Wheelchair travel guides
Sourced, dated, mobile-first accessibility guides for cities around the world.
Europe
- France
Paris
The big sights work. The metro mostly doesn't.
Read the guide - France
Bordeaux
Flat, walkable, with an accessible tram.
Read the guide - France
Grenoble
The Alps from a step-free cable car.
Read the guide - France
Lyon
Modern metro and a cobbled old town.
Read the guide - France
Marseille
Vieux-Port is flat. Le Panier is steep.
Read the guide - France
Nice
A long flat promenade by the sea.
Read the guide - France
Strasbourg
Compact, flat, easy to roll.
Read the guide - France
Toulouse
Pink-brick streets, mostly flat.
Read the guide - Germany
Berlin
Wide pavements, modern transit, room to roll.
Read the guide - Germany
Bonn
Quiet riverside city. Easy walks.
Read the guide - Germany
Cologne
Cathedral square is flat and big.
Read the guide - Germany
Dresden
Baroque centre, mostly step-free.
Read the guide - Germany
Düsseldorf
Riverside Altstadt. Easy and bright.
Read the guide - Germany
Frankfurt
Skyline city with step-free transit.
Read the guide - Germany
Hamburg
Step-free ferries on the Elbe.
Read the guide - Germany
Leipzig
Flat, compact, easy to navigate.
Read the guide - Germany
Munich
Beer gardens and ramps everywhere.
Read the guide - Germany
Stuttgart
Hill city. The U-Bahn does the climb.
Read the guide - Spain
Barcelona
Long flat blocks. Accessible metro lines.
Read the guide - Spain
Madrid
Big city, mostly step-free transit.
Read the guide - Spain
Granada
The Alhambra has accessible routes.
Read the guide - Spain
Malaga
Seafront city, mostly flat.
Read the guide - Spain
Palma de Mallorca
Compact old town by the sea.
Read the guide - Spain
Seville
Flat centre, patios, easy trams.
Read the guide - Spain
Valencia
Step-free metro to the City of Arts.
Read the guide - Italy
Rome
Ancient cobbles and accessible museums.
Read the guide - Italy
Florence
Renaissance art with a step-free Uffizi.
Read the guide - Italy
Milan
Modern metro lines work for chairs.
Read the guide - Italy
Naples
Step-free funiculars to the hilltop.
Read the guide - Italy
Venice
Most bridges work. Some don't.
Read the guide - Austria
Vienna
Compact, mostly flat, deeply walkable.
Read the guide - Belgium
Brussels
Trams work. Cobbles in the old centre.
Read the guide - Czech Republic
Prague
Old town is cobbled but flat.
Read the guide - Denmark
Copenhagen
Step-free everything. Bike-flat city.
Read the guide - Greece
Athens
Lifts at the Acropolis.
Read the guide - Hungary
Budapest
Thermal baths and accessible M4 metro.
Read the guide - Ireland
Dublin
Compact, friendly, mostly flat.
Read the guide - Netherlands
Amsterdam
Step-free trams along the canals.
Read the guide - Norway
Oslo
Fjord ferries and step-free metro.
Read the guide - Poland
Krakow
Old town is flat. Cobbles are a thing.
Read the guide - Poland
Warsaw
Modern transit and accessible buses.
Read the guide - Portugal
Lisbon
Hilly. The elevators are your friend.
Read the guide - Sweden
Stockholm
Step-free metro under the islands.
Read the guide - Turkey
Istanbul
Step-free Marmaray under the Bosphorus.
Read the guide - United Kingdom
London
Elizabeth line works. The Tube is half done.
Read the guide - Vatican City
Vatican City
Step-free entry at St Peter's.
Read the guide
North America
- United States
New York
Free companion museum tickets. Wide ramped streets.
Read the guide - United States
Los Angeles
Sprawling, drive-everywhere, big sidewalks.
Read the guide - United States
Chicago
Architecture city, step-free 'L' trains.
Read the guide - United States
Miami
Boardwalks reach the sand.
Read the guide - United States
Las Vegas
Skybridges link the Strip's biggest hotels.
Read the guide - United States
Orlando
Theme parks with full mobility programs.
Read the guide
Asia
- Japan
Tokyo
A step-free station for every line.
Read the guide - Japan
Osaka
Bright, neon, accessible Midosuji line.
Read the guide - Japan
Kyoto
Temples and buses. Both work.
Read the guide - South Korea
Seoul
Step-free metro across the whole city.
Read the guide - Thailand
Bangkok
Skytrain has lifts. Tuk-tuks don't.
Read the guide