She Started Using a Wheelchair and Saw a Serious 鈥楥hasm.’ Her Business Solution Led to $75M in Under a Year.

Karen Morales listened to her “spidey sense” and embraced an exciting opportunity.

By Amanda Breen | edited by Frances Dodds | Apr 14, 2026
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Key Takeaways

  • After Morales’s mobility changed in 2020, the inaccessibility of luxury travel surprised her.
  • A life-long trip planner, Morales joined Fora as a travel advisor and spearheaded its accessibility initiative.
  • The business pillar now boasts over 300 travel advisors and $75 million in bookings in less than a year.

鈥淭raveling and being a planner has been part of my identity my whole life,” Karen Morales tells 91成人. Growing up, Morales plotted trips to Disney World; as an adult, she architected bachelorette trips and company travel during a career in advertising. But in 2020, Morales鈥檚 perspective on planning her travel adventures shifted.聽

Image Credit: Courtesy of Fora. Karen Morales.

The progression of her muscular dystrophy required her to start using a wheelchair. 鈥溾奍 tripped and fell during Covid,鈥 Morales recalls. 鈥淚 was homeschooling two elementary-age kids, baking brownies, doing Zooms, and I tripped on an area rug. It was not the huge swelling music moment that most people have, but all of a sudden, I couldn’t go anywhere independently without a wheelchair.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Upgrading to luxury resorts didn’t mean accessible travel

For the first couple of trips, Morales upgraded to very nice resorts, thinking that they鈥檇 be able to accommodate her wheelchair. But they could not. During one stay in Hawaii 鈥 鈥渁t a hotel we鈥檝e all heard of鈥 鈥 they gave her a room upstairs and suggested she enter and exit through the lanai, a covered patio. But the door couldn’t be locked from the outside.

A similar scenario unfolded when she attended the opening of a spa in New England. She had to travel half a mile through a parking lot to avoid contending with 22 steps. 

鈥溾奍 just didn鈥檛 understand this chasm is in the market,鈥 Morales says. 鈥淭hat all of a sudden if you need help, a little something extra, why is it expected that you either have pretty medium-level taste, like you can go to a Holiday Inn without problems, but if you want to do a five-star experience, there’s a gap. I thought this cannot be real.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Her consulting business gave her a head start on all things travel

An entrepreneur at heart, Morales had the experience to make all aspects of travel accessible, including the luxury end. She鈥檇 started a consulting business in 2017, and in planning her clients鈥 corporate travel, also fielded questions about how to take grandmothers with limited mobility on safaris, or elderly people who鈥檇 suffered strokes to Europe. She saw the potential for a sort of side hustle adjacent to her primary business.聽

So Morales began shopping around with different travel agencies. (It鈥檚 similar to the way a real estate agent chooses an agency to join, she explains). When Morales stumbled upon the travel agency , her 鈥渟pidey sense鈥 went off.

Fora has booked over $2 billion in travel since 2021

Co-founders Henley Vazquez, Evan Frank and Jake Peters launched Fora in 2021. Since then, the agency鈥檚 global network of travel advisors has booked more than $2 billion in travel across over 180 countries. 

Within a few weeks of Morales starting with the agency, the co-founders had her training other advisors on accessible travel. And after the first training call, they resolved to build out Fora’s accessibility pillar in an official capacity.

鈥淲e started quietly at first, just like every lean startup,” Morales says. “We had a few of us that were paid to consult and spend a lot of time building training and developing our own lists of top hotels and properties around the world.鈥

Image Credit: Courtesy of Fora. Karen Morales.

Morales had visited nearly 50 countries by that point, and Judy Tudor, another Fora advisor who also uses a wheelchair, has been to more than 50 鈥 which meant a lot of helpful data points. 

Travel agents and suppliers learn more about the accessibility initiative

It wasn鈥檛 surprising that a lot of agents wanted to get involved (after all, they鈥檝e answered hundreds and hundreds of questions about accessible travel), Morales says. 

However, a pleasant twist was just how many luxury suppliers 鈥 hotels, resorts, etcetera 鈥 wanted to get in on the program. 

鈥溾奣hey’re really looking to understand this market more,鈥 Morales says, 鈥渨hich is beautiful. We’ve had people offer to buy beach wheelchairs or ask for us to give them a review of how something really works. And I think that’s how things change. It’s about the actual hoteliers leaning in and saying, with true interest, How could I do this a little bit better?鈥&苍产蝉辫;

In training Fora鈥檚 advisors on accessible travel, the first focus was mobility. But they branched out into other accommodations, like food allergies, even though this is a more difficult space to navigate. (For instance, it鈥檚 relatively straightforward to track how many accessible rooms a hotel has. It鈥檚 more difficult to gauge its responsiveness to a dairy or wheat allergy.) Still, despite the challenges, Fora鈥檚 advisors now account for any accommodation possibility, including service animals.

