As more governments and authorities around the world work to ensure people with disabilities have equal access to commercial flying, it is likely that some companies will use the 2025 Aircraft Interiors Expo (AIX) to showcase some cabin concepts that would allow personal wheelchairs to go onboard.
In 2016, the All Wheels Up (AWU) non-profit organization funded a series of tests to prove that wheelchairs and wheelchair protection systems could meet current FAA airplane seat standards. Since then, AWU has become part of the Air Carrier Access Act (ACAA) Advisory Committee, a group tasked with assessing disability-related access barriers and advising the US Transportation Secretary on its findings. The committee counts multiple advocacy groups within its membership that address air travel needs of the deaf, blind and other disabled communities.
Under the Trump administration, US Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has signaled support for improving access to all types of transportation readily available to people without disabilities.
FAA expects to determine the feasibility of allowing wheelchairs onboard aircraft by the end of 2025, and its study will aim to streamline the approach that installers can take.
Meanwhile, design work is moving ahead. One convertible seat concept is being funded by Delta Air Lines. Its subsidiary, Delta Flight Products (DFP), and partner AirforAll—a UK-based consortium formed by PriestmanGoode, Flying Disabled, SWS Certification, and Sunrise Medical—have displayed updated prototypes, including an economy-seat design and an upgraded version of a premium seat.
Other onboard wheelchair concepts include Molon Labe’s Freedom Seat, a bank of two that collapses into one as the aisle seat slides over, making space for a wheelchair to lock in place. Another solution from Collins Aerospace involves an integrated restraint system and seat belt attachments, securing both wheelchair and passenger.
Next steps will involve establishing standards and continuing tests of onboard accessibility concepts to bring more options to market for airlines and aircraft manufacturers. Airbus, Boeing and Embraer are said to be extremely receptive to improving accessible air travel.
More than 1.3 billion people around the world—or roughly 16% of the global population—live with a disability according to World Health Organization statistics, a figure set to grow as populations age, but many choose to avoid flying because of fears of having their wheelchair lost or damaged or being confronted with other challenges along the journey. That represents a potentially massive new market for airlines and airports.
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