Motus for Organizations — Fleet Pricing & Grant Help

Make your trails, beaches, and programs open to everyone. Parks departments, adaptive sports programs, camps, schools, and zoos across 25+ states and 4 countries use the Extreme Motus All-Terrain Wheelchair to welcome visitors that standard wheelchairs leave behind.

We don’t just sell you chairs — we help you fund them

Most organizations assume there’s no budget for accessibility equipment. There usually is — it’s just sitting in a grant program you haven’t heard of. Our business development team, led by Kenny Jardine, has helped organizations across the country secure funding for all-terrain wheelchairs, and we maintain a database of 43+ verified grant programs.

Qualifying organizations get free grant sourcing and application help. Tell us about your program, and we’ll tell you which grants fit — and help you write the application.

Trusted by organizations like

The Alaska Zoo · City of Reno Adaptive Recreation · National Ability Center · Wasatch Adaptive Sports · Common Ground Outdoor Adventures · Ogden Valley Adaptive Sports · Uintah Special Service District · state parks, county parks, conservancies, camps, and schools across the US, Canada, Australia, and the UK.

Forest Preserve District of DuPage County All-Terrain Wheelchair
Extreme Motus All-Terrain Wheelchair at Forest Preserve District of DuPage County.

Why organizations choose the Motus

  • No batteries, no motors, no downtime. Fully manual, hand-built in Utah — nothing to charge, almost nothing to maintain.
  • One chair serves every visitor. Sizing by rider weight, push-friendly for staff and family, and it even floats.
  • Goes where your visitors want to go. Sand, snow, gravel, and rocky trails on Wheeleez® balloon tires.
  • Easy to store and transport. 55 pounds, breaks down in seconds with two quick-release pins.
  • Free visibility for your program. Locations with public-access chairs are featured on our Find a Motus map, which sends visitors your way.

How it works

  1. Tell us about your program. A quick call or email about your visitors, terrain, and goals.
  2. We scope chairs and funding together. Fleet pricing, plus grant matching and application help from our team.
  3. Your chairs arrive ready to roll. We help with training, and if you offer public access, we put you on the map.

A state park, a Reeve Foundation grant, and a free chair for every visitor

At Odiorne Point State Park in New Hampshire, any visitor can now borrow a Motus all-terrain wheelchair — free, no reservation needed — to explore coastal trails, rocky shoreline, and salt marshes. The program was funded by a grant from the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation, exactly the kind of funding our team helps organizations find and win. Read the story.

And it happens all over the country: at Zion National Park, a single donor gave through the 2LIV4 nonprofit, which purchased a Motus and donated it to the park. In Illinois, 2LIV4 did the same for the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County. Tennessee State Parks bought two chairs to test across their system. Grants, donors, nonprofits — the funding routes exist, and we’ll help you find yours.

Let’s get your visitors outdoors

Email kenny@extrememotus.com, grab time on Kenny’s calendar below, or use the contact form. Tell us you’re an organization and we’ll take it from there.

Get $100 Off Your All-Terrain Wheelchair

Join the Extreme Motus family and we’ll email you a $100 coupon plus our complete funding guide — grants, financing, and fundraising from 43 verified programs.

(No spam — just your coupon, the guide, and the good stuff.)