Experiences for Reduced Mobility

Italy, curated for how you travel.

Each experience below is verified for the specific needs of your accessibility profile — by a concierge who calls every venue, in any language, before you do.

What "verified" means for Reduced Mobility

Every experience checked for the details that matter to you.

We don't list a generic catalogue. Each experience below has been visited, measured and verified by our team specifically for travelers in your profile.

The verification checklist under each card is the actual list of items we confirmed before publishing it.

A slow-paced Tuscany with short walking distances

Tuscany · Florence + Chianti

A slow-paced Tuscany with short walking distances

Hotels with elevators. Vineyards with golf-cart access. Restaurants you can reach without a hill.

Reduced mobility doesn't always mean a wheelchair — sometimes it means short walking distances, frequent rest, and never being more than a few steps from a chair. We build itineraries where every site is within 200m of a parking spot and every restaurant has seating waiting.

Verified for you

  • Sites <200m from parking
  • Elevators in every hotel
  • Seated rest stops every 30min
  • Golf-cart winery access
“We're slow walkers. The trip was paced for us, not the bus tour next to us.” — Eleanor, USA
Taormina without the climb

Sicily · Taormina

Taormina without the climb

The cable car instead of the stairs. A hotel right on the main pedestrian street. A Greek theatre with a side entrance.

Taormina is built on a cliff. Most visitors don't realize there is a cable car from the seafront, a side entrance to the Greek theatre that skips the steps, and a few hotels that let you arrive without climbing. We book all three.

Verified for you

  • Cable car timetable
  • Step-free hotel street
  • Theatre side entrance
  • Rest benches mapped
“I was dreading the stairs. We never took a single set.” — Diana, slow walker, Australia
Cinque Terre by train and boat, not by trail

Liguria · Cinque Terre

Cinque Terre by train and boat, not by trail

Skip the hiking trails. The local train stops in every village. The accessible boat between them.

Cinque Terre is famous for hiking — and inaccessible for many travelers. We build an itinerary using only the regional train and the seasonal accessible ferry, with hotels in Monterosso where the village is on flat ground.

Verified for you

  • Train accessibility per station
  • Ferry accessible boarding
  • Flat-village hotel
  • Step-free seafront cafés
“No one tells you that you can see Cinque Terre without hiking. We saw all five villages.” — Marc, reduced mobility, Belgium

Plan with us

Tell us your dream trip. We'll handle the uncertainty.

Our concierge replies in any language, usually within a few hours.

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