Daniel
11 mag 2026
5,0
Much work has been done to make Vienna explorable for people with mobility issues. In particular, getting from a sidewalk to the street is smooth, as all abrupt drops have been eliminated. In most areas, there are smooth paths around cobblestones; that, too, facilitates access to people with wheelchairs or other mobility helps.
Melody
6 mag 2026
5,0
Having the wheelchair made it possible for me to really enjoy the tours
Leanne
9 apr 2026
3,0
The venues were great and almost bent over backwards to help. The underground/rail system let the side down a lot. There were no staff on the platforms at all. I do not mean they were hard to find, I mean there were zero, none, even worse this was across the entire network of the underground. The surface trains though Austria claims to be "Barrier free", this only applies to getting to the platform. They are still running rolling stock which has stairs to board the trains. Staff on the trains can only help if there is someone spare on the train. At one time the driver had to get out of the train and walk down the outside of the train to the ramp access to put the ramp down for us. There is no such thing in the Austrian rail network as "Passenger Assistance". So if you are planning to go to Austria, and have mobility issues (need wheelchair or scooter), then please be warned the rail companies do not care about helping people.
Isabel
5 apr 2026
5,0
Everyting was perfect