Try a Motus Near You

All-Terrain Wheelchair Rentals & Public Access Locations Across the US, Canada, Australia & UK

We have chairs in 25+ states and 4 countries. Click a pin to find a park, organization, or rental program where you can ride a Motus before you buy.

No location near you? No problem.

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Looking for an all-terrain wheelchair near you? Tap the 📍 Near me button to find the closest location in seconds.

This is a directory of public locations across the US, Canada, Australia, and the UK where you can try, rent, or borrow an Extreme Motus all-terrain wheelchair before deciding whether to buy. Most locations offer free public access through state parks, county parks, conservancies, schools, or adaptive sports programs. A few are paid rentals. Some are private organizations or individuals you can contact directly.

How to Use This Map

The map shows three categories of locations:

  • Public access (green pins): Free access through state parks, county parks, adaptive sports nonprofits, conservancies, and similar public programs. Most require a phone call or online reservation a day or two ahead, but the chair itself is free to use.
  • Paid rentals (orange pins): Rental programs that charge a fee — typically modest ($25 for 2.5 hours at the Alaska Zoo, for example). Walk-up at some, advance booking at others.
  • Contact organizations (blue pins): Schools, individuals, mobility dealers, or private programs that have an Extreme Motus on hand. Reach out directly.

When you click any pin, you'll get a pop-up with the organization's name, location, category, a "Visit website" link, and a "Get directions" link that opens directly in Google Maps.

Browse by State or Region

Below is the full directory of 59 Motus locations, organized by state. Click any link to visit the host organization's website.

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Alabama (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Alaska (2)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Arizona (3)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in California (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Colorado (5)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Florida (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Georgia (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Illinois (2)

📖 Adventure stories from this state:

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Louisiana (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Maryland (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Massachusetts (2)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Minnesota (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Montana (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Nevada (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in New Hampshire (2)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in New Jersey (6)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in New York (2)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in North Carolina (2)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in North Dakota (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Pennsylvania (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Tennessee (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Utah (11)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Vermont (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Virginia (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Washington (1)

  • Camp Korey — Mount Vernon, WA 98274 [Public access]

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Wisconsin (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Australia (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in British Columbia, Canada (1)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Ontario, Canada (3)

All-Terrain Wheelchair Access in Saskatchewan, Canada (1)

Before You Visit: What to Know

The Motus is a four-wheeled, low-pressure-tire all-terrain wheelchair built for trails, beaches, sand, snow, and shallow water.

Reservations vs. walk-up

Most public-access locations require a reservation. State parks, county parks, and adaptive sports nonprofits typically book a few days in advance. A few — like the Alaska Zoo — are walk-up.

Rider weight and trunk control

The standard Motus has a 250–300 lb rider weight rating. The chair has an optional 5-point harness for riders with limited trunk control.

Trail difficulty

The Motus handles dirt, gravel, packed snow, sand, mud, and shallow water with the right team of pushers. Steep technical trails need 3–4 helpers. Flat boardwalks and accessible state-park trails are typically a one-pusher job.

What to bring

  • A capable companion (or three for technical terrain).
  • Water for everyone.
  • Sun protection.
  • Phone with offline maps.
  • Helmet for skatepark visits or technical descents.

Want to bring a Motus to your park, school, or rec program?

We partner with parks, conservancies, school districts, and adaptive recreation programs across the US, Canada, Australia, and the UK.

Email Ryan → See the Motus