Best Restroom Finder Apps for IBS: Ally's Law State Guide
Posted by The CodonRX Science Team on May 8th 2026
A Guide for Those with IBS, Crohn's, and IBD
If you have IBS, Crohn's disease, or ulcerative colitis, you've almost certainly planned a trip, an errand, or a commute around one question: where is the nearest restroom, how many stalls are there and can I get to it in time?
Bathroom anxiety is real and can be overwhelming. Research shows that fear of an accident in public is one of the most significant contributors to reduced quality of life in IBS — causing people to avoid work, travel, social events, and activities they would otherwise enjoy.
This article is a practical resource. Here are the apps that can help — and the legal right you may not know you have.
Restroom Finder Apps That Actually Work
These apps locate public restrooms near you using crowdsourced databases, Google Maps integration, or dedicated networks. None of them require an account to use.
Flush — Toilet Finder & Map
Large crowdsourced database with offline capability. Shows restroom locations on a map with user-submitted details on accessibility and hours. One of the most frequently updated options available.
SitOrSquat
Crowdsourced ratings on cleanliness and accessibility. Color-coded system: green (recommended), red (not recommended). Useful in urban areas where the database is densest.
Bathroom Scout
Filters by accessible restrooms, 24-hour availability, and baby changing facilities. Less dense than Flush in smaller cities but strong in major metro areas.
Google Maps
Search "restroom near me" or "public bathroom near me." Not a dedicated app, but often the fastest option in unfamiliar areas. Results pull from Google's business listings and public facilities database.
Practical tip: Download at least one dedicated app (Flush or SitOrSquat) alongside Google Maps. Dedicated apps maintain databases in parks, transit hubs, and standalone facilities that don't appear in Google's business listings.
Ally's Law: Your Legal Right to Access Restrooms
Most people with IBS, Crohn's, or ulcerative colitis don't know this law exists. Ally's Law — formally called the Restroom Access Act — requires qualifying retail businesses to allow customers with documented medical conditions to use employee-only restrooms when a public restroom is not available and the need is urgent.
The law is named after Ally Bain, an Illinois teenager with Crohn's disease who was denied restroom access at a retail store and subsequently had an accident. Illinois became the first state to pass the legislation in 2005. Other states followed.
How to Use Ally's Law
To invoke your rights under Ally's Law in states where it applies:
- Carry documentation. A note from your physician (or a medical card from your gastroenterologist) stating your diagnosis is typically sufficient. The Crohn's & Colitis Foundation provides wallet cards for this purpose.
- Request access directly. Ask to speak with a manager. State that you have a documented medical condition and need access to the employee restroom under your state's restroom access law.
- Know the eligibility criteria. Most state laws cover: retail establishments with 3 or more toilets, open to the public, with 3 or more employees on duty. The business cannot deny access if these conditions are met and you present documentation.
- The business is not liable. Ally's Law typically includes liability protection for businesses that provide access in good faith. This removes the primary reason businesses cite for refusing.
Knowing your legal right changes the dynamic. You're not asking a favor — you're asserting a right established in law. That shift in framing can be practically useful in the moment.
Managing the Underlying Problem
Apps and legal rights are practical tools for managing the reality of life with IBS. They don't address the underlying biology driving the urgency.
The gut dysfunction in IBS involves a sensitized mucosal lining, dysregulated gut-brain signaling, and in many cases, a microbiome environment that sustains a low-grade inflammatory state rather than resolving it. For IBS sufferers who have tried standard probiotics without improvement — or who noticed their symptoms worsened — the issue is often the strain itself.
Standard probiotics carry a pro-inflammatory molecule called LTA (lipoteichoic acid) on the bacterial cell wall. In a gut that's already reactive, LTA activates the same immune receptor pathway involved in IBS symptom generation — adding fuel rather than support.
NCK2025™, the patented strain in CodonRX | AI, was engineered at NC State University to remove this LTA trigger while preserving the beneficial properties of L. acidophilus. For IBS sufferers whose gut is already sensitized, that distinction matters. Learn about the science behind CodonRX — and why the strain in your probiotic matters as much as the CFU count.
References & Notes
- State restroom access legislation ("Ally's Law") varies by jurisdiction. For the most current state-by-state guide, see the Crohn's & Colitis Foundation: crohnscolitisfoundation.org/patient-support/allys-law. The table above reflects enacted statutes as of early 2026.
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