VAT Relief for Disability Ireland 2026 — 0% VAT on specifically adapted goods; full VAT remission on adapted vehicles via the Disabled Drivers Scheme

VAT Refund Scheme for Disability Ireland 2026

Persons with disabilities in Ireland are entitled to purchase certain specifically adapted goods and equipment free of VAT — at the 0% rate, applied at the point of sale by the supplier. This covers hearing aids, prosthetics, wheelchairs, braille devices, and other items specifically designed or adapted for disability use. Vehicle VAT remission (full 23% VAT refund on adapted cars) operates separately through the Disabled Drivers and Disabled Passengers Scheme. This page explains what qualifies, how the relief works, and what to do if VAT was incorrectly charged.

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VAT Relief for Disability — At a glance

VAT rate on qualifying adapted goods
0% (zero-rated)
Vehicle VAT remission (DD&DPS)
Full 23% remission — via Revenue Form DD1
How relief is applied
Supplier applies 0% at point of sale
Key test for goods relief
Must be specifically adapted/designed for disability
Home modification works
Not covered — see Housing Adaptation Grant
If incorrectly charged VAT
Claim refund from Revenue with receipts

What qualifies for 0% VAT — adapted goods for disability use

CategoryQualifying examplesKey condition
Mobility aidsWheelchairs (manual and electric), mobility scooters, adapted walking aids, stairliftsMust be specifically designed for disability/mobility impairment use
Prosthetics & orthoticsProsthetic limbs, orthotic devices, splints, orthopaedic supports specifically fitted for disabilityCustom-fitted or medically prescribed
Hearing aids & audiologicalHearing aids, cochlear implant accessories, audiological assessment devices, deaf alerting systemsDevices specifically designed for hearing impairment
Visual aidsBraille printers/embossers, braille displays, screen reading hardware, magnification devices specifically for visual impairmentMust be specifically designed for visual impairment — not general computers
Communication aidsAAC (Augmentative and Alternative Communication) devices specifically designed for speech/communication disabilitiesMust be designed for disability communication needs
Adapted vehiclesVehicles fitted with disability adaptations for a qualifying disabled driver or passengerVia DD&DPS — Primary Medical Certificate required; separate application

What does NOT qualify for VAT relief

ItemReason
Standard computers and tablets (even used with assistive software)Off-the-shelf general goods — not specifically designed for disability
Home modifications / building work (ramps, widening doors)Building services attract VAT — Housing Adaptation Grant is the correct route
Over-the-counter mobility aids (generic crutches, basic walking sticks)Must be specifically designed for disability use, not general aids
Vitamins, supplements, or general health productsNot specifically adapted for disability
Standard clothing or footwear (even worn for comfort with a condition)Not specifically adapted or designed for disability use

Vehicle VAT remission — Disabled Drivers and Passengers Scheme

The most significant VAT relief available to disabled persons in Ireland relates to vehicles. Under the Disabled Drivers and Disabled Passengers Scheme (DD&DPS), a qualifying person can receive full remission of the 23% VAT on the purchase of an adapted vehicle. For a vehicle costing €28,000 before VAT, this saves approximately €6,440 in VAT alone (on top of full VRT remission).

To qualify for vehicle VAT remission:

  • Must hold a Primary Medical Certificate issued by an HSE Senior Medical Officer
  • The vehicle must be adapted for the qualifying disability (hand controls, swivel seats, wheelchair ramp, etc.)
  • Application via Revenue Form DD1 before purchase
  • Applies to both the disabled driver and disabled passenger (if the passenger is the qualifying person)

See the Disabled Drivers and Disabled Passengers Scheme guide for the full application process and all five reliefs available under the scheme.

What to do if you were charged VAT incorrectly

  1. Verify the goods genuinely qualify

    Confirm the item is specifically adapted or designed for disability use under the VAT legislation. Generic items do not qualify even if used by a disabled person.

  2. Contact the supplier first

    The simplest route is to ask the supplier to re-issue the invoice with the correct 0% rate and refund the VAT charged. Suppliers are responsible for applying the correct rate.

  3. If the supplier cannot refund, contact Revenue

    Contact Revenue's VAT unit with evidence: the receipt/invoice showing VAT charged, details of the disability (medical documentation), and a description of the goods. Revenue can confirm whether a refund is due and process it directly.

Frequently asked questions

Can a carer or family member buy qualifying goods on behalf of a disabled person and still get the VAT relief?

Yes. The relief applies to goods purchased for the permanent use of the disabled person — whether purchased directly by the person with the disability or by a carer or family member acting on their behalf. The key is that the goods must be specifically adapted for disability use and used permanently by the qualifying person. Documentation showing the disability and the purpose of the goods should be retained.

Is there a specific Revenue form to claim VAT relief on disability goods?

For most disability-adapted goods (wheelchairs, hearing aids, prosthetics), the 0% rate should be applied automatically by the supplier at the point of sale — no separate Revenue form is needed. For vehicle VAT remission under the DD&DPS scheme, Revenue Form DD1 is required before purchase. If you need to retroactively claim VAT incorrectly charged on qualifying goods, contact Revenue directly with your evidence.

Does the VAT relief cover prescription glasses or contact lenses?

Standard corrective glasses and contact lenses prescribed by an optometrist are zero-rated for VAT in Ireland — but this is a separate VAT rule that applies to all corrective eyewear, not specifically the disability VAT scheme. The end result is the same: qualifying corrective eyewear should be purchased without VAT. If you are charged VAT on prescription lenses, query it with your optician.

Can charities or disability organisations claim back VAT on goods they purchase for disabled beneficiaries?

There is a separate VAT Compensation Scheme for charities, which allows registered charities to reclaim a proportion of VAT on qualifying expenditure. This is different from the individual disability VAT relief. Charities providing goods and services to disabled persons should check their own eligibility under the VAT Compensation Scheme with Revenue.

Do immigrants with disabilities in Ireland qualify for these VAT reliefs?

Yes. VAT reliefs on qualifying disability-adapted goods in Ireland apply based on the nature of the goods and the disability, not on nationality or immigration status. If you are in Ireland with a qualifying disability and you purchase specifically adapted goods from an authorised supplier, the 0% VAT rate applies. For vehicle VAT remission via DD&DPS, you need to hold a Primary Medical Certificate — available from any HSE Senior Medical Officer regardless of nationality.

Common misunderstandings about VAT relief for disability
  • General goods used by a person with a disability do not qualify — the item itself must be specifically adapted or designed for disability use.
  • Home modification works (ramps, door widening, wet rooms) do not attract VAT relief — the Housing Adaptation Grant from your local authority is the correct route for those costs.
  • Vehicle VAT remission requires a Primary Medical Certificate and Form DD1 before purchase — it is not applied automatically; you must apply and receive approval first.
  • If you are charged VAT incorrectly on a qualifying item, contact the supplier first — they can re-issue the invoice at 0%. Revenue is a secondary route if the supplier cannot resolve it.

This page was reviewed against Revenue.ie VAT guidance on disability goods and updated to reflect 2026 qualifying categories, vehicle VAT remission rules under the DD&DPS scheme, and the correct process for VAT refund claims.

Reviewed by

Vitor Alves

Founder of D’Emilia Accounting

Tax adviser and accountant helping immigrants and businesses in Ireland.

Last reviewed: June 24, 2026 · About this site