When TravelAbility announced its inaugural Film Festival in July 2025, the goal was simple: spotlight the stories, people, and places shaping a more accessible future for travel.
One year later, those stories have reached new heights—literally.
The top 10 winning films from the festival are now streaming on United Airlines’ inflight entertainment systems. Available on all United aircraft equipped with seatback screens, the films will remain onboard for six months, introducing passengers to real-world stories of accessibility, innovation, and adaptive travel.
For TravelAbility, this milestone is about more than just industry recognition for filmmakers. It reflects a broader cultural shift: accessible travel storytelling is no longer confined to advocacy spaces and specialized events. Instead, it has officially entered the mainstream, reaching passengers directly as an organic part of their travel experience.
A Global Showcase for Inclusive Travel
The inaugural TravelAbility Film Festival received 52 submissions from nine countries, capturing entries from tourism boards, local attractions, and independent content creators. The films highlight a diverse range of perspectives, from destination-led accessibility initiatives to first-hand accounts of navigating on-the-ground travel barriers.
A panel of film, accessibility, and media professionals—including representatives from the Sundance and Cannes film festivals—reviewed the submissions to select 14 finalists and 10 ultimate winners.
This initiative directly aligns with TravelAbility’s Vision 2030 initiative, which recognizes that accessibility is rapidly becoming a core expectation in global travel rather than a niche consideration. By 2030, all 73 million Baby Boomers in the United States will be 65 or older. This demographic shift means accessibility will increasingly dictate how a massive segment of the population chooses destinations, transportation, and hospitality experiences.
As demand grows, travelers need clear, credible visibility into what accessible travel looks like in practice. Without it, anxiety and invisible barriers persist, even where proper infrastructure already exists. The TravelAbility Film Festival was built to close that exact gap.
Moving From Vision to Flight Entertainment
The films now streaming on United Airlines include work from destinations and creators around the world. Among them is the festival’s Grand Prize winner, produced by GLP Films and the Oregon Coast Visitors Association, which highlights accessible and inclusive travel along the Oregon Coast.
Taken together, these films reflect a simple reality: accessibility is not a separate category of the travel experience. It is fundamental to how travel should be designed, executed, and narrated.
“When I opened the entertainment system on a flight from Newark to San Francisco last week, I was thrilled,” said Jake Steinman, Founder of TravelAbility. “Were it not for the seatbelt sign being illuminated, I would have been jumping out of my seat for joy when I found our film festival on the screen.”
Steinman notes that the collaboration came together through a shared commitment to industry progress.
“Like everything else in the travel industry, this initiative began with a relationship,” Steinman shared. “First with David Kinzelman, Chief Customer Officer at United Airlines, who was recognized in 2025 as one of TravelAbility’s ‘Champions of Change,’ and then with the Customer Strategy & Innovation and Inflight Entertainment teams at United Airlines who helped make this opportunity possible. We are deeply grateful for their commitment to providing a platform that showcases these important stories.”
By bringing accessibility-focused storytelling into a space shared by millions of passengers, United Airlines and TravelAbility are helping ensure the future of travel is not only visible, but welcoming to everyone. For a full list of winning films, visit: https://travelability.net/travelability-film-festival/
SUBSCRIBE TODAY!
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.