The EY Global Neuroinclusion at Work Study 2025 was conducted between July and September 2024 to understand the skills and lived experience of neurodivergent professionals. The sample included 1,603 neurodivergent and 508 neurotypical professionals (control group), either employed or recently employed across organizations in the past 12 months. Of neurodivergent respondents, 823 identified as neurodivergent without a formal diagnosis (51%) and 780 identified as neurodivergent with a formal diagnosis (49%).
Respondents included individuals identifying or diagnosed with ADHD (42% of the sample), autism spectrum disorders (17%), dyslexia (18%), dyscalculia, developmental coordination disorder (DCD) or dyspraxia, developmental language disorder, known genetic conditions (such as Williams syndrome), mental health conditions (such as anxiety, bipolar disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder), tic disorders (including Tourette syndrome) and acquired neurodiversity (such as brain injury, head trauma, or stroke). Forty-eight percent of the sample reported co-occurring neurotraits, which were further analyzed in combinations.
By sampling professionals in 21 job functions, with and without degrees, across organizations we aimed to provide a robust understanding of how professional working environments can better enable neurodivergent professionals to thrive and test the resulting impact on skill proficiency.
Respondents represented eight sectors (technology, energy and utilities, banking and capital markets, advanced manufacturing, consumer products, life sciences, government and public sector, and retail) and 22 countries (covering the Americas, Europe, Africa, the Middle East, India and Asia-Pacific).
In presenting a robust global sample for the purpose of analyzing the rates and effects of neuroinclusion in professional workplaces, we acknowledge that:
- Incidence rates of neurodivergent diagnoses by country continue to fluctuate, impacted by health system capacity, government policies and differing levels of underlying social awareness.
- The skills proficiency reported in this study cannot be generalized to individual or co-occurring neurotraits.
- The lived experiences reported in this study cannot be generalized to all neurodivergent people.
We warmly thank them for their collaboration: Professor Robert Austin (Evolution of Work Chair, Ivey Business School), Professor Amanda Kirby (Honorary Professor, Cardiff University and CEO, Do-IT Solutions), Anna Krzeminska (Associate Professor, Macquarie University) and Ryan Sharman (Head of Careers, Cambridge Judge Business School and Founder, Coaching Refuge).