Italy's greatest strength โ its ancient, unchanged, cobblestoned, stair-filled cities โ is also its greatest accessibility challenge. The honest truth: Italy is not easy for wheelchair users or people with limited mobility. Medieval streets are uneven. Many restaurants have steps. Buses are improving but inconsistent. Train stations range from fully accessible (Milan, Rome, Turin) to barely functional (rural stations). But progress is real: major museums now have lifts and ramps, new legislation requires accessible hotel rooms, beach wheelchair programs are expanding, and Italian willingness to physically help (strangers will carry your chair up steps โ this happens constantly, unprompted, with genuine warmth) fills many gaps that infrastructure doesn't. This guide is city-by-city, honest, and updated for 2026.
Plan my accessible trip โRome: 6/10. Colosseum has lift access to arena level. Vatican Museums have a wheelchair route (book ahead). Metro Line B has elevators at most stations. Line A: inconsistent. The Forum: gravel paths, partially accessible. Trastevere: cobblestones everywhere, very difficult. Best areas for wheelchair: Via del Corso, Prati/Vatican, EUR.
Florence: 5/10. Uffizi: fully accessible. Accademia: accessible. Duomo: cathedral yes, dome climb no. Streets: flat but cobbled. No metro. Buses have ramps (unreliable).
Venice: 3/10. 400+ bridges. Most have steps. Accessible vaporetto stops are marked with โฟ. Water taxis (โฌ70+) are the most practical accessible transport. The city has an official accessible route map: veneziaaccessibile.it.
Milan: 8/10. Italy's most accessible major city. Modern metro with lifts. Flat terrain. Duomo has lift to terraces. Fondazione Prada fully accessible.
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