A preliminary search of the published literature was undertaken on 06.02.2024 in Google Scholar, PROSPERO, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) Evidence Synthesis using the key words neurodegenerative disease, minority ethnic, and intervention. No current scoping reviews or reviews in progress on the topic were identified. One systematic review, conducted by Huggins et al. [] was identified; this assessed whether existing educational interventions increase knowledge about dementia among minority ethnic communities. Most of the studies were conducted in the USA, primarily concentrating on Black and Hispanic/Latino communities. The three studies conducted in the UK, targeted Black (Black British, Black African, Black Caribbean, African and Caribbean) and Asian (British Indian, Asian Caribbean) populations. The interventions predominantly took a psychoeducational approach, with the aims of enhancing knowledge regarding cognitive assessments, fostering an understanding of person-centred dementia care, and teaching coping strategies to families and unpaid carers of people living with dementia to reduce burden and stress. Only two studies, Parveen et al. [] and Roche et al. [], specifically addressed the effectiveness of interventions aimed at enhancing knowledge of dementia in South Asian families and promoting timely help-seeking for dementia in older Black African and Caribbean adults, respectively. This systematic review was restricted to studies published between 2015 and 2020, focusing solely on knowledge about dementia. To broaden the scope and to expand the period covered by the searches, the present scoping review will consider four neurodegenerative conditions, specifically dementia of any type, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, and motor neurone disease, and consider studies published from inception to 2025., Eligible sources will include interventions specifically tailored for South Asian and Black communities, living with dementia, Parkinson’s disease, Huntington’s disease, or motor neurone disease., Raising awareness about HD and the treatments available that the evolving diagnostic criteria can help in decreasing the stigma surrounding HD, can help with decreasing the misperceptions.