A growing number of travelers are exploiting airline wheelchair assistance not because they need help, but because it offers an easy way to board early and skip long lines. It’s time for a fundamental policy change that discourages this behavior while protecting passengers who actually need a wheelchair.
This is not a harmless travel hack. Wheelchair abuse strains limited airport staffing resources, delays assistance for passengers who genuinely require mobility support, and slows boarding and deplaning for everyone. When assistance teams are overwhelmed, the people who suffer most are those with legitimate disabilities.
The problem is structural. Under the Air Carrier Access Act, airlines cannot demand medical proof at the gate. Passengers self-declare a need for assistance, and airlines must accommodate them. That framework exists for good reason: to protect passengers with disabilities from humiliation and discrimination. But it also makes the system vulnerable to abuse.
A great solo travel tip spotted this week on Live and Let's Fly.




