T2’s “Souvenir Shop” is basically the Aelia Duty Free
In Terminal T2, souvenir shopping lives inside the Aelia Duty Free rather than a stand‑alone “Souvenir Shop” with its own storefront. You’ll see the duty free zone shortly after security in T2, before the small cluster of boarding gates, so you don’t need to double back. Signage lists Aelia Duty Free as selling Belgian pralines, local beers, toys and souvenirs, which is where any “Souvenir Shop” listing on airport maps actually points.
The Aelia Duty Free in T2 opens in line with flight schedules, typically from early morning departures around 05:00 until the last evening flights. Pricing skews touristy rather than supermarket-cheap: box sets of Belgian chocolates often sit in the €8–€20 range, and multi-pack Belgian beers can climb higher once duty and packaging are factored in. You can still grab smaller items like keyrings, magnets or kids’ toys under €10 if you just need a token gift.
Product focus in this combined T2 duty free and souvenir area is heavy on Belgian specialities. Expect praline brands stacked near the entrance, with chocolate bars, truffles and gift tins on end-caps. Beer shelves usually feature Belgian names like Leffe and Chimay alongside generic duty free alcohol. Toys and souvenir items cluster near the central aisles, so a quick five-minute loop is normally enough to pick up magnets, mugs or soft toys before heading to your gate.
Since there’s no separate “Souvenir Shop” in T2, don’t waste time hunting for another storefront past Aelia Duty Free. If you want more choice, T1 has a larger retail footprint, but that only helps if your boarding pass already says T1; there’s no easy post-security transfer between terminals. Plan one pass through Aelia Duty Free right after security in T2, so you’re not squeezing gift shopping into the boarding queue.