Short answers to the questions we hear most. Can’t find what you need? Contact us — we read every message.
Using Only Everywhere
Yes. Browsing venues, using the accessibility filters, reading reviews, and leaving your own review are all completely free. You don’t need an account to do any of it.
No. You can search, filter, and read everything without signing in, and you can leave a review as a guest. Creating an account is optional — it just lets you keep track of the reviews and listings you’ve contributed.
We’re focused on California to start, with our deepest coverage in Los Angeles. We’re actively expanding into San Francisco, Orange County, and Palm Springs. The fastest way to grow a city is to add a venue or tell us where you’d like to see us next.
Go to Things to Do and use the filters to check only the accessibility features that matter to you — Quiet Zones, Loaner Mobility Aids, Assistive Listening Devices, and so on. The directory then shows only venues that have them. For a full walkthrough, see How it Works.
Every listing uses the same standard set of features, grouped into four areas: mobility and physical access; visual and auditory communication; neurodivergent and sensory comfort; and support services and amenities. Our Accessibility Features Guide explains what each one means.
Reviews & Accessibility Information
Two sources. Baseline venue details come from official sources where they’re available, and our framework draws on the UN World Tourism Organization’s Recommendations on Accessible Tourism for All. But the most valuable information comes from people who’ve actually visited — their reviews tell you what a place is really like.
Real visitors. Only Everywhere is a community-driven directory, so reviews are written by people sharing honest, first-hand experiences of the places they’ve been — not by venues describing themselves.
Open the listing for a place you’ve visited, click the yellow Write a Review button, and continue as a guest with just your name and email (your email is never published). Give it a short title, describe what you experienced, and rate only the categories you personally noticed — leave the rest at N/A. Specific details help most: “the path from the lot to the entrance was paved and flat” is far more useful than “it was accessible.” See our Content Guidelines for tips.
No. We ask for your email so we can verify reviews and follow up if needed, but it is never published alongside your review.
Venues & Listings
Use Add Listing. You can submit a new venue as a guest or while signed in. Adding the places you know and love is the single best way to help the directory grow.
Let us know through the contact form (choose “Troubleshooting”) and point us to the listing. Accurate information is the whole point of the site, so we’ll get it corrected. You can also leave a review with your up-to-date experience — that helps future visitors right away.
Yes — we welcome venues that want to share accurate accessibility information. You can add your venue directly. If a listing for your venue already exists and you’d like to update it, get in touch and we’ll help.
No. Listings are free, and a venue can’t pay to change its accessibility information or its reviews. The directory’s value depends on the information being honest and independent, so it stays that way.
About Us
First and foremost, people with disabilities — permanent or episodic, visible or invisible, physical, cognitive, or sensory. But detailed accessibility information helps many more people: a parent with a stroller, someone recovering from surgery, an aging adult with changing hearing, or anyone who needs sensory comfort. It’s built for everyone. Read more on our About page.
Please do. Language around disability and neurodivergence keeps evolving, and we don’t always get it right. Our goal is to make useful information easier to find, never to define or categorize people. If something doesn’t reflect your experience, tell us — we’re listening.
Still have a question? Send us a message.
