Venues invest in accessibility features and then wonder why disabled visitors aren’t showing up. The gap is usually not the features themselves — it’s everything around them. The information, the assumptions, the details that didn’t make it onto the website, and the staff who weren’t told the ramp existed.
This is what disabled visitors are actually looking for, based on what they research before they visit, what they report when they get there, and what they wish venues understood.
“Accessible” is not a complete sentence
Listing a venue as “wheelchair accessible” communicates almost nothing useful. Accessible from which entrance? Throughout the entire venue, or just the ground floor? Is the accessible restroom near the exhibits or a five-minute detour through a service corridor?
Disabled visitors doing pre-trip research are trying to answer a specific question: will this venue work for my particular needs on this particular visit? “Accessible” doesn’t answer that. The venues that get this right treat their accessibility page like a practical planning tool, not a compliance checkbox.
The accessibility statement on your website is probably about your website
Many venues have an “Accessibility Statement” that covers screen reader compatibility, font sizing, and keyboard navigation. That’s website accessibility — important, but not what a visitor trying to plan a trip needs.
Physical accessibility information — entrances, routes, restrooms, sensory accommodations, staff support — often lives nowhere on the site, or is buried in the FAQ under a question nobody thought to ask.
Visitors regularly report emailing venues directly because the website didn’t answer basic questions. That’s a gap the venue created.
The accessible entrance experience matters
Venues with step-free or accessible entrances that route disabled visitors through service areas, back corridors, or loading docks — while non-disabled visitors enter through the main entrance — are communicating something about how they think about their disabled visitors, whether they intend to or not.
This comes up in reviews with enough consistency to be worth naming. Visitors notice. They report it.
Wheelchair access is not the whole picture
Features that disabled visitors actively look for — and frequently can’t find information about:
- Mobility and Physical
- Seating along routes — Not just in the café. Throughout the galleries or grounds. Relevant for anyone with chronic fatigue, pain conditions, cardiac issues, or mobility limitations that don’t require a wheelchair. Venues often have benches, but don’t document where they are.
- Sensory & Neurodivergent
- Quiet rooms or low-stimulation spaces — Museums, theme parks, and cultural venues increasingly offer these. Many don’t advertise them. Visitors with autism, anxiety, PTSD, migraines, or sensory processing differences are searching specifically for this before they commit to a visit.
- Sensory guides and social narratives — A sensory guide maps noise levels, lighting, crowd density, and unexpected stimuli throughout the venue. A social narrative describes what a visit looks and sounds like in advance. Both reduce anxiety and help visitors plan. Both are underused and under-advertised.
- Less crowded times — Officially recommended off-peak windows exist for many venues, but aren’t always published. Visitors with sensory sensitivities, chronic fatigue, or mobility aids that are harder to navigate in crowds actively seek this information.
- Staff training in sensory differences — Visitors notice when staff don’t know how to interact with someone who is non-speaking, visibly autistic, or having a pain flare. They also notice — and report — when staff do know. This is one of the few features that shows up in reviews specifically because it’s rare enough to be remarkable.
- Visual
- Large print and high-contrast materials — Visitors with low vision are looking for whether these exist before they arrive, not just whether the venue is “accessible.”
- Audio guides — format, device or app, whether it requires a data connection, and whether it costs extra. All details that matter and are rarely specified.
- Braille materials — Less common, but visitors who need them are specifically searching for them.
- Hearing
- Assistive listening devices — type, availability, and whether they require a deposit or ID.
- Captioning on video content — Often an afterthought in exhibit design, frequently not documented.
- Sign language interpretation — whether it’s available, how much notice is required, and who to contact. “Available upon request” with no further detail is not useful planning information.
“Upon request” means something different to the person requesting it
Venues often list accommodations as “available upon request” without specifying what that request process looks like. To a visitor planning a trip, this raises more questions than it answers:
- How much notice is required?
- Who do I contact?
- What happens if I show up without having requested it in advance?
- Is this actually available on the day I’m visiting, or is it dependent on specific staff being scheduled?
“Sign language interpretation available upon request” with two weeks’ notice is a meaningfully different accommodation than one available with 48 hours’ notice. Visitors making plans need to know which one they’re dealing with.
Documentation requirements are often unclear and sometimes wrong
If your venue offers reduced admission, an accessibility pass, or other programs with documentation requirements, publish the specifics. What’s accepted, what’s not, and what the process looks like.
Visitors with invisible disabilities report a consistent pattern: arriving unsure whether to disclose, what to bring, or whether they’ll be believed. Clear published policies reduce that friction — for visitors and for your staff.
Outdated information is worse than no information
A venue’s accessibility page that hasn’t been updated since a renovation, a temporary closure of the accessible restroom, or the discontinuation of the audio guide creates a specific problem: visitors plan around information that turns out to be wrong when they arrive.
Disabled visitors, particularly those who have been caught out by this before, are often doing more research than the average visitor precisely because the consequences of showing up unprepared are higher. Finding information that turns out to be outdated doesn’t just inconvenience them — it undermines trust in the venue entirely.
An accessibility page with a “last updated” date, or a note about temporary changes to accessibility features, costs almost nothing and signals that the information is being maintained.
What gets documented gets visited
Disabled visitors make decisions based on available information. A venue with genuinely good accessibility features that aren’t documented online will lose visits to a venue with mediocre features that are clearly described — because the second venue answered the research question and the first one didn’t.
This is the practical case for investing in accessibility documentation alongside accessibility features themselves. The feature only helps visitors who knew it existed before they decided whether to come.
OnlyEverywhere.com lists accessibility features for US venues across mobility, sensory, visual, auditory, and support service categories. Venues can claim their listing to update and expand their accessibility information.
