Blue signed spaces sit right next to the Landvetter terminal
Accessible Parking at Göteborg Landvetter Airport sits directly beside the main terminal building, so you roll or walk just a short few dozen meters to check-in. Spaces are clearly marked with the blue wheelchair symbol and laid out for extra door-opening room, which helps if you use a wheelchair, walker, or have a passenger who does.
This is standard airport Accessible Parking, not a separate premium product, but the key perk is proximity: you park at ground level right by departures instead of using a multi-storey or long‑term lot farther out. That cuts your curb‑to‑check‑in time down to a few minutes compared with 10–15 minutes from remote parking with shuttle.
Rules normally follow Swedish disabled parking regulations, so you should display a valid disabled parking permit in the windshield to use these marked spaces. Airport staff and security cars circulate around the terminal frontage several times an hour, and they do check for permits in the dedicated bays.
Lighting around these spaces stays on through the night, matching terminal operating hours that run from early morning first departures to the last evening arrivals. That helps if you are dropping off or picking up someone on a 06:00 flight or a late arrival around 23:00, when regular curb space can be busy and hard to hold.
Accessible Parking sits inside the main terminal traffic loop, so there is no shuttle or extra barrier to cross. If you arrive in a wheelchair-accessible vehicle or taxi, you can first drop at the terminal door, then park the car in an accessible bay a minute or two away on foot.
Practical tip: Spaces nearest the main entrance fill first, especially before 08:00 on weekdays, so plan to arrive at least 20 minutes earlier than you normally would to give yourself time to find a blue-marked bay right by the terminal.