Emirates has introduced a suite of new services and products designed to make air travel more inclusive and accessible for passengers with disabilities. The announcement was made at the 7th edition of the AccessAbilities Expo held at the Dubai World Trade Centre, reinforcing Emirates’ commitment to empowering customers to “fly with confidence.”

At the heart of these initiatives is the newly launched Accessible & Inclusive Travel Hub on emirates.com, a comprehensive online platform that allows travellers with disabilities to plan every stage of their journey. The hub provides information tailored to different accessibility needs—mobility, visual, hearing, and hidden disabilities—and offers detailed guidance for every phase of travel, from booking to arrival.
Developed over a year, the hub features accessibility-friendly navigation, compatibility with assistive technologies, and high-contrast visuals for readability. Travellers can also access resources such as sensory guides, an autism-friendly travel guide, and the “Be My Eyes” app integration for visually impaired users.
Beginning November 1, 2025, Emirates will introduce sensory products and fidget toys across all cabin classes to support neurodiverse passengers and nervous flyers. The collection includes tactile aircraft-shaped stress relievers, fidget cubes, and branded poppers—aimed at providing calming sensory engagement during flights. In Business Class, a new “mattress hood” design improves comfort for passengers with mobility limitations, ensuring the bedding remains secure throughout the flight without requiring mid-journey adjustments.

Emirates’ award-winning inflight entertainment system, ice, now features more than 600 movies with closed captions and 200 films with audio descriptions for visually impaired passengers. The airline’s latest Airbus A350-900 fleet also debuts an accessible user interface developed in collaboration with Thales and disability advocacy groups, featuring voice feedback, gesture navigation, and audio-cue assistance.
In Dubai, Emirates has enhanced Terminal 3 with barrier-free smart corridors, biometric-enabled movement, and self-service kiosks equipped with text-to-speech, braille, tactile keys, and adjustable screens. A newly designed wheelchair-accessible Chauffeur Drive service—using Mercedes V250 vans fitted with electric lifts—is also being rolled out, with a full fleet of 10 vehicles expected by early 2026.

Emirates’ innovation teams are collaborating with Airbus and tech providers to develop QR-based cabin navigation systems that enable blind or low-vision passengers to independently locate key onboard features. The airline’s Office of Accessibility and Inclusion, established earlier this year, continues to drive industry change. Emirates became the world’s first Autism-Certified airline in March 2025 and has already trained over 35,000 staff to better support neurodiverse travellers.
Emirates’ latest initiatives reaffirm its commitment to designing for dignity and advancing accessibility across all touchpoints—from booking and boarding to inflight and ground services. With its ongoing innovation and global partnerships, the airline continues to set benchmarks for inclusive travel experiences in the aviation industry.
