Ten minutes from most T2 domestic gates, Huawei sits right in the main departures shopping strip at Chengdu Shuangliu. This is a standard brand store: phones, tablets, laptops, wearables, and accessories all under the Huawei label. Expect China-mainland pricing in RMB, not duty-free deals, so think flagship-phone money rather than souvenir spend.
The shop is airside in Terminal T2 after security, so you’re already through checks before stopping in. Staff demo current P‑series and Mate‑series phones and usually have MateBook laptops open on the counters. Accessories run from basic USB‑C cables and 65W chargers up to FreeBuds earbuds and smartwatches, handy if your charging brick died at the last hotel.
Plan 10–20 minutes if you want to test devices; less than 10 if you’re just grabbing a cable or power bank. Payment skews local: WeChat Pay and Alipay are common, but they also take UnionPay cards, and larger T2 shops typically accept Visa and Mastercard. Prices are listed clearly in RMB on shelf tags, so you can compare against your home market before buying a big-ticket phone.
There’s usually no formal tax‑free counter in the store; for VAT export refunds in China you generally deal with designated counters in the terminal, not individual shops, so don’t count on extra savings here. If your gate is in a far T2 pier, check the FIDS boards first, then stop at Huawei on the way only if you still have at least 25 minutes before boarding starts.