Finding the Right Accessible Hotel

Booking an accessible hotel room in Paris can be frustrating. Most booking platforms label rooms as "wheelchair accessible" without providing specific measurements, photos of the actual bathroom, or details about doorway widths. You often do not know what you are getting until you arrive.

That is why we recommend wheelietravel for finding accessible hotels in Paris. Every hotel on their platform has been verified with real photos, room measurements, and detailed accessibility information collected by wheelchair users.

Browse Accessible Hotels in Paris

Verified photos, room measurements, bathroom details, and accessibility checklists for wheelchair-accessible hotels across Paris.

Find Hotels on wheelietravel

What You Will Find on wheelietravel

  • Real photos of accessible rooms, bathrooms, entrances, and hallways taken by wheelchair users
  • Room measurements including doorway widths, turning radius, and bed height
  • Bathroom details such as roll-in shower dimensions, grab bar placement, and shower chair availability
  • Building access information covering elevator dimensions, entrance ramps, and parking
  • Neighborhood context including nearby accessible transit stops and sidewalk conditions

Tips for Booking Accessible Rooms

Even when using a verified platform like wheelietravel, take these extra steps to make sure your room works for you:

Before You Book

  • Call the hotel directly. Do not rely on booking site descriptions alone. Confirm which specific room you will be assigned and whether the accessible room is guaranteed or subject to availability at check-in.
  • Ask for specific measurements. Request the bathroom door width (you need at least 80 cm for most wheelchairs), the distance from the bed to the wall, and whether the roll-in shower has a lip or is completely flush with the floor.
  • Request photos of the actual room. Ask the hotel to email you photos of the accessible bathroom, room entrance, and hallway. Most hotels are happy to do this if you explain your needs. If a hotel refuses, treat that as a warning sign.
  • Confirm elevator access. Some older Parisian buildings have elevators that are too narrow for larger wheelchairs or power chairs. Ask for the interior dimensions of the elevator cabin.
  • Get everything in writing. After your phone call, send an email summarizing what was confirmed (room number, features, measurements) and ask for a written reply. Bring a printed copy when you check in.

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