February 17, 2026
Restaurants with accessible websites are more profitable.
If you work in hospitality, you already know that every empty cover is a missed opportunity. While we focus a lot on the physical layout of the dining room, the digital front door often gets overlooked. According to the UK government’s 2025 report on private sector accessibility, a huge number of potential guests are being shut out by websites that simply don’t work for them. For a restaurant, this means if a guest can’t easily read your menu with a screen reader or navigate your booking platform, they’ll just book the bistro down the street instead. An accessible website opens the door for people using assistive technology (they want to order your food too). Prioritising digital accessibility is a strategic move that fills more tables and ensures your brand appears when potential customers are searching for a place to eat.
The report surveyed 1,545 disabled adults across multiple sectors, revealing major gaps in accessibility:
Barriers appeared at every stage of the customer journey: from researching products, to purchasing, to post-purchase support. The most frequently cited problem was “using or accessing the product or service.”
These findings show that inaccessible websites and services are major obstacles preventing people from engaging with your business.
Making your digital services accessible brings direct, measurable benefits:
Accessible design is ethical and profitable.
The way people find a table has changed. In 2026, many of your potential guests aren’t just scrolling through Google; they are asking AI assistants or voice-activated devices to “find a nearby Italian restaurant with gluten-free options and a quiet atmosphere.” These AI agents “read” your website in much the same way a screen reader does. If your site structure is messy or your menu is trapped inside an unreadable PDF, the AI can’t find the information it needs to recommend you. By making your site accessible, you are essentially providing a clear map for AI discovery. It ensures that when someone asks for a recommendation, your restaurant is the one the technology can actually understand and suggest.
Restaurants face unique challenges and opportunities when it comes to accessibility. The government report highlights that disabled customers experience high barriers in the hospitality sector:
For restaurants, this represents lost revenue and dissatisfied customers: not just from disabled patrons, but also from companions, family, and friends who might choose a more accessible competitor.
By improving accessibility in digital services and physical premises, restaurants can:
Restaurants with accessible websites win customers and loyalty. You might be surprised at how quickly your bookings increase once you’ve fixed the inaccessible form you’ve been using for the last five years.
According to the report, difficulties arise from inaccessible information, poor product design, and inadequate communication/support. For websites and digital services, accessibility includes:
These changes make services usable for everyone, reduce friction, and increase conversions and loyalty.
The 2025 UK government report makes it clear: inaccessible services leave large portions of your potential market behind. Businesses that act early will:
For restaurants and other customer-facing sectors, accessibility is directly tied to bookings, orders, and repeat business. Every barrier removed is an opportunity gained.
Make your website and services accessible, it’s the easiest way to expand your market reach. We build custom audits for clients that are based on business type, size and client needs. Book a meeting with us and we will send you a complimentary sample audit.