"Wheelchair accessible" on a hotel website means one thing in Tokyo, another in Barcelona, and a third (more dangerous) one in Mexico City. The first has a whole country built for accessibility since the 1964 Paralympics, with 90% of metro stations elevator-equipped and station staff trained to deploy portable ramps. The second has a perfect new metro and an old quarter (Gòtic) that destroys a wheelchair tire in two blocks. The third has zones (Roma, Condesa, Polanco) where you roll just fine and zones (Centro Histórico, Coyoacán) where you need a Plan B before leaving the hotel. This guide is for anyone traveling with a wheelchair (own, rented, manual or powered) who wants to know — street by street, hotel by hotel, attraction by attraction — what actually works and what doesn't. Data verified May/26, with official sources and real user reports (not hotel marketing). Tokyo, Barcelona, Mexico City — three high-interest cities, three levels of planning complexity.
14 min read
Accessibility isn't binary. "Accessible city" is a simplification that hides what matters: station X has an elevator, station Y doesn't. Hotel Z has a roll-in shower, hotel W has a tub "with grab bar" (useless for a wheelchair user). The attraction has a ramp at the main entrance but requires 30 stairs to reach the second floor.
This guide treats each city in three layers:
- How you move (metro, bus, taxi, sidewalks)
- Where you sleep (hotel with a verified room, not just "compliant")
- What you visit (attractions with real access, not just "wheelchair friendly" on the site)
Anyone who's used a wheelchair for a while knows the difference between a good trip and a terrible one lives in these details. Here's what three cities — Tokyo, Barcelona and Mexico City — actually deliver as of May/26.
Comparison table: the three cities at a glance
| Criterion | Tokyo | Barcelona | Mexico City |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accessible metro | 90% of stations with elevators (Tokyo Metro + JR East) | L1/L2/L3/L5 = 100%. L4 partial | Inconsistent: lines 7 and B have elevators, the rest vary |
| Buses | 100% ramp-equipped (low-floor since 2018) | 100% ramp + wheelchair area | Metrobús 100% ramp; regular buses vary |
| Accessible taxi | Toyota JPN Taxi (60% of fleet, hail on street) | AMB Taxi adapted (24h booking, +€8) | Uber WAV (few vehicles, expect 15-30 min wait) |
| Central sidewalks | Excellent (Shibuya, Ginza, Marunouchi) | Eixample yes; Gòtic/Born NO | Roma/Condesa yes; Centro Histórico NO |
| Public restrooms | Everywhere (multi-purpose toilet in every station) | In metro stations and malls | Rare and poorly maintained — use hotel/restaurant |
| Main attractions | 85% accessible (Skytree, Imperial Palace gardens) | 70% (Sagrada Família yes, Park Güell partial) | 50% (Templo Mayor yes, Frida Kahlo Museum no) |
| Hotels with verified rooms | High supply (Granvia, Imperial, New Otani) | Medium (Yurbban Trafalgar, Cotton House, Catalonia) | Low (Cartesiano, JW Marriott Reforma) |
| Adapted restaurants | Almost all (ramp entry, accessible toilet standard) | Variable (Eixample yes, Gòtic no) | Roma/Polanco yes, rest variable |
| Emergency language | Limited English, but universal signage | Decent English, easy Spanish | Spanish mandatory |

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
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