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The Intersection of Travel and Disability

Tourism

Best Practices: Bonjour Quebec’s Tools for Accessible Travel

July 4, 2025 by lkarl

Bonjour Québec has accessibility filters!

The ability to sort out what you can or cannot do in travel planning is an invaluable empowerment for the disabled traveler.

Bonjour Québec utilizes practical website planning tools and filters across disabilities to make it easy for travelers to plan a visit to Quebec.

Québec for All is a database of over 2,000 Kéroul-certified tourism businesses (Kéroul criss-crosses the province to test and evaluate establishments. Its representatives also make recommendations to businesses on adapting their infrastructures) across Québec, linked directly through the tourism website. Fully or partially accessible to people with a disability, seniors, or anyone with difficulty getting around (parents with strollers included), these establishments offer a warm and caring welcome, with staff that has been trained to respond to the needs and expectations of this clientele.

Business accessibility and searches

With the Bonjour Québec search engine, you can also find accommodation establishments and tourist sites or activities whose accessibility has been evaluated by Kéroul based on four criteria:

  Accessible   Accessible

 Partially accessible   Partially accessible

 Services for people with a visual impairment  Services for people with a visual impairment

   Services for people with a hearing impairmentc Services for people with a hearing impairment


Québec has done a lot in terms of accessibility and inclusion, but the ability to plan for the plethora of accessible options is what truly makes Québec accessible to all travelers.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Accessible Landing Pages, Best Practices, Digital Accessibility, Tourism, Travel

News from the TravelAbility Community

July 4, 2025 by lkarl

TravelAbility Community Sweeps the Forbes Accessibility 100 List

Forbes Accessibly 100 graphic with black background and red boarders

Including: Alvaro Silberstein, Wheel the World; Mayan Ziv, Access Now; Kelly Twichel, Access Trax; Matt Ater, Vispero; Pierre Paul, We Hear You; Michael Buckley, Be My Eyes; Eve Andersson, Google; Betty Siegel, Kennedy Center; Keely Cat-Wells, Making Space; Squirmy and Grubbs; Dominic Marinelli, United Spinal; Kursat Ceylon, We Walk

Forbes Accessibility 100 List

Cannes Lions Awards

Cannes Lions 2025 logo in yellow on gray background

Josh Loebner also took a Cannes Award for Tennessee Sounds Sights! Well done! 

Tennessee Sound Sights received a Bronze award for Industry Craft and a Silver Award for Entertainment Lions For Music.

Winners and Shortlists

Meet the Google engineer making Maps more accessible

Sasha wearing a light blue shirt and gray pants poses in his wheelchair in a NY Subway station

And read a Q&A with our Advisory Board member, Sasha Blair-Goldensohn on Here and Now!

Read Here

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Accessibility Awards, Disability Advocates, Disability Awareness, Tourism, Transportation, Travel

Fora Travel Sparks Accessibility Movement for Travel Advisors

July 3, 2025 by lkarl

By Jennifer Allen

Booking a luxury vacation should be a seamless process. Unfortunately, for those with accessibility needs, even the most high-end experiences can fall short in ways that make travel unnecessarily difficult—or even impossible. Karen Morales, a seasoned traveler, was shocked by the gap in accessible travel options when she became a wheelchair user in 2020. “I had already been to 45 countries before using a wheelchair,” she shares. “What I found really quickly was that even if I was booking the Four Seasons, I would show up and something would be hugely wrong—like a suite with a full staircase.”

The system, as she puts it, is inherently broken. But instead of accepting the status quo, Morales set out to change it.

Building a Program to Fill the Gap

“I needed to find a way to have influence, so I started interviewing with host agencies to see how I could disrupt and improve travel planning.” When she met with Fora in 2023, the company was still a startup—but they shared her vision. Within weeks, she was in conversations with the executive team, who immediately saw the need for a structured approach to accessible travel planning. Together, they built a certification and training program designed to educate travel agents, improve industry standards, and ultimately create better experiences for travelers with accessibility needs.

The Missing Market: Luxury Without Limitations

A common misconception in the travel industry is that accessibility equates to a clinical or downgraded experience. But, as Morales points out, travelers with disabilities don’t want to compromise on quality.

People don’t want to downgrade—they want luxury. I’m a person who wants a luxury trip, and I happen to use a wheelchair. Don’t make me feel like ‘other’ or less.”

