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These Guidance Notes – which you can read or watch below – are for applicants to the Exhibitions Group Access Grant scheme.
In this guidance the terms ‘people with disabilities’ and ‘disabled people’ are used interchangeably to reflect individual preference for person-first and identity-first language.
The Exhibitions Group are committed to helping cultural organisations improve accessibility and remove barriers to exhibitions for people who face challenges in accessing exhibitions or pursuing careers in the sector. This includes, but is not limited to, d/Deaf, disabled, and neurodivergent people, and people who encounter physical, sensory or cognitive barriers.
UK-based organisations that hold Volunteer, Small or Medium Organisation level membership of The Exhibitions Group.
You must be planning to use the grant to support a specific exhibition programmed for 2026 or 2027.
You can apply for a grant from £1,500 to £4,000.
The Exhibitions Group will look favourably on proposals that demonstrate need and value for money.
The pot of money available for all grants in 2025-26 is £40,000.
Refer to these Guidance Notes and fill out an application form available on the website or respond to the video of the application form questions with your own submission video or audio.
We recommend that you prepare your answers before filling out the application form or preparing your video or audio.
You are able to save the application form and return to it.
If you prefer to provide answers to the questions on a video or audio file, please email your video link to administrator@theexhibitionsgroup.org.uk.
You may wish to consider the following when completing your application:
1. Use clear, plain English. Avoid jargon.
2. Word limits are at the upper limits. You do not need to fill out the space or the time. We welcome succinct and simple applications.
3. Barriers to access that you might have identified may include
4. Examples of activities you might apply for are:
5. You may wish to frame your proposal using the social model of disability (barriers in society, not the person) or the affirmation model of disability.
The affirmation model is explained by Disability Arts Online in their podcast: Interview – Podcast ep.69 Disability and…The Affirmation Model
6. Evaluation:
How will you know what has changed as a result of this improvement?
What will you want to measure?
Consider evaluation at the application stage not at a later stage.
We do not expect a complex or detailed evaluation project. We just want to know what your plans are for assessing success. You may consider evaluating this improvement within a wider evaluation plan.
The Exhibitions Group will require a short case study summarising what you did and what the results of your action were after implementation.
7. Other things to consider:
A panel of assessors including people with disabilities will decide on grants. The panel who assess the application forms will also look for these factors:
SMART means Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant and Timed ie with a schedule provided that is realistic.
Demonstrable need for the funded action and / or a special opportunity to make a difference.
This might be because of the subject or reach of the exhibition, the needs of a specific audience or participants’ engagement.
This is the timeline The Exhibitions Group is working to:
Scheme launch: 15 November 2025
Deadline for applications: 15 January 2026
Panel review: Late January 2026
Grant awards announced: w/b 2 February 2026
First tranche of funds released: By end February 2026
Projects delivery: March 2026 – December 2027
Final reports due: 31 December 2027
The final 50% of your grant will be released after presentation of appropriate evidence of expenditure. These would be:
Disabled Access Grants Scheme Application Form – online form and video