Blue-badge spaces sit right next to Orly’s terminals
Accessible Parking at Paris–Orly puts disabled bays immediately beside terminals 1, 2, 3, and 4, so you’re only a short roll or walk from check-in. Spaces are clearly marked for European disability placards, with step‑free access from the parking level to the terminal doors. If you use your own wheelchair, you can stay in it all the way from the bay to the airline desk without ramps or lifts that feel like a detour.
These accessible bays sit inside the official terminal car parks, not in remote lots, so you avoid shuttle buses entirely at Orly 1–4. Signage for “PMR” (personnes à mobilité réduite) starts as you enter the airport road system and points you to the closest car park entrance for your terminal number. In practice, that usually means following signs for P1, P2, P3, or P4, then heading for the blue wheelchair icons as soon as you’re through the gate.
Standard Orly parking tariffs apply to Accessible Parking, with hourly rates that start from a few euros and daily caps that vary by car park (P1/P2 cost more than long‑stay P7). Some disabled drivers report getting reduced rates or exemptions in France when they show a valid EU disability badge at the information desk, so keep your placard and ID handy. Payment runs through the usual ticket machines in each car park, which sit on level 0 or level 1 depending on the building.
Every car park next to terminals 1–4 has lifts between the accessible bays and departures/arrivals levels, and the routes are step‑free from car to check‑in. If you need help with bags or boarding, flag it when booking your flight and then use the special assistance points inside each terminal once you’ve parked. Practical tip: photograph the car park sign (P1, P2, P3, or P4) and level number before you head to security, so finding your accessible bay again after a late flight is painless.