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Hudson Valley Wheelchair Accessibility Guide

Find Wheelchair Accessible
Restaurants in the Hudson Valley

4,800+

Hudson Valley locations scored for accessibility

When the next restaurant is 20 minutes away, you can't afford to guess. Every location gets a 0-100 accessibility score based on 6 features that matter. From Beacon to Woodstock. Always free.

Three steps. No wasted drives.

In rural areas, getting it wrong means a 40-minute round trip for nothing. Plan ahead.

1

Search your town

Type a town, cuisine, or vibe. "Wheelchair accessible farm-to-table in Rhinebeck" works. So does "pizza Beacon."

2

See the real score

Every place gets a 0-100 accessibility score. Not a thumbs up. Not a checkbox. A number based on six specific features you can actually check.

3

Know before you drive

See exactly what's accessible and what's not. That charming Main Street cafe might have a ramp in back. Or it might have three steps and no alternative. You'll know.

Six features. The ones that actually matter.

Each Hudson Valley restaurant is evaluated on the specific accessibility details wheelchair users need to know.

Wheelchair Entry

Can you get through the front door in a wheelchair? Ramp, level threshold, or side entrance. In a region of converted barns and century-old storefronts, this is never guaranteed.

Critical Feature

Accessible Restroom

A restroom you can actually use. Grab bars, turning radius, accessible stall. In older Hudson Valley buildings, restrooms are often an afterthought in a converted closet.

Critical Feature

Level Entry

No steps at the entrance. Zero. Not "just one small step." Historic Main Street buildings and hillside restaurants make level entry a genuine challenge throughout the valley.

Critical Feature

Accessible Parking

Designated accessible parking spots nearby. The good news: the Hudson Valley generally has more parking than a city. The question is whether any of it is designated accessible.

Wide Aisles

Enough space between tables to navigate a wheelchair. Farm-to-table restaurants in renovated spaces can be cozy to the point of inaccessible. We track which ones have room.

Elevator

For multi-level restaurants, is there an elevator? That upstairs dining room at the historic inn or the cellar wine bar — you need to know if you can reach it.

From river towns to mountain villages. 4,800+ locations.

The Hudson Valley's dining scene is spread across dozens of towns. We've scored them all.

Google says "accessible." We show you the score.

In the Hudson Valley, getting it wrong means a wasted trip — not a walk to the next block.

Google Maps

Café Le Perche, Hudson

Wheelchair accessible

That's it. That's all you get. It's a converted historic building — accessible how? Through which entrance? Only one way to find out: drive there.

ROLLIN

Café Le Perche, Hudson

68/ 100
Wheelchair entry (side entrance)
Accessible restroom
Level entry (1 step, ramp available)
Accessible parking
Wide aisles
Elevator (N/A single floor)

Side entrance has a ramp. Accessible restroom and parking. Tight aisles inside. Now you can decide before driving 25 minutes to get there.

Scored by people who live and dine here.

ROLLIN doesn't let restaurants rate themselves. Our scores come from a combination of public data, on-the-ground verification, and community contributions from people who actually navigate the Hudson Valley in wheelchairs.

This region is where ROLLIN started. The founder lives here. The first data was collected here. The Hudson Valley is our home turf, and it shows in the depth of our coverage — 4,800+ locations across every town from Nyack to Woodstock.

Our trust-weighted system means the most reliable contributors have the most influence on scores. The result: data you can trust before you make the drive to that new farm-to-table spot in Rhinebeck or that brewery in Kingston.

Search Accessible Restaurants in the Hudson Valley

4,800+ locations. Every town. Real scores. Free.

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