10 minutes from most T1 gates, Monop’Daily is the grab-and-go option at Beauvais.
This is the Monoprix offshoot inside Terminal T1, after security, built around prepacked snacks and drinks rather than hot meals. Think supermarket fridge wall in airport form: sandwiches, salads, chips, pastries, chocolate bars, and bottled drinks. Reviews of Beauvais in general call the food scene “a few basic restaurants and fast food,” and Monop’Daily fits that description: simple, functional, and focused on speed over atmosphere.
Pricing runs lower than many French airports: expect about €4–€5 for a basic jambon-beurre sandwich, €1–€2 for a bottle of water or soft drink, and around €2–€3 for coffee from the machine. Portions skew light, so treat it as a snack stop rather than a full lunch unless you double up on items. You pay at a standard checkout counter rather than at a café bar, so it moves reasonably fast when one or two tills are open.
Food is cold-case only: prepacked baguettes, wraps, salads, yogurts, and pastries like croissants and pain au chocolat. If you need something vegetarian, you usually find at least one cheese-based sandwich or salad in the €4–€6 range. Kids’ options mostly mean crisps, cookies, and juice boxes. There’s plenty of branded bottled drinks, including energy drinks and iced tea, but very limited fresh fruit beyond the odd apple or banana.
Watch out for timing: outside the main Schengen wave (roughly 06:00–10:00 and 16:00–21:00), you can hit half-empty shelves or closed fridges while staff restock. That matters at Beauvais because T1 departures often cluster around Ryanair banks, and the line can jump from 0 to 15 people in five minutes. Card payment is standard, but carry a backup €10 note in case a terminal glitches.
Tip: if you land hungry in T1 and still have a bus ride to Paris ahead, grab two items here and a large water before boarding; prices on the Porte Maillot bus can be higher and choices thinner.