Terminal T1 hosts 4 airlines. It's Ryanair's home turf at BGY.
Ryanair owns most of the departures board in T1
Terminal 1 at Bergamo Orio al Serio (BGY) is the main and only terminal, and it runs almost entirely on low-cost traffic from Ryanair, plus Wizz Air, easyJet, and Blue Air. If you’re flying any of these four airlines from Bergamo, you’re in T1 by default. There’s no second terminal to worry about, so every departure and arrival on these carriers funnels through the same building.
Every check-in counter and gate sits under the T1 label
Check-in desks for Ryanair, Wizz Air, easyJet, and Blue Air all line up in the same departure hall in T1, with flights separated only by airline and destination on the screens. That means a single security area feeds all gates, so you don’t choose between multiple checkpoints or piers. Just follow the signage for departures and your airline; there’s no chance of walking to the wrong terminal code, because BGY only lists T1 on the boards.
No lounges means every passenger waits at the gate
Terminal 1 currently lists no lounges at all, so even status holders with Ryanair’s partners, Wizz Priority, or easyJet Plus don’t have a separate space. Boarding areas serve as the only waiting zones, and you’ll spend your pre-flight time in standard seating near your numbered gate. If you usually rely on a lounge for Wi‑Fi, snacks, or quieter seating, plan for regular gate-area conditions instead in BGY T1.
No catalogued restaurants or shops inside T1
Official listings show no named restaurants or shops for Terminal 1, so don’t bank on a specific chain, favorite coffee spot, or duty-free brand being available airside. Food and retail can change quickly in low-cost oriented terminals, and with nothing documented here, assume limited options and higher prices than in Bergamo city. Grabbing a proper meal and buying snacks or water before you reach the airport is the safer move.
Single-terminal layout keeps connections straightforward
Because Bergamo runs only Terminal 1, you won’t shuttle between buildings when connecting between, say, a Ryanair flight and a Wizz Air departure. All domestic and international flights for these low-cost carriers share the same terminal footprint. Any connection still needs time for passport control and security where applicable, but at least you’re not dealing with inter-terminal buses or trains inside BGY.
One simple rule: arrive fed and with a charged phone
With no logged lounges, restaurants, or shops in T1, plan as if you’ll find only basic seating and boarding queues near the gates. Eat in Bergamo or Milan before you head out, charge your devices at your hotel or home, and bring a bottle (empty if you’re going through security) plus snacks. That way, once you’re in Terminal 1 with the low-cost crowd for Ryanair, Wizz Air, easyJet, and Blue Air, you can just watch the screens and wait for boarding without scrambling for services that might not exist.