Marked disability spaces sit right next to the BGR terminal
At Bangor International (BGR), Accessible Parking means clearly signed disability spaces in the main lots directly beside the Domestic and International terminal entrances, not out in a remote satellite lot. You park within a short roll or walk of the doors, then head straight to check-in without dealing with off-airport shuttles or long curbside drop-offs.
The airport spells it out: only vehicles with disability license plates or a valid temporary placard may use these accessible spots, and regulations are “strictly enforced” by the parking operator. That strict tone actually helps here; regulars say it reduces the risk of finding every blue-space taken by cars that shouldn’t be there.
Spaces are grouped and clearly marked inside the main parking areas, so you’re not guessing which section qualifies as accessible. Look for the blue disability symbols and adjacent signs as soon as you turn into the on-airport parking entrance for the terminal; signage points you toward the closest rows facing the terminal doors.
Enforcement and logistics sit with PCI Municipal Services, which runs the Parking Office for BGR rather than TSA or any airline desk. If you have a question about a plate, a temporary permit, or a blocked space, you call the local Parking Office number listed on the airport’s parking page or posted at the lot instead of asking gate agents.
Practical tip: keep your placard or disability registration visible before you turn into the terminal loop so you can go straight to the accessible rows without having to circle back to fix how it’s displayed.