BKK · Shops

NaRaYa

Baht 150 gets you a signature NaRaYa fabric tote

NaRaYa in Suvarnabhumi’s Main terminal sits airside in the international departures shopping strip, an easy stop if your gate is in the central pier. The shop focuses on its familiar quilted fabric bags and accessories, all with big “NaRaYa” tags that Thai and regional travelers recognize instantly. Prices start around THB 150–200 for small pouches and run up to roughly THB 800–1,200 for larger shoulder bags and weekender styles.

Most travelers hit NaRaYa for last‑minute gifts: coin purses, cosmetic bags, and foldable totes in floral or polka-dot prints. Stock skews heavily to fabric items, with some PVC-trim pieces and a few seasonal colors that change every few months. Sizes range from tiny zipper pouches barely bigger than a credit card to large tote bags that still qualify as a personal item on most airlines flying out of BKK.

Expect typical airport hours, roughly matching Main terminal international departures, so early-morning flights around 06:00 and late departures close to 00:00 still catch it open. Payment is easy: cash in Thai baht and major cards like Visa and Mastercard are standard, and many staff handle simple English requests for colors or patterns without fuss. Receipts clearly show VAT in case you’re tracking expenses.

Quality sits a notch above generic market stalls you might see around Bangkok, with cleaner stitching and zippers that feel less flimsy. It’s still soft-structure fabric, so bags won’t protect electronics the way a hard-shell backpack from another brand might. If you push the seams with overpacking, especially on the smaller zipper pouches, expect a shorter life.

Practical tip: check the tag for “Made in Thailand” and current price in THB, then compare to downtown NaRaYa shops in the city; if the difference is under about THB 50–70, just buy it here and save yourself the detour.

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