The demand is there. As more travelers age into disability, the need for accessible, high-end experiences will only grow. “There’s a self fulfilling loop where destinations don’t market what they have, so people don’t know about accessible offerings, so they don’t ask, so there’s no perceived demand.” Fora’s program seeks to break that cycle by equipping travel agents with the knowledge to both advocate for and book truly accessible experiences.

Training and Certification: Raising the Bar

The Fora accessibility training program is built on the expertise of travelers who have firsthand experience navigating the challenges of accessible travel. “We’re recruiting and training existing employees with experience traveling with a disability—whether it be hidden, mobility-related, or neurodivergent, food allergies, etc.,” Morales explains. “We’re sharing our black book and slowly building training with travel agents, ensuring we meet the needs of travelers while influencing the supplier level.” There are so many nuances in disability travel, and agents need to be prepared for the types of requests that might come up, and how to find answers. Where can a guest with innumerable food allergies go and have the chef create a custom menu? Will they have to remove their orthotics to enter the temples in Thailand?

The program is open to all travel agents, with certification requiring multiple steps: attending accessibility trainings, passing an exam, and creating a portfolio that includes successful bookings for travelers with accessibility needs. Agents must also complete property reviews to demonstrate that they can apply their knowledge in real-world scenarios.

Beyond the training, Fora is embedding accessibility into its broader operations. Accessibility information is now a required part of all FAM (familiarization) trips. Fora’s Friday destination trainings on social media now feature accessibility as a core component.

Transforming the Travel Industry

Fora’s impact extends beyond just training agents; it’s influencing suppliers and destinations as well. “Suppliers are now sending their own offerings to us,” Morales notes. The program encourages accommodations and tour operators to rethink how they cater to travelers with accessibility needs with a focus on scaling and providing better value. A free upgrade is worthless to guests who need an accessible room. What can you offer instead? They’re teaching ways to be proactive – like offering in-room breakfast or providing beach wheelchairs. “You have a family coming who needs a beach wheelchair? Don’t make them rent one. Buy one,” she says. “They did—and they thought it was beautiful to see me playing with my kids.”

The approach is working. Suppliers are seeing the return on investment as demand for accessible travel services becomes more visible. 

A Future Without Barriers

For Morales, this initiative is deeply personal. “Having a degenerative disease, being in a wheelchair was my worst-case scenario. I thought I wouldn’t be independent or free—that my life would get smaller. But without my wheelchair, that was my reality. I was too afraid to go anywhere because of falling. The chair is how I became unlimited.”

Her hope is that the Fora training program will ensure that no one has to choose between a love of travel and accessibility. “Everything is possible,” she says. “People who love to travel should be able to continue doing that through the trajectory of their life—no matter what nuances pop up along the way. And our operators, who are dedicated to this, will make travel happen for everyone, no matter what’s going on.”

At its core, the program isn’t just about logistics—it’s about joy. “You don’t get anywhere by constantly fighting,” Morales says. “No one wins that way.

We spend endless hours talking about people who want to travel and what we need to do to make it work. Let’s shift the conversation. How can we make the joy erupt?”

With the Fora accessibility training and certification program, that joy is finally within reach for more travelers than ever before.

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Mobility, Tourism, Travel, Travel Industry People

Advice Line: Lessons with Kristy Durso Part Two

July 3, 2025 by lkarl

Kristy Durso freefalls through the sky, strapped to a skydiving instructor, smiling with pure joy as they soar high above the landscape. Her wide grin and outstretched arms capture the thrill of the moment and her fearless spirit.

What helps skeptical tourism businesses understand the value of investing in accessibility?

I like to share stories that challenge assumptions. Like the list of things I’ve done as a wheelchair user that most in the room haven’t. Or my son, who has intellectual disabilities, but has read Julius Caesar, Lord of the Rings and The Count of Monte Cristo. Most adults haven’t read all three. Or my daughter, who has 30 food allergies and is still one of the most adventurous eaters I know.

These moments open people’s eyes. They show that people with disabilities aren’t defined by limitations. They are travelers, adventurers and consumers—just like everyone else.

Here’s what really seals the deal.

Accessibility is just smart customer service.

Tourism is a customer service industry. Accessibility is about meeting your guest’s needs, just like you would for dietary preferences or language barriers. So why not for mobility, sensory, or cognitive needs?

