Blue-marked Disabled Bays sit closest to Terminal 1 at CFU
Disabled Bays at Corfu Airport sit in the main car park directly in front of Terminal 1, so distance from car to check-in is about a 1–3 minute walk depending on your pace. These are standard blue-marked accessible spaces for passengers with reduced mobility arriving by car and trying to avoid the longer walk from general parking rows.
Airport and airline info, including Flydubai’s Corfu page, confirm that CFU officially provides facilities and assistance for passengers with reduced mobility, even though no one publishes an exact bay count or row numbers. Figure on a small cluster of marked spaces near the terminal entrance rather than an entire dedicated lot, similar to what you see at many Greek island airports.
A Corfu Forum member in 2023 said they were “very impressed with special assistance at Corfu airport,” rating it higher than what they got on arrival back in Edinburgh. That kind of comment usually means staff actually come out with a wheelchair or buggy promptly, so think of the Disabled Bays as part of a broader assistance setup instead of the only support available.
Locals on Corfu community forums tell visitors to pre‑request special assistance with the airline at least 48 hours before departure, then head straight to the assistance desk inside Terminal 1 on arrival, instead of banking on finding an empty Disabled Bay at peak times. If your mobility is limited, plan the bay only as the drop-off point and let airport staff handle the rest from the curb.
There are no strong complaints online about towing or fines, but Greek police do patrol terminal fronts and can ticket cars abusing Disabled Bays, especially in July–August when CFU pushes past 3,000–4,000 passengers per peak day. Keep a valid EU blue badge or equivalent visible, and don’t leave the car unattended longer than your actual drop-off or pick-up window.
Tip: In high season, aim to reach the Disabled Bays 20–30 minutes earlier than you normally would, so you have time to find a marked space and still meet special-assistance staff at check-in without rushing.