Near T2 security, Lost & Found handles the airport’s loose ends
Right inside Terminal T2, this small Lost & Found desk sits post-security, so you can deal with missing items without exiting and re-clearing. It’s listed as a service/assistance point, not a retail counter, and it focuses on property reported or turned in within the international terminal.
There’s no posted rating yet (current score shows as -1), and there’s no set price list because charges depend on the situation: basic inquiries cost nothing, while shipping or documentation can add up. Expect the team to handle items left at T2 checkpoints or gates; things left in taxis or city-side usually go through airport police or the cab operator instead.
Plan for a wait that can stretch past 20–30 minutes at busy bank times, since there’s often only one staffer handling forms and back-room searches. Bring your flight number, boarding pass, and approximate time you lost the item; this lines up with how they log property and speeds up the search. If your item vanished in T1, this T2 desk usually can’t pull those records directly.
The service sits in the $ price tier because most basic help is free, but international shipping of a passport, laptop, or bag can jump past the cost of replacing low-value items. Get a clear quote in rupees before agreeing to any courier or handling fee, and ask if holding the item for pickup on a later trip is possible.
Practical tip: before you walk to Lost & Found in T2, write down your seat number, gate, and approximate time you last saw the item; hand that over first so they can search the log without a back-and-forth interrogation at the counter.