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Access Stamp

For venues

Show access clearly before customers have to ask.

Access Stamp helps venues turn vague accessibility claims into practical, confidence-building access information.

The business case

  • 1 in 4

    UK adults are disabled

  • £274bn

    annual spending power of disabled households (Purple Pound)

  • June 2025

    European Accessibility Act — applicable in EU member states from 28 June 2025

Most venues lose this custom invisibly, because people check access before they travel and never arrive if they cannot be sure your venue will work for them.

Organisations selling certain products and services into the EU may also need to consider the European Accessibility Act, which became applicable in EU member states on 28 June 2025. UK Equality Act duties continue to apply separately. Reviewed June 2026.

Beta

Submit your own venue with Quick Feature Scan

Organisations and venue owners can list their own place on Access Stamp. Scan entrances, routes, toilets, parking, or signage with photos — we show what already looks accessible, what may need work, and small practical steps you could take before you submit for review.

Free during beta while we refine the scanner and listing flow. Verified Access Snapshot and measured audit tiers remain available when you want an on-site review.

Start Quick Feature Scan
  • Scan areas or upload photos from your phone
  • See accessible features and gaps in plain English
  • Get small improvement steps you can act on
  • Submit your venue listing for team review

What we check

  • Entrances
  • Routes
  • Toilets
  • Seating
  • Parking/drop-off
  • Staff support
  • Emergency considerations
  • Website information

How it works

  1. Step 1

    Book your review

    We visit at a time that suits you and agree which areas matter most for your customers.

  2. Step 2

    We measure what matters

    Entrances, doorways, toilets, routes, parking, and hearing support — photographed and measured on site.

  3. Step 3

    Get your access report

    Access Snapshot, Measured Access Report, or Full Access Review with a public listing your customers can trust.

  4. Step 4

    Get found

    Your venue appears in the Access Stamp finder that disabled customers use to choose where to go.

Venue review tiers

Pilot programme pricing — request details for your venue size and scope. These are access reviews and reports, not formal certification until governance is published.

  • Access Snapshot

    Pilot pricing available

    Best for smaller venues that need a simple access information review.

    • On-site core accessibility review
    • Public access report on Access Stamp
    • Window stamp for your entrance
    • Listed in the venue finder
    Request pilot details
  • Most popular

    Measured Access Report

    Pilot pricing available

    Best for venues that want a fuller measured report with practical recommendations.

    • Everything in Access Snapshot
    • Full measured PDF access report
    • Staff guidance sheet for front-of-house
    • Priority placement in venue finder
    Request pilot details
  • Full Access Review

    Pilot pricing available

    Best for venues that want deeper review, staff-facing guidance, and a more complete access profile.

    • Everything in Measured Access Report
    • Annual accessibility re-check
    • Staff training session on access support
    • Featured placement across Access Stamp
    Request pilot details

What you receive

  • Window stamp

    Physical stamp for your entrance — a clear signal that access information is published.

  • Public access report

    A shareable listing on Access Stamp with features, photos, and confidence labels.

  • Measured PDF report

    Detailed doorway widths, routes, and facilities for your team (Measured and Full tiers).

  • Venue finder listing

    Discovered by disabled customers searching by town, need, and access feature.

Frequently asked questions

Can we submit our own venue without a full audit?
Yes — during beta, organisations and venue owners can use Quick Feature Scan on the Submit your venue page. Upload photos of entrances, routes, toilets, and parking to see what already looks accessible, what may need work, and small practical next steps. Submissions are reviewed before anything goes live. This is AI-assisted self-serve listing, not a verified Access Stamp audit.
Is this a legal requirement?
No — Access Stamp reviews are voluntary. The Equality Act already requires reasonable adjustments for disabled customers. Organisations selling certain products and services into the EU may also need to consider the European Accessibility Act, which became applicable in EU member states on 28 June 2025. UK Equality Act duties continue to apply separately. An Access Stamp review is evidence of good faith and practical progress, not a substitute for your legal duties.
What if my venue scores badly?
Your full report stays private until you choose to publish. We prioritise fixable quick wins and plain-English guidance so you can improve access before anything goes public. Many venues use the first review as a practical improvement plan.
How long does a review take?
Most single-site reviews take half a day on site, depending on venue size and complexity. You receive a draft report within ten working days, then a final report once any follow-up measurements are complete.
Do you publish a review for any venue that pays?
No. The stamp reflects what we measure — entrances, routes, toilets, parking, hearing support, and staff readiness. That is why customers trust it. If a venue cannot meet a tier standard, we say so clearly.
How is this different from doing a self-assessment?
Self-assessments are useful starting points, but customers cannot verify them. Access Stamp reviews use measured doorways, photographed routes, and consistent methodology — the same data disabled customers use when choosing where to go.

Book an audit

Tell us about your venue and we will arrange a call to scope your audit.