lists rely on memory. This calendar relies on automation. By adding this layer to your schedule, you can set alerts for one week or one day in advance. This ensures you never miss a major advocacy day, giving you time to plan that blog post, social media shout-out, or internal company memo before the day arrives.
2. Gamify Learning & Advocacy
For teachers, team leaders, and ERG (Employee Resource Group) managers, this calendar can be the foundation for interactive projects:
- Classroom “Day Champions”: Assign upcoming dates to students or team members. When the calendar reminder pops up, that person shares one fact or one piece of assistive tech related to that disability.
- Awareness Bingo: Use the upcoming month’s events to create a challenge where participants learn about different accessibility features (e.g., “Turn on captions on World Hearing Day” or “Try a screen reader on World Braille Day”).
- Proactive Allyship: Instead of reacting to a day once it’s trending on social media, use the calendar to prepare thoughtful, researched content in advance.
3. A Repository of Knowledge
Every event in this calendar includes more than just a title. We have embedded direct links to official organizations—from the United Nations to specific research foundations—right in the calendar description. This turns your schedule into a personal knowledge repository for research and education.
Why This Calendar Matters
For users, developers, clinicians, and allies in the AT space, these observances serve as vital opportunities:
Community Building: Days like Autistic Pride Day or International Wheelchair Day offer a moment for communities to celebrate their identity and culture.
Educational Spotlights: Observances like Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD) compel the tech industry to pause and evaluate the usability of their products.
A Repository of Knowledge: The events in this calendar do not just list a title; they connect to the source. Each entry includes a direct link to an official organization—from the United Nations to specific research foundations.
Download the Calendar
We have done the heavy lifting so you don’t have to manually type in dozens of dates.
[>> CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE 2026 CALENDAR FILE <<]
(Download the .csv file to your computer)
How to Add This to Your Digital Calendar
Once you have downloaded the file above, follow these steps to integrate it into your life.
For Google Calendar Users
Recommendation: Create a separate “layer” in your calendar so you can toggle these dates on and off without cluttering your personal appointments.
- Create a New Calendar:
- Open Google Calendar on a desktop computer.
- On the left sidebar, click the + next to “Other calendars” and select Create new calendar.
- Name it (e.g., “Disability Awareness 2026”) and click Create.
- Import the Events:
- Click the Settings gear icon (top right) > Settings.
- In the sidebar, click Import & export.
- Click Select file from your computer and choose the
.csvfile downloaded from this post. - CRITICAL STEP: In the “Add to calendar” dropdown, select the new calendar you just created (e.g., “Disability Awareness 2026”). Do not leave it on your default personal calendar unless you want them mixed in!
- Click Import.
For Outlook & Apple Calendar Users
The file provided is a standard CSV format, compatible with most calendar apps.
- Outlook (Desktop/Web): Go to File > Open & Export > Import/Export. Choose “Import from another program or file,” select “Comma Separated Values,” and map it to your preferred calendar folder.
- Apple Calendar (Mac): Go to File > Import. Select the CSV file. macOS will ask which calendar you want to add these events to (creating a “New Calendar” in the app first is recommended for better organization).
Reference Guide: 2026 Dates & Resources
If you do need a quick reference list or want to bookmark these high-quality sources for your own research, here is the complete breakdown of the year.
January
- Jan 4: World Braille Day (UN Observance)
- Jan 24: Moebius Syndrome Awareness Day (Moebius Syndrome Foundation)
- Jan 28: Data Privacy Day (Stay Safe Online)
February
- Feb 4: World Cancer Day (Union for International Cancer Control)
- Feb 9: International Epilepsy Day (International Bureau for Epilepsy)
- Feb 28: Rare Disease Day (Rare Disease Day)
March
- Mar 1: International Wheelchair Day (International Wheelchair Day)
- Mar 3: World Hearing Day (WHO)
- Mar 21: World Down Syndrome Day (World Down Syndrome Day)
- Mar 26: Purple Day for Epilepsy (Purple Day)
April
- Apr 2: World Autism Awareness Day (UN Observance)
- Apr 11: World Parkinson’s Day (Parkinson’s Foundation)
- Apr 30: National Assistive Technology Awareness Day (ATAP)
May
- May 21: Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD) (GAAD Foundation)
- May 30: World MS Day (World MS Day)
June
- June 4: World Day for Assistive Technology (Unlock The Everyday)
- June 18: Autistic Pride Day (Autistic Pride Day)
- June 27: Helen Keller Day (HKNC)
July
- July 1: Disability Pride Month Begins (Library of Congress/House Resolution)
- July 26: Anniversary of the ADA (ADA.gov)
August
- Aug 1: SMA Awareness Month Begins (Cure SMA)
September
- Sept 21: International Week of the Deaf Begins (WFD)
- Sept 23: International Day of Sign Languages (UN Observance)
October
- Oct 1: ADHD Awareness Month Begins (ADHD Awareness Month)
- Oct 1: National Disability Employment Awareness Month (DOL)
- Oct 6: World Cerebral Palsy Day (World CP Day)
- Oct 8: World Sight Day (IAPB)
- Oct 10: World Mental Health Day (WHO)
- Oct 15: White Cane Safety Day (Braille Institute)
November
- Nov 14: World Diabetes Day (World Diabetes Day)
- Nov 16: UK Disability History Month Begins (UKDHM)
December
- Dec 3: International Day of Persons with Disabilities (UN Observance)
Help Us Improve
The world of disability advocacy is vast and diverse, and there may be important observances that were missed. If you know of a significant date or awareness event that should be included in this calendar, please mention it in the comments below.
The goal is to keep this resource living, breathing, and as inclusive as possible. The calendar file will be updated regularly based on community feedback.

