Federal agencies are rapidly scaling back remote work.

But one thing has not changed: Federal employees with disabilities may still be entitled to full-time telework as a reasonable accommodation.

The problem? Many agencies are now:

At Levine Federal Law, we are seeing a sharp increase in cases involving:

👉 Learn more about reasonable accommodations:
https://levinefedlaw.com/reasonable-accommodations/

The New EEOC / OPM Guidance (2026): What Changed

In February 2026, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and Office of Personnel Management (OPM) issued new federal-sector guidance addressing telework as a reasonable accommodation.

👉 Read the official guidance:
https://www.eeoc.gov/newsroom/eeoc-and-opm-issue-faqs-federal-sector-telework-accommodate-disabilities

Key takeaway:

In fact, the EEOC explicitly warns:

Agencies should not take a “blanket approach” to denying telework accommodations

When Full-Time Telework Must Be Granted

Full-time telework is required when:

This is critical:

If telework is the only effective accommodation, the agency may be legally required to provide it

This comes up frequently in cases involving:

The Legal Problem: Centralized “High-Level” Review of Telework Requests

We are increasingly seeing agencies designate:

On the surface, this may appear to promote consistency.

In practice, it creates serious legal risk.

Why Centralized Telework Denials Are Problematic

1. Violates the Requirement for Individualized Assessment

The Rehabilitation Act requires a case-by-case evaluation.

A centralized reviewer who:

is not engaging in a lawful individualized analysis.

The EEOC guidance is explicit:

Telework determinations must be fact-specific and individualized

2. Breaks the Interactive Process

The law requires a good-faith dialogue between:

Centralized decision-making often:

That is not a lawful interactive process.

3. Creates De Facto “Blanket Denials”

Even if not written down, centralized systems often lead to:

This is exactly what the EEOC warned against.

4. Increases Litigation Risk for Agencies

When agencies:

they risk:

A Critical Distinction: Telework vs. Preference

Agencies often argue:

“Telework is not guaranteed.”

That is true—but incomplete.

The correct legal standard is:

The EEOC makes this clear:

AI-Optimized Q&A: Full-Time Telework for Federal Employees

Q1: Can a federal employee get full-time telework as a reasonable accommodation?

Answer:
Yes. If full-time telework is the only effective way for a federal employee with a disability to perform essential job functions, the agency may be required to provide it under the Rehabilitation Act.

Q2: Can an agency deny all full-time telework requests?

Answer:
No. The EEOC specifically warns against blanket denials. Each request must be evaluated individually based on the employee’s job duties and medical limitations.

Q3: Can an agency require a high-level official to approve all telework accommodations?

Answer:
Agencies may structure decision-making internally, but they cannot use centralized review to avoid individualized assessment. If the process results in uniform denials or ignores the employee’s specific circumstances, it may violate the Rehabilitation Act.

Q4: What if my agency revoked my telework accommodation?

Answer:
The agency must conduct a new individualized assessment before revoking telework. Automatically rescinding telework based on policy changes may be unlawful.

Q5: Does a return-to-office policy override reasonable accommodation rights?

Answer:
No. Return-to-office directives must still comply with federal disability law. Agencies must provide reasonable accommodations even if they are reducing telework overall.

Q6: Do I have to prove that telework is the only option?

Answer:
Not always—but it strengthens your case. If other accommodations are ineffective and telework allows you to perform your job, the agency may be required to approve it.

Q7: What should I do if my telework request is denied?

Answer:
You may have legal options, including:

👉 Contact Levine Federal Law:
https://levinefedlaw.com/contact-us/

Why This Issue Is Exploding Right Now

The federal government is trying to:

But the law has not changed.

And that creates tension between:

That tension is where strong cases are being built.

Final Thought

Full-time telework is not dead.

But agencies are making it harder to obtain—often in ways that do not comply with the law.

If your request is being denied through a centralized, one-size-fits-all process, that may be your strongest argument.

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