Understanding the New Draft Equality Act Code of Practice (2026)

The UK Government and the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) have published a new draft Code of Practice for services, public functions, and associations under the Equality Act 2010.

This matters because the Code explains how organisations should apply equality law in practice — including schools, colleges, councils, charities, businesses, leisure providers, and membership organisations.

What is this Code?

The Code is official guidance designed to help organisations:

  • understand their legal duties
  • avoid discrimination
  • make reasonable adjustments
  • apply equality law consistently
  • support courts in interpreting the law

Although it is guidance rather than primary legislation, courts can take it into account in legal cases.

To whom does it apply?

The draft Code applies to:

  • public services
  • local authorities
  • charities and voluntary organisations
  • shops, restaurants, and hotels
  • healthcare providers
  • sports and leisure facilities
  • associations and clubs with 25+ members
  • organisations delivering public functions

It also applies to services delivered online, including websites.

The 9 Protected Characteristics

The Equality Act protects people from discrimination linked to:

  • age
  • disability
  • gender reassignment
  • marriage and civil partnership
  • pregnancy and maternity
  • race
  • religion or belief
  • sex
  • sexual orientation

However, this Code does not cover marriage and civil partnership protections in services/public functions contexts.

Key Change: Single-Sex Services and “Biological Sex”

Much of the public discussion focuses on updated guidance following a UK Supreme Court ruling about how “sex” is interpreted under the Equality Act.

What the draft guidance says

The draft Code states that:

  • single-sex services can lawfully operate based on biological sex
  • organisations may exclude trans people from some single-sex spaces where this is proportionate and justified
  • providers should still consider dignity, safety, and alternative arrangements
  • gender-neutral or mixed facilities may help reduce exclusion

Examples discussed publicly include toilets, changing rooms, refuges, healthcare settings, and leisure facilities.

Why is this controversial?

Different groups have responded very differently.

Some organisations say the guidance:

  • provides clearer legal direction
  • protects single-sex services
  • reflects the Supreme Court ruling accurately

Others argue the Code:

  • could increase exclusion for trans people
  • may create confusion in public settings
  • risks inconsistent implementation
  • could negatively impact dignity and belonging

There has also been strong public reaction online and across equality organisations.

Important Reminder: Trans People Still Have Legal Protection

The Equality Act still protects people with the protected characteristic of gender reassignment.

That means organisations must still:

  • prevent harassment
  • avoid victimisation
  • avoid unlawful discrimination
  • consider inclusive and proportionate approaches

The Code does not remove all protections for trans people.

Disability and Reasonable Adjustments Still Matter

The Code also reinforces duties around disability inclusion.

Organisations must continue to:

  • make reasonable adjustments
  • remove barriers
  • consider accessibility proactively
  • adapt services where appropriate

This includes physical spaces, communication methods, and digital services.

Positive Action is Still Allowed

The draft guidance confirms organisations can still take proportionate positive action to:

  • reduce disadvantage
  • meet different needs
  • increase participation for underrepresented groups

This remains an important part of equality work.

What Should Organisations Be Doing Now?

1. Review Policies

Check policies linked to:

  • inclusion
  • toilets/changing rooms
  • safeguarding
  • complaints
  • accessibility
  • equality impact assessments

2. Train Staff

Staff need confidence to:

  • respond appropriately
  • manage sensitive conversations
  • understand protected characteristics
  • reduce discrimination risks

3. Avoid “One Size Fits All”

The Code repeatedly refers to proportionate and context-specific decision-making.

Blanket approaches may create legal risks.

4. Keep Inclusion Central

Legal compliance should not come at the expense of dignity, respect and belonging.

Good organisations will balance:

  • legal obligations
  • psychological safety
  • accessibility
  • practical implementation
  • human impact


Why This Matters for Leaders

This draft Code is likely to affect:

  • HR teams
  • governors
  • trustees
  • senior leaders
  • EDI leads
  • colleges and schools
  • charities and public services

Leaders will need clear communication, careful implementation, and ongoing review.

Final Thoughts

The new draft Code is one of the most significant updates to Equality Act guidance in years.

It reinforces that equality law is complex and requires organisations to balance rights carefully, thoughtfully, and lawfully.

For many organisations, the challenge now is not simply “what is legal?” — but also:

“How do we create environments that are lawful, safe, respectful and inclusive for everyone?”

Read the full draft Code here: GOV.UK Draft Code of Practice

Further coverage: The Guardian explainer   EHRC guidance coverage

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