Find accessible places
Search venues using practical access details, not vague promises. Look for entrance information, toilet details, parking notes, photos, and confidence labels.
Explore venuesDisability-led access intelligence
Access Stamp helps disabled people, wheelchair users, carers, families, and venues make better decisions with practical guides, clearer venue information, verification labels, and AI tools built around real access needs.
Built from lived experience, practical detail, and the belief that access information should be clear before someone risks the journey.
Access snapshot
Riverside Café
Status
Sample report layout
Too much accessibility information is vague. A venue can say “wheelchair accessible” without explaining the things that actually decide whether someone can visit safely: entrance width, step-free routes, toilet transfer space, seating layout, parking distance, staff awareness, quiet times, emergency planning, and whether the information is recent.
That leaves disabled people and families doing the work themselves — calling ahead, guessing from photos, risking wasted journeys, or avoiding places completely.
Vague access claims vs useful access details
Weak information
Useful information
Founder-led platform
Allister Diniz · Founder, Access Stamp
Access Stamp was founded by Allister Diniz to make access information more practical, honest, and useful. Accessibility is not just a ramp symbol. It is doorway width, seating, transfer space, fatigue, toilet layout, staff awareness, pressure care, emergency planning, and knowing what to expect before you risk the journey.
Vague “wheelchair accessible” claims are not enough. Access Stamp exists because disabled people are often expected to discover access barriers alone — at the doorway, in the toilet, at work, or on the phone before an appointment. We show practical detail, label what is unknown, and help venues explain access in a way people can actually use.
Access Stamp brings venue information, practical guides, verification labels, and AI support into one place so people can make better access decisions before they are under pressure.
Search venues using practical access details, not vague promises. Look for entrance information, toilet details, parking notes, photos, and confidence labels.
Explore venuesRead plain-English guides on wheelchair use, pressure care basics, access planning, workplace adjustments, travel preparation, and everyday disability admin.
Read guidesUse AI tools to turn messy situations into checklists, phone scripts, venue questions, and practical next steps.
Try AI toolsAccess Stamp separates checked information from community reports and unverified listings so users understand the confidence level.
How verification worksHelp people decide whether your venue is suitable by publishing clear access information, measurements, photos, and support details.
List your venueAccess is not only about going out. It also includes adjustments, risk assessments, evacuation plans, support needs, and the right questions to ask.
View resourcesDisabled people and their households represent one of the UK’s most overlooked customer markets. The Purple Pound has been estimated at £274 billion per year, and newer Purple Tuesday material cites research suggesting disabled people and their families may represent £446 billion in spending power.
But that opportunity is wasted when venues do not provide clear access information. If a disabled customer cannot tell whether they can enter, use the toilet, transfer safely, park nearby, or ask staff for support, many will simply not risk the visit.
For venues, accessibility is not only about major building work. Small improvements can build trust: better photos, honest measurements, clear ramp procedures, staff training, accurate website information, quieter booking times, and practical details that help people decide before they arrive.
16 million
Disabled people in the UK
£274bn+
Estimated annual disabled household spending power
4 in 10
Disabled people unable to visit local shops because they are inaccessible
Figures are based on publicly available research from UK Parliament, Scope, Business Disability Forum, Purple Tuesday, and VisitBritain.
If your venue is accessible but people cannot find or trust the information, you are still losing customers.
Improve your venue listingNot every access improvement starts with a building project. Many venues can immediately improve confidence by explaining what already exists more clearly and fixing small points of friction.
Access Stamp is designed to reduce the guesswork. Whether you are planning a meal out, preparing for work, starting university, arranging travel, or trying to understand equipment and support needs, the platform gives you clearer information and practical next steps.
Access Stamp helps venues move beyond vague claims like “disabled access available.” The goal is to help you explain access in a way disabled people can actually use when deciding whether to visit.
Clear access information improves trust, reduces repeated phone calls, helps staff answer questions consistently, and makes your venue easier to choose.
Access information is only useful when people understand how reliable it is. Access Stamp uses verification labels so visitors know where information came from and how much to rely on it.
Measured on site with photographed evidence, audit record, and published methodology version.
Reviewed remotely against our checklist using submitted or public evidence.
Information shared by users, visitors, or venue staff and useful as a starting point.
Shows how a venue report could work. Not live venue data and must not be relied on for travel.
A listing exists, but users should confirm details before relying on it.
Access needs vary. Access Stamp does not pretend one label can guarantee suitability for everyone. The goal is to make the information clearer, more detailed, and easier to check before someone travels.
Access Stamp’s AI tools are designed to help users ask better questions, prepare for visits, understand guide content, and turn complicated access situations into practical checklists.
The AI does not replace professional advice, medical advice, legal advice, or venue confirmation. It helps people organise information, spot missing details, and prepare more confidently.
Generate exact questions to ask a venue before visiting.
Help venues identify missing access information and quick improvements.
Use measurements to help users think through wheelchair width, turning space, transfer needs, and support requirements.
Suggest practical guides based on what the user is trying to solve.
Explain hidden basics such as cushions, pressure areas, slide sheets, transfers, and planning ahead.
Access Stamp should be easy to use with keyboard navigation, screen readers, clear contrast, readable typography, plain language, and mobile layouts that do not punish users for needing larger text or assistive technology.
Join the Access Stamp newsletter for new venue checks, practical disability guides, access planning tips, and updates on tools that help people make better decisions.
Whether you are planning a visit, supporting someone else, improving a venue, or trying to understand the access details nobody explains, Access Stamp is built to make the next step clearer.