There are several laws and regulations in Denmark to consider in relation to innovation of welfare technology. For example is a wash toilet named an ‘assistive device’ when it is enacted by the Social Services Law in referral practices and ‘welfare technology’ if it is enacted in project-based practices as a work environment device. The bodies of law enact the wash toilet differently, in terms of who the users are, but, in both cases, the toilet is expected to compensate either citizens’ permanent impairments or homecare assistants’ physical work. The toilets were to be distributed as a working device for care employees, according to the Work Environment Law, which stipulates that the workplace should be arranged so that it is safe and healthy. However, when the toilet as in this case is enacted as a welfare technology it potentially undermines the purposes of toilets enacted as assisted devices in that they compensate rather than rehabilitate the citizens. According to the Social Services Law, impairments must be permanent in order for the citizen to be granted assistive devices, or there must be a substantial relief in the everyday life of the citizen. The law inscribes who has the right to be granted an assistive device, and who has not. The Danish Policy makers need knowledge about legislation and laws due to welfare technology products. Furthermore the Danish Policy makers need a platform for cooperation with SME ́s due to interpretation of legislation and laws