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Why Accessibility Information Is So Hard to Find When Traveling

ADA Compliant, but is it accessible?

You’d think it would be simple. You want to visit a museum, a park, a stadium. You go to the website. You look for accessibility information. And you find… a vague statement about being ADA compliant, a phone number to call, and maybe a note that wheelchairs are available upon request.

If you have a disability, this is a familiar experience. The information you need to plan a trip — real, specific, actionable information — is either buried, generic, or missing entirely. This isn’t an accident. It’s the result of several overlapping problems that have made accessibility one of the most under-documented areas in travel.


“ADA Compliant” Doesn’t Tell You Anything

The Americans with Disabilities Act sets a legal floor for accessibility. It doesn’t tell you whether the accessible restroom is on the third floor with no elevator nearby, whether the “accessible route” involves a steep slope, or whether the quiet room is actually quiet or just a corner of the gift shop.

Compliance language was written to protect venues from liability. It was not written to help travelers plan a visit. The result is that most accessibility statements on venue websites are legally useful and practically useless.

What travelers actually need — surface types, distances, the noise level in different areas, what equipment is available and where to get it, whether staff are trained to help — is rarely documented anywhere.


Venues Don’t Know What to Document

Even venues that genuinely want to be helpful often don’t know what information matters most to visitors with disabilities. Accessibility is not one thing. It means something different for a wheelchair user, a person with low vision, someone with autism, a Deaf visitor, or a parent with a child who has sensory processing differences.

Most venues approach accessibility from a mobility-first perspective — ramps, elevators, accessible parking — because those are the features they’ve been required to provide. Sensory accommodations, communication supports, and cognitive accessibility are newer areas, and many venues haven’t caught up. The information gap is widest exactly where the need is often greatest.


Reviews Don’t Fill the Gap

Peer reviews on platforms like Yelp, TripAdvisor, and Google are theoretically a good source of real-world accessibility information. In practice, they’re inconsistent and hard to search. A review might mention that “the parking lot is a nightmare” or that “staff were incredibly helpful” without any of the specific details that would help someone plan.

Non-disabled reviewers rarely think to document accessibility features because they don’t need to. And when disabled reviewers do leave detailed accessibility notes, that information is mixed into general reviews with no way to filter for it or find it easily.

The result is that travelers with disabilities often spend hours searching review sites, disability forums, and Facebook groups trying to piece together information that should be available in five minutes on the venue’s own website.


Accessibility Pages Are Often an Afterthought

When accessibility information does exist on a venue’s website, it’s frequently outdated, incomplete, or hard to find. It might be a single paragraph at the bottom of a “Plan Your Visit” page, last updated several years ago. It might list features that were added or removed without the page being updated. It might describe the building as it was before a renovation.

Venues update their ticket prices, hours, and event calendars regularly. Accessibility pages often get updated once and forgotten.


The Information Asymmetry Is a Real Barrier

For travelers without disabilities, incomplete information is an inconvenience. For travelers with disabilities, it can mean the difference between a successful trip and one that ends at the front door.

Someone who uses a power wheelchair needs to know whether the accessible entrance is on the same side as parking, or whether they’ll need to travel an extra quarter mile on an exposed sidewalk. A visitor with severe noise sensitivity needs to know whether the venue has a quiet room or sensory bags before they buy a ticket — not after they arrive and find out it doesn’t.

When that information isn’t available, many travelers simply don’t go. The cost of a bad experience — physical, financial, emotional — is high enough that uncertainty itself becomes a barrier.


What Better Looks Like

The venues that get this right share a few things in common. They publish specific, detailed accessibility guides — not legal statements. They describe the actual visitor experience: what the entrance looks like, where to go, what to ask for, what to expect in each area. They update this information regularly. And they make it easy to find.

A growing number of venues also offer tools like sensory guides, social narratives, and downloadable maps specifically for visitors who benefit from knowing what to expect before they arrive. These resources exist because someone at those venues understood that accessibility information isn’t just a compliance checkbox — it’s part of the visitor experience.

That’s the standard worth pushing toward. And it’s why directories that consolidate and standardize this information — across venues, across categories, in one place — exist in the first place.

Read with your Fingers interactive display about braille at the Queensland Museum

Browse accessibility details for venues across Los Angeles at OnlyEverywhere.com.