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Orlando Wheelchair Accessibility Guide

Find Wheelchair Accessible
Restaurants in Orlando

1,200+

Orlando locations scored for accessibility

Millions visit Orlando every year. Many use wheelchairs. The parks are built for access — the restaurants around them are a different story. Every location gets a 0-100 accessibility score based on 6 features. Always free.

Three steps. No surprises at the door.

You planned the theme park trip. Don't leave dinner to chance.

1

Search your area

Type a neighborhood, cuisine, or vibe. "Wheelchair accessible restaurants near I-Drive" works. So does "brunch Winter Park."

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 go

See exactly what's accessible and what's not. Level entry but no accessible restroom? You'll know. Elevator to the second floor but tight aisles? You'll see it.

Six features. The ones that actually matter.

Each Orlando 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 wide automatic doors. Tourist corridor restaurants are usually good. Local spots in older plazas? Check the score first.

Critical Feature

Accessible Restroom

A restroom you can actually use. Grab bars, turning radius, accessible stall. Because being able to eat somewhere means nothing if you can't use the bathroom.

Critical Feature

Level Entry

No steps at the entrance. Zero. Orlando is flat, which helps. But raised storefronts, patio curbs, and strip mall design can create unexpected barriers.

Critical Feature

Accessible Parking

Designated accessible parking spots nearby. Orlando is a driving city — you're parking everywhere you go. We track which restaurants have accessible spots close to the entrance.

Wide Aisles

Enough space between tables to navigate a wheelchair without turning it into a logistical challenge. We know which restaurants leave room to move and which ones don't.

Elevator

For multi-level restaurants, is there an elevator? That upstairs lounge or rooftop bar might look great on Instagram, but only if you can get there.

From the tourist corridor to the local scene. 1,200+ locations.

Orlando is more than the parks. We've scored the dining across the whole metro.

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

A checkbox doesn't tell you what you actually need to know.

Google Maps

Ravenous Pig, Winter Park

Wheelchair accessible

That's it. That's all you get. It's a popular gastropub — but accessible how? Can you get to the patio? Is the restroom on a different level? No answers.

ROLLIN

Ravenous Pig, Winter Park

80/ 100
Wheelchair entry
Accessible restroom
Level entry
Accessible parking
Wide aisles
Elevator (N/A single floor)

Level entry, spacious layout, accessible restroom and parking. Single floor so no elevator needed. This one checks nearly every box.

Scored by people who actually need the data.

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 Orlando in wheelchairs — residents and visitors alike.

Orlando welcomes tens of millions of visitors every year, and a significant number use wheelchairs or mobility devices. The theme parks have invested billions in accessibility. The independent restaurants on I-Drive and in local neighborhoods? That's where the data gaps live. Our trust-weighted system means the most reliable contributors have the most influence on scores.

The result: scores you can trust whether you're a local heading to Mills 50, a tourist looking for dinner near the parks, or a family planning an accessible vacation in Central Florida.

Search Accessible Restaurants in Orlando

1,200+ locations. Tourist corridor to local gems. Real scores. Free.

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