The aim of this study was identifying the challenges and opportunities of access of labeledrnprescription and pharmaceutical related information for the blind in Addis Ababa. With thernassumption of meeting the purpose, quantitative and qualitative methods were applied. Thernresearcher selected three groups of respondents. They were: thirty blind people, ninety twornpharmacists and two key government offices (i.e. Ministry of health and Ethiopian food andrndrugs control authority). A questionnaire that include demographic characteristics of thernrespondents, barriers and opportunities the blind have to access for labeled prescriptions andrnpharmaceutical related information presented in an open-ended, FGD, interview and liker scalesrnwere designed. After the data has been collected, analysis was made. Data from the quantitativernsurvey were analyzed using percentages, mean; standard deviations and t-test .While thernqualitative using inductive thematic analysis. Thus, the t-test result shows pharmacies are notrnequipped with medicines with various formats (medicines with audio, tactile materials andrnBraille writings) that can make access of the blind to such information easier. The study alsornfound that even though pharmacists prove their readiness to assist the blind, lack of equipmentsrnand consistent polices remains a challenge .The qualitative findings shows the blind are at riskrnin their day to day life as a result of missing those assistive aids. This missing informationrnresulted to taking wrong medicines, inability to identify exact locations of medicines andrndifficulty in getting assistance. The research further established marginalization of blind womenrnis far worse than their male counterparts due to gender-specific challenges. Finally, based onrnthe major findings, the research comes up with recommendations that help overcome the existingrnproblems