The good news is that once a business starts doing this, and truly commits to it, they usually don’t want to stop. I’ve seen destinations begin with small steps, like Traverse City adding a sensory room, and quickly become champions for accessibility. They see the results. They hear the gratitude. They feel the difference it makes.

To any business that’s hesitant, I say this: “Start with the human connection. Show the economic value.”

Then let them experience the joy of being a place where everyone belongs.

Check back next month for Part Three! Noble Studios conducted a thorough interview with Kristy Durso going over the many facets of creating a destination that is truly for everyone. This series is pulled directly from the interview. Check out last month’s issue for Lesson #1. Click here for the full interview. 

Kristy Durso is sitting in her wheelchair on the beach, smiling over her shoulder with the beautiful turquoise ocean in the background.

Featured public speaker, accessibilities advocate, entrepreneur, Army veteran, and military wife Kristy Durso is Travelability’s Ambassedor and owns and operates Incredible Memories Travel, a full-service travel agency that assists everyone, including those with accessibility needs. She has three children, one who has autoimmune issues and food allergies, another on the spectrum, and another with cognitive and intellectual disabilities. 

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Adaptive Sports, Advice Line, Disability Advocates, Disability Awareness, Expert Q&A, Tourism

Advice Line: Lessons with Kristy Durso Part One

June 6, 2025 by lkarl

Accessibility isn’t about ‘them.’ It’s about all of us.”

When you meet with a city council or tourism board, what single statistic or story most effectively demonstrates the importance of investing in accessibility?

There are a few ways I like to answer this question, but the most impactful is leading with the numbers—because numbers don’t lie and they tell a powerful story.

I’ll often ask travel professionals, “How much do you think people with disabilities spend on accessible travel?” The guesses are usually way off. Some say $10 million, maybe $10 billion if they’re thinking big.

But the truth? Between 2019 and 2020, people with disabilities spent $58.7 billion on accessible travel in the U.S. alone.

And that’s just a fraction of the potential. Many travelers with disabilities still hesitate to travel because they’re afraid their needs won’t be met. Imagine how much higher that figure could be if more destinations were truly inclusive.

It’s also important to realize this isn’t a small group. According to the CDC, 27% of American adults have a diagnosed disability. That’s more than one in four people. This is a major market segment, not a niche.

I also love sharing a moment from my keynotes. I’ll ask the audience, “Who here has a disability or a family member with a disability?” Usually about a third of the room stands. Then I break down what a disability actually includes—vision impairments like wearing glasses, neurodivergence, temporary conditions—and by the end, nearly the entire room is on their feet. It’s a powerful visual. Accessibility isn’t about “them”—it’s about all of us.

Another stat I share: families with a disability spend 30% more when they travel. Sometimes that’s due to extra equipment, but often it’s because better service means their needs are met. If an average family spends $3,000 on a trip, a family with accessibility needs might spend $4,000. Multiply that by how often we travel in larger groups, return to places that treat us well and tell our communities—it adds up fast.

Take Disney World. Ask any U.S.-based accessible travel group where to go, and the first answer is always Disney. Not because of specialized programs, they’ve actually phased some of those out, but because their customer service is consistently excellent. They meet guests’ needs first. That reputation alone has made them a leader in accessible travel, supporting everything from food allergies to wheelchairs to neurodivergencies.

So when I speak with tourism boards or councils, I focus on both sides: the emotional connection and the financial return. Accessibility is the right thing to do—but it’s also smart business. You’re not just meeting needs. You’re building loyalty, encouraging repeat visits, driving higher spend and fueling powerful word of mouth. And in tourism, where everything centers on customer service, that’s everything.

Check back next month for Part Two! Noble Studios conducted a thorough interview with Kristy Durso going over the many facets of creating a destination that is truly for everyone. This series is pulled directly from the interview. Click here for the full interview. 

Kristy Durso is sitting in her wheelchair on the beach, smiling over her shoulder with the beautiful turquoise ocean in the background.

Featured public speaker, accessibilities advocate, entrepreneur, Army veteran, and military wife Kristy Durso is Travelability’s Ambassedor and owns and operates Incredible Memories Travel, a full-service travel agency that assists everyone, including those with accessibility needs. She has three children, one who has autoimmune issues and food allergies, another on the spectrum, and another with cognitive and intellectual disabilities. 

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Filed Under: Accessibility, Advice Line, Expert Q&A, Government, Tourism, Trends

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