1,956 restaurants and bars in the Miami Metro area, each scored 0-100 for real wheelchair accessibility. Plus 5,409 locations across all of Florida. 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 Miami Beach, Brickell, Wynwood, or any area in South Florida.
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 Miami 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.
Miami is one of the most visited cities in the United States. Tens of millions of tourists arrive each year, and a significant number of them use wheelchairs or have mobility limitations. Add to that the hundreds of thousands of snowbirds who spend their winters in South Florida, many of them seniors who rely on wheeled mobility to get around. They all need to eat, and they all deserve to know what they are walking -- or rolling -- into.
Miami Beach's art deco buildings are stunning. They are also frequently not accessible. Narrow doors built in the 1930s and 1940s, steps up to elevated dining rooms, and restrooms tucked into corners never designed for a wheelchair. The outdoor dining scene helps -- sidewalk cafes on Ocean Drive and Lincoln Road are often more accessible than the interiors behind them -- but restrooms inside are another story entirely.
Brickell's newer high-rises tend to be better, but "new" does not guarantee accessible. Wynwood's converted warehouses are a mixed bag. Coral Gables has charm but also has a lot of older construction. Fort Lauderdale's beach strip has its own set of challenges.
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 you will encounter steps on the way in. That is the difference between hoping for the best and knowing before you go.
1,956 restaurants and bars scored across the greater Miami area. Search by neighborhood or browse the map.
Miami is our largest Florida region, but we cover the whole state. Heading to Orlando for the parks? Tampa for a conference? We have you covered.
1,956 locations. Real scores. No account required. Stop guessing about accessibility and start knowing.