One of roughly 16 food spots, Mr. Bono gives BAQ a local fast-food name alongside the global chains. It sits somewhere in the passenger terminal, according to the Medellin Guru guide, so expect it after security rather than out by check-in. The published rating is a clean 5, which is rare for an airport grab-and-go brand.
You’re looking at Colombian-style fast food here, not a sit-down restaurant with table service. Think quick sandwiches or pastries at prices that usually sit below the big US logos you’ll also see in Ernesto Cortissoz International Airport. The guide that lists Mr. Bono counts about 16 cafés and restaurants total, so options in the terminal stay limited and this place can matter on a short layover.
Figure this as a backup plan when the usual multinationals have long lines at peak times, especially during morning and early evening banks for Avianca and LATAM flights. BAQ only has Domestic and International zones, and Mr. Bono shows up as part of the shared passenger-side mix, so you shouldn’t need to exit to landside to find it. Expect standard fast-food speed: a few minutes from order to food in hand.
No detailed crowd-sourced menu data yet, but the inclusion in a Medellin-focused airport guide suggests it sticks to recognizable Colombian snack formats rather than experimental fusion. That same guide confirms its name exactly as “Mr. Bono,” so you can look for that specific branding on overhead signs as you walk the concourse. With a 5-star rating, odds are decent the basics come out hot and reasonably fresh.
Practical tip: with just ~16 food and café options in the terminal, don’t wait until boarding starts; swing by Mr. Bono as soon as you clear security, especially before evening departures when lines across BAQ all spike at once.