Voices From The Community | Spinal Cord Injury & Paralysis

Accessible Travel Planning

Written by Amber Collie | Mar 13, 2024 1:00:00 PM

Just because you use a wheelchair doesn't mean you're limited to staying at home. YES, you can travel! Sure, there will be limitations but there are still many places and new things to experience. The fear of the unknown and how to get started can be a hurdle for some. I realize it can be intimidating when you start thinking about traveling in a wheelchair, especially a power chair, but it is possible! So, start thinking where do I want to go?

Planning a vacation takes effort, I find doing it in stages makes it easier and I enjoy the process because it makes me feel excited about the future upcoming trip. When I first traveled with Zack, my then 16-year-old quadriplegic son, it was simple to prove we could do it. We flew from California to Colorado with a layover. I do recommend a straight flight if one is available, depending on the length of the flight sometimes that break is helpful. After we saw that travel was possible, I surprised Zack with a trip to the Aloha state. We have since been to Hawaii 3x’s the islands Honolulu, Kauai & Maui have proven to be pretty wheelchair accessible.

How to Start: Where, Research, Dates, Flights, Hotel, Transportation & Activities

Pick a spot and do some research about the place. Check the weather for the time of year you want to visit, look up things to do there, what they are known for.

Find flexible dates that work and start playing around with those dates while looking up flights and hotels, before you request time off work, making sure those dates all match up. You will need an aisle seat.

Flight options

So far, the different airlines we have used have been helpful. You will be the first to board and the last to exit the plane. Employees bring out a small transfer isle chair and you will need to be lifted to that chair from your wheelchair. Employees are willing to help with this transfer. They then roll you to the airplane seat (aisle chair is the easiest). We find it helpful to bring the cushion from wheelchair, and put it on the airplane seat, just be mindful if it is an air type cushion (example Roho brand) as it will inflate from the altitude. We combat this by letting a small amount of air out before. We tried a gel filled cushion on our last trip and worked fine.