DineAbiliti aggregates firsthand restaurant reviews focused on accessibility—informed by people with disabilities, for people with disabilities.
Helping patrons plan visits with confidence and helping eateries improve their facilities.
Many popular restaurant sites don’t say whether a venue has a ramp, stepfree entry, or service-animal policies. That leaves guests with disabilities guessing— and often missing out on a night out.
One in four Americans has a mobility, hearing, or vision disability—and countless more dine with someone who does. Without reliable access info, people skip restaurants or get stuck at the door, missing out on friends, family meals, and everyday fun.
We pull real-world comments from popular review sites and surface only the details you care about—like whether there’s a step-free entrance, wheelchair friendly ramps, wide restrooms, service animal friendly staff and more. Just pick your city, find a restaurant, and see exactly what to expect before you go, or simply search for your restaurant. And it is totally free!
Sanjit is a senior at Brophy College Preparatory in Phoenix, Arizona. Sanjit’s
interests lie in data science, nanotechnology, engineering and research. Having
completed a graduate level data science certification from Pragmatic Institute
and several technical data science courses when he was 15 years old, Sanjit
is DineAbiliti’s technical guru. Sanjit has also conducted research at Brown
University on nanotechnology applications in healthcare, applied nanotechnology for research in Oncology at the Cancer Research lab at University of Missouri, School of Medicine. When he’s not studying for AP exams, coding or conducting research,
Sanjit is on the tennis court or at home playing the piano.
Rohit graduated from UC Berkeley in 2021 with a degree in economics and worked at Uber in their strategic finance department. Rohit is currently pursuing his MBA at The Wharton School.
Outside of Uber, Rohit has founded multiple startups and marketplaces before.
His first venture was ShareYourSkills, a marketplace dedicated to bringing
volunteers all over the world to teach skills to children in Indian villages. He also
founded a consulting club at UC Berkeley advising small startups as well as F100
companies. Now, Rohit is focused on providing a better dining experience for
people with disabilities. Rohit is an avid tennis player and restaurant explorer.
Alexander Bhatt is a third-year medical student at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, where he serves as Class President. He earned a double major in Human Biology and History and a Master of Science in Epidemiology and Clinical Research at Stanford University and Stanford School of Medicine and was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to teach in Spain. His commitment to accessibility is deeply personal and inspired by his brother, Steven, who has cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, thoracolumbar kyphoscoliosis, and visual impairment, and whose lived experience navigating structural barriers shaped Alexander’s lifelong dedication to disability advocacy and inclusive design. He is a current resident of the Bronx, New York, and works to expand accessibility initiatives across New York City through community-driven partnerships.
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