Pro.du.co basically doesn’t exist in traveler reviews
Pro.du.co shows up on Pisa Airport’s food listings, but it has no usable reviews on forums, blogs, or the big map apps. That’s rare for PSA, because spots in T1 that actually get foot traffic usually pick up at least a handful of comments within a year or two. Here, you’re flying blind: no clear info on hours, pricing, or even exactly where it sits in relation to T1’s Schengen vs non-Schengen flows.
The airport’s own materials list Pro.du.co alongside other outlets in the single-terminal layout at Pisa International Airport (T1), but don’t spell out a gate area, opening times, or a price tier. That usually means one of three things: it’s a kiosk-style concept that comes and goes, it has recently changed name/operator, or it’s effectively dormant while the listing lingers on paperwork. In each of those cases, counting on it for a pre-flight meal is a gamble.
Because there are zero first-hand reports tied to “Pro.du.co Pisa airport” across major review platforms and frequent-flyer forums, there’s no real basis to recommend a specific dish, drink, or style of service. No one is talking about espresso quality, sandwich sizes in euros, or queue times at busy Ryanair banks. In airport terms, that silence is its own data point: regulars are clearly defaulting to other T1 venues for reliable food and coffee before going to security or waiting at their assigned gate.
Practical tip: treat Pro.du.co as a maybe, not a plan. When flying out of PSA T1, aim to eat at a clearly signed bar or café you can see from the main departures hall, then only use Pro.du.co if you physically spot it open with a menu and prices posted that fit your timing and budget in euros.