• NY Apartment Law
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
  • Commercial Lease Law
  • Guidebooks
  • Archives
  • Protected Classes
  • Management Issues
  • eAlerts
  • Resources
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • NY Apartment Law
  • New York Apartment Law Insider
  • New York Landlord V. Tenant
  • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
  • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
  • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
  • Fair Housing Coach
  • Assisted Housing Management Insider
  • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
  • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
  • Commercial Lease Law
  • Commercial Lease Law Insider
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
  • Protected Classes
  • All Protected Classes
  • Disability
  • Familial Status/Age
  • Race/Color/National Origin
  • Religion
  • Sex/Sexual Orientation
  • Other Classes
  • Management Issues
  • Accommodations
  • Advertising/Applications
  • Complaints/Investigations
  • Employees/Contractors
  • Eviction
  • Leasing
  • Other Issues
  • eAlerts
  • Cases and Settlements
  • HUD News
  • Reports & Studies
  • Other
  • Resources
  • Fair Housing Coach Resources
May 27, 2025
We use cookies to provide you with a better experience. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies in accordance with our Cookie Policy.
The Habitat Group Logo
  • NY Apartment Law
    • New York Apartment Law Insider
    • New York Landlord V. Tenant
    • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
    • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
    • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
  • Fair & Affordable Housing
    • Fair Housing Coach
    • Assisted Housing Management Insider
    • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
    • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
  • Commercial Lease Law
    • Commercial Lease Law Insider
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
      • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
    • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
  • Guidebooks
  • May 27, 2025
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
  • Subscribe
  • May 27, 2025
FHC Logo.webp
  • Archives
  • Protected Classes
    • All Protected Classes
    • Disability
    • Familial Status/Age
    • Race/Color/National Origin
    • Religion
    • Sex/Sexual Orientation
    • Other Classes
  • Management Issues
    • Accommodations
    • Advertising/Applications
    • Complaints/Investigations
    • Employees/Contractors
    • Eviction
    • Leasing
    • Other Issues
  • eAlerts
    • Cases and Settlements
    • HUD News
    • Reports & Studies
    • Other
  • Resources
    • Fair Housing Coach Resources
Free Issue
The Habitat Group Logo
May 27, 2025
  • Log In
  • Log Out
  • My Account
Home » Seven Tips for Meeting Disability-Related Needs of Individuals with Mobility Impairments

Seven Tips for Meeting Disability-Related Needs of Individuals with Mobility Impairments

Feb 19, 2012

In our March 2012 lesson, Fair Housing Coach explains how to meet the disability-related needs of individuals with mobility impairments under fair housing law. Communities should expect increased demand to meet those requirements with the influx of returning veterans—many with service-related disabilities—as well as the predicted increase in age-related disabilities of baby boomers and their parents.

Federal fair housing protections cover conditions that substantially limit mobility, including paralysis, loss of limbs, and other conditions that require the use of a wheelchair, cane, or motorized device to get around. Moreover, the law covers nonobvious impairments, such as heart disease and other conditions that impede the ability to walk due to nerve damage, muscle weakness, or shortness of breath.

Here are seven tips from the March lesson for complying with the Fair Housing Act (FHA) when dealing with individuals with mobility impairments:

