3,093 restaurants and bars across the DC Metro area, each scored 0-100 for real wheelchair accessibility. Georgetown to Capitol Hill, Navy Yard to Bethesda. Know before you go.
No guesswork. No phone calls. Just real data about the places you want to visit.
Type a neighborhood, cuisine, or restaurant name. Filter by Georgetown, Capitol Hill, Dupont Circle, or any area in the DC Metro.
Every location has a 0-100 accessibility score based on six real features. See exactly what is and is not accessible before you leave the house.
Save your favorites, share with friends and family, and stop worrying about surprises at the door. That is what "know before you go" means.
Every DC restaurant is evaluated on the features that actually matter when you use a wheelchair.
The three critical features carry the most weight. When critical features are unverified, the score is capped to prevent false confidence.
Washington DC is where accessibility policy is written. The ADA was signed into law here. Federal agencies set the standard for the rest of the country. And yet the city itself is a maze of accessibility challenges -- historic Federal architecture, cobblestone streets in Georgetown, Metro elevators that are famously unreliable, and row houses converted into restaurants with steps at every entrance.
Georgetown is one of the most popular dining destinations in the city, and one of the hardest to navigate in a wheelchair. Brick sidewalks, narrow storefronts, and buildings from the 1800s that were never designed for accessibility. Capitol Hill has its own mix of historic townhouse restaurants and newer developments. Dupont Circle and Adams Morgan sit on steep hills. The Smithsonian draws millions of visitors a year, and many of them need to eat near the National Mall -- but which Penn Quarter restaurants can they actually get into?
The newer neighborhoods are better but not guaranteed. Navy Yard's Wharf development is relatively modern, but "new construction" does not always mean fully accessible. Tysons Corner and Bethesda have suburban sprawl with its own set of parking and entry challenges.
ROLLIN gives you the full picture -- not a binary "wheelchair accessible: yes" from Google Maps, but a granular 0-100 score that tells you whether you can get through the door, whether the restroom works, and whether there are steps on the way in. In a city that writes the rules on accessibility, you should not have to guess.
3,093 restaurants and bars scored across DC, Northern Virginia, and suburban Maryland. Search by neighborhood or browse the map.
3,093 locations. Real scores. No account required. Stop guessing about accessibility and start knowing.