The issue of un-advertised accessibility accommodations

Fora鈥檚 accessibility work also uncovered another critical point: Although some luxury hotels do lack fundamental accessibility features, others do have them 鈥 they鈥檙e just not advertised. 

For example, Morales once spoke with a sales director who mentioned that she has a nonverbal granddaughter who communicates via tablet, and that the property she works with welcomes children in need of accommodations like that at their kids鈥 club, and makes sure they鈥檙e well integrated into the program. 

That was news to Morales. No one would know that information without digging deeper, but some properties might be wary of leading with it amid fears of cancel culture, Morales says. 

鈥淚t’s a feeling that we’re going to get sued or in trouble if we get it wrong,鈥 Morales explains. 鈥淎nd that can’t be our motto. In disability or in travel or in luxury, it has to be, let people do their best to welcome you in, and you make the decision on whether that is going to work for you or not. If we come at it with a really combative attitude, nothing’s going to change.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Travel suppliers should prioritize inclusivity upfront

Instead, travel suppliers should focus on making every guest feel special and included upfront 鈥 and that means not being afraid to have important conversations early, ahead of challenges that arise in the moment.

As a starting point, though, all properties should make sure their accessible rooms can be viewed easily on their website. That doesn鈥檛 have to entail an expensive IT overhaul, either 鈥 even a simple landing page with a list of accessible offerings can go a long way, Morales says. Additionally, a property鈥檚 ability to accommodate food allergies should be noted clearly online. 

鈥淟et鈥檚 make it findable and searchable,鈥 Morales says. 鈥淥therwise, it doesn鈥檛 give people a lot of confidence.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

That transparency and visibility should also include showing people with different abilities in marketing materials.  

鈥溾奣here seems to be this bias that we just don’t photograph as well, or it doesn’t look as good in brand marketing,鈥 Morales says. 鈥淏ut people are traveling with wheelchairs and mobility devices, and it would be good to see some of that out in the world, even if it’s just in the socials or in the stories that you read.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Fora’s accessibility initiative has generated $75 million

With Morales at the helm, Fora鈥檚 accessibility initiative has grown to include more than 300 advisors specializing in accessible travel and generating $75 million in accessible travel bookings. 

But it鈥檚 only the beginning, especially as the continue to age. Baby Boomers hold about in the U.S., and by 2030, all of them will be . Many of them will want to spend their money on travel 鈥 and need accessibility accommodations to do it, Morales says. 

鈥溾奍f you are not catering to grandmas and grandpas, I don’t know what you’re doing,鈥 she adds. 鈥淏ecause they’re not only traveling, but they’re often bringing a three-generational troop of family members with them. I’ve seen that in my own book of business this year. I’m up about 300%. And it’s all driven by celebratory trips, where grandparents need a little extra help.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Luxury accessible travel’s growth and promising future

Morales looks forward to continuing to drive accessibility in the luxury travel space. What鈥檚 more, she and Fora are in a unique position to show, as they already have, hotel brands the major growth potential in prioritizing accessibility 鈥 and how many devoted fans, eager to spread the word, they stand to gain. 

鈥溾奧e’re also in a really unique position to give a lot of caretakers and people like myself who have this lived experience the chance to really have a career in travel,鈥 Morales says. 鈥淎nd help people [in need of accommodations] do what they already do anyway. There is nothing more fulfilling.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Key Takeaways

  • After Morales’s mobility changed in 2020, the inaccessibility of luxury travel surprised her.
  • A life-long trip planner, Morales joined Fora as a travel advisor and spearheaded its accessibility initiative.
  • The business pillar now boasts over 300 travel advisors and $75 million in bookings in less than a year.

鈥淭raveling and being a planner has been part of my identity my whole life,” Karen Morales tells 91成人. Growing up, Morales plotted trips to Disney World; as an adult, she architected bachelorette trips and company travel during a career in advertising. But in 2020, Morales鈥檚 perspective on planning her travel adventures shifted.聽

Image Credit: Courtesy of Fora. Karen Morales.

The progression of her muscular dystrophy required her to start using a wheelchair. 鈥溾奍 tripped and fell during Covid,鈥 Morales recalls. 鈥淚 was homeschooling two elementary-age kids, baking brownies, doing Zooms, and I tripped on an area rug. It was not the huge swelling music moment that most people have, but all of a sudden, I couldn’t go anywhere independently without a wheelchair.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Upgrading to luxury resorts didn’t mean accessible travel

For the first couple of trips, Morales upgraded to very nice resorts, thinking that they鈥檇 be able to accommodate her wheelchair. But they could not. During one stay in Hawaii 鈥 鈥渁t a hotel we鈥檝e all heard of鈥 鈥 they gave her a room upstairs and suggested she enter and exit through the lanai, a covered patio. But the door couldn’t be locked from the outside.

Amanda Breen Senior Features Writer

91成人 Staff
Amanda Breen is a senior features writer at 91成人.com. She is a graduate of Barnard... Read more

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