Disability Scholarships

Explore disability scholarships for students with disabilities, chronic health conditions, neurodivergence, accessibility needs, or lived experience connected to disability advocacy and support. Compare eligibility language, documentation requirements, deadlines, award amounts, school level, and application materials so you can focus on opportunities that fit your situation.

Showing 505–508 of 508 scholarships

Available Disability scholarships

Browse available disability scholarships below or use filters to refine your results by deadline, award amount, GPA, eligibility, and requirements.

NEW

Tina McCloskey Memorial Scholarship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. It is geared toward students attending . The listed award is Amount Varies. Plan to apply by 4/15/2026.

Amount Varies

Award Amount

Apr 15, 2026

deadline passed

1 requirement

Requirements

DisabilityFew RequirementsHigh SchoolUndergraduateCommunity CollegeGPA 2.5+TXTexas
NEW

Linda Carter Slade Endowed Scholarship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. It is geared toward students attending . The listed award is Amount Varies. Plan to apply by 4/15/2026.

Amount Varies

Award Amount

Apr 15, 2026

deadline passed

1 requirement

Requirements

DisabilityFew RequirementsFinancial NeedUndergraduateGraduateFLFlorida
NEW

L. Oree Leadership Scholarship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. The listed award is $500. Plan to apply by April 30, 2026.

387 applicants

$500

Award Amount

Apr 30, 2026

today

4 requirements

Requirements

EducationDisabilityMedicineWomenAfrican AmericanInternational StudentsHispanicFinancial NeedHigh School SeniorHigh SchoolUndergraduateGraduatePhDGPA 3.5+FLGAMISC
NEW

SixSurgery Scholarship

offers this scholarship to help cover education costs. It is geared toward students attending . The listed award is Amount Varies. Plan to apply by 4/15/2026.

Amount Varies

Award Amount

Apr 15, 2026

deadline passed

2 requirements

Requirements

MedicineLawDisabilityFew RequirementsUndergraduate
For United States

How this page works

Compare scholarships with the listing tools above

This page helps you review disability scholarships from the ScholarshipTop catalog. Use filters to narrow results by deadline, award amount, GPA, eligibility, location, and application requirements before opening provider details.

How to increase your chances

Choose applications with a stronger fit

  • Focus first on disability scholarships where your background matches the listed eligibility requirements.
  • Compare deadlines and required materials before choosing which applications to prioritize.
  • Prepare essays, transcripts, recommendation requests, and proof of enrollment before the final week.
  • Confirm official provider requirements and submission instructions before applying.

Frequently asked questions about disability scholarships

Who can apply for disability scholarships?
Disability scholarship eligibility can vary widely. Some awards are open to students with any documented disability, while others focus on a specific condition, chronic illness, learning difference, mobility disability, sensory disability, mental health condition, neurodivergence, or connection to disability advocacy. Providers may also consider school level, GPA, financial need, community involvement, field of study, or location.
Do disability scholarships require medical documentation?
Some disability scholarships ask for documentation, but requirements are not the same everywhere. A provider may request a short verification letter, proof of diagnosis, an accommodation letter, or a personal statement instead of medical records. Review the official instructions carefully and share only what is requested. If documentation feels unclear, contact the provider before submitting personal health information.
What should I write about in a disability scholarship essay?
A strong essay can discuss your goals, resilience, community, advocacy, accessibility needs, or the way your experience has shaped your education. You do not have to share more personal detail than the prompt requires. Focus on what the scholarship committee needs to understand: your path, what support would make possible, and how the award connects to your academic or career plans.