  1. Make sure your leasing office is accessible. Your leasing office must be accessible to people with mobility impairments. Because it’s open to the public, a community’s leasing office is considered a place of public accommodation, which means that it’s subject to the Americans With Disabilities Act as well as federal fair housing law.
  2. Comply with FHA accessibility rules. With few exceptions, multifamily communities built within the past 20 years must comply with the FHA design and construction requirements. Those rules require that all ground-level and elevator-accessible units, public-use areas, and common areas be accessible to individuals with mobility impairments.
  3. Don’t discriminate against individuals with mobility impairments. It’s illegal to turn away a prospect who uses a wheelchair due to a mobility disorder regardless of the reason. It doesn’t matter whether it’s based on concerns about the community’s image or potential liability or financial considerations. It’s a violation of the FHA to deny housing to a prospect because he—or someone associated with him—has a disability.
  4. Don’t ban use of motorized mobility devices. Take a hard look at your rules on the use of motorized vehicles to ensure that you don’t inadvertently violate fair housing law. Communities have faced liability under fair housing law for prohibiting or unduly restricting the use of power-driven wheelchairs and other motorized devices by individuals with mobility impairments.
  5. Curb curiosity about mobility impairments. Make sure your staff understands and complies with fair housing rules governing disability-related inquiries. In general, it’s unlawful to ask an applicant whether he or anyone associated with him has a disability or to ask about the nature or severity of such disabilities.
  6. Carefully consider requests for reasonable accommodations. Be prepared to handle requests for reasonable accommodations by individuals with mobility disorders. Not all requests are labeled as such—they often are expressed as something the resident needs or wants because of a disability. According to HUD/DOJ guidelines, a person makes a request for a reasonable accommodation whenever she makes it clear that she’s requesting an exception, change, or adjustment to a rule, policy, practice, or service because of her disability.
  7. Carefully review requests for reasonable modifications. Fair housing law requires communities to allow an applicant or resident with a disability to make reasonable modifications to the interior of his unit—as well as common areas—to allow him to fully enjoy the housing and related facilities. Under the FHA, the housing provider must permit the modification, but the resident is responsible for paying for it.

For the complete lesson and quiz, see “Meeting Disability-Related Needs of Individuals with Mobility Impairments,” on the Coach’s home page.

Other / Online Alerts
    • Related Articles

      Meeting Disability-Related Needs of Individuals with Mobility Impairments

      How to Avoid Fair Housing Trouble When Dealing with Individuals with Mobility Impairments

      Responding to Requests for Disability-Related Parking Accommodations

    • Related Products

      FAIR HOUSING BOOT CAMP Basic Training for New Hires

    • Related Events

      Complete installation of natural gas detectors in residential buildings with gas lines or gas service.

      File bedbug infestation and treatment reports with HPD.

    • Publications
      • Assisted Housing Management Insider
      • Commercial Lease Law Insider
      • Co-op & Condo Case Law Tracker Digest
      • Fair Housing Coach
      • New York Apartment Law Insider
      • New York Landlord v. Tenant
      • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
    • Additional Links
      • Contact Us
      • Advertise
      • Group Subscriptions
      • Privacy Policy
    • Boards of Advisors
      • Assisted Housing Management Insider
      • Commercial Lease Law Insider
      • Fair Housing Coach
      • New York Apartment Law Insider
      • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
    ©2025. All Rights Reserved. Content: The Habitat Group. CMS, Hosting & Web Development: ePublishing
    The Habitat Group Logo
    • NY Apartment Law
      • New York Apartment Law Insider
      • New York Landlord V. Tenant
      • Co-Op & Condo Case Law Digest
      • New York Rent Regulation Checklist, Fourth Edition
      • 2025 New York City Apartment Management Checklist
    • Fair & Affordable Housing
      • Fair Housing Coach
      • Assisted Housing Management Insider
      • Tax Credit Housing Management Insider
      • Fair Housing Boot Camp. Basic Training For New Hires
    • Commercial Lease Law
      • Commercial Lease Law Insider
      • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
        • Best Commercial Lease Clauses, 17/e
      • Best Commercial Lease Clauses: Tenant's Edition
    • Guidebooks
    • May 27, 2025
    • Log In
    • Log Out
    • My Account
    • Subscribe
    • May 27, 2025
    FHC Logo.webp
    • Archives
    • Protected Classes
      • All Protected Classes
      • Disability
      • Familial Status/Age
      • Race/Color/National Origin
      • Religion
      • Sex/Sexual Orientation
      • Other Classes
    • Management Issues
      • Accommodations
      • Advertising/Applications
      • Complaints/Investigations
      • Employees/Contractors
      • Eviction
      • Leasing
      • Other Issues
    • eAlerts
      • Cases and Settlements
      • HUD News
      • Reports & Studies
      • Other
    • Resources
      • Fair Housing Coach Resources
    Free Issue
    The Habitat Group Logo
    May 27, 2025
    • Log In
    • Log Out
    • My Account