2,279 restaurants and bars in the Houston Metro, each scored 0-100 for real wheelchair accessibility. Plus 7,526 locations across all of Texas. 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 Montrose, The Heights, Midtown, or any area across the Houston 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 Houston restaurant is evaluated on the features that actually matter when you are in a wheelchair.
The three critical features carry the most weight. When critical features are unverified, the score is capped to prevent false confidence.
Houston has more cuisines per square mile than almost any city in the country. Vietnamese in Midtown, Nigerian in Alief, Salvadoran in the East End, Tex-Mex everywhere. The problem is that this incredible diversity lives in strip malls, converted houses, and standalone buildings that were never designed with wheelchair access in mind. A pho spot with a two-inch step at the door. A taqueria with gravel between the parking lot and the entrance. A dim sum hall with narrow aisles between packed tables.
Then there is the weather. Houston is flat -- good for rolling, bad for drainage. When it rains, and it rains a lot, water pools in parking lots, blocks curb cuts, and floods ground-level entrances. The same level entry that makes a restaurant wheelchair-accessible in dry weather becomes the first thing underwater when a bayou overflows. This is not hypothetical. It happens every storm season.
Houston's sprawl is legendary. The metro area covers 10,000 square miles. There is no meaningful public transit for most of it. You are driving everywhere, which means accessible parking is not a nice-to-have -- it is the entire first chapter of whether you can eat somewhere. A restaurant with great food and a ramped entrance means nothing if the nearest accessible parking spot is across a six-lane feeder road.
ROLLIN gives you the full picture -- not just "wheelchair accessible: yes" like Google Maps, but a granular 0-100 score that tells you whether you can get through the door, whether the restroom works for you, and whether there are steps between you and your table. That is the difference between hoping for the best and knowing before you go.
2,279 restaurants and bars scored across the Houston metroplex. Search by neighborhood or browse the map.
Houston is our second-largest Texas region. Heading to Dallas for work? Weekend in Austin? We have you covered.