Saudi-made Patchi chocolates show up here in their own store.
This standalone Patchi sits in King Fahd International Airport’s main Passenger Terminal, so you can grab boxed chocolates even on domestic runs. Expect the usual silver and white branding and gift-ready packaging that people in Saudi actually give at Eid and weddings. It’s a straightforward retail unit: glass counters, pre-packed boxes on shelves, and staff ready to assemble mixed assortments if you don’t see the combo you want.
Hours aren’t posted officially, but most Passenger Terminal shops at DMM track peak flight banks and stay open late into the evening, especially around 21:00–01:00 departures. If you’re on an early-morning flight before 06:00, don’t bank on it; treat it as a bonus if the lights are on. If you’re connecting airside within the same terminal, you’ll see similar confectionery in duty free, but Patchi’s own shop usually has fresher stock and more gifting formats.
Pricing lands firmly in premium-gift territory: think small mixed boxes as a quick-office-gift, and larger ribboned sets that look like you spent time planning. You’ll find classic milk and dark pieces, plus filled chocolates that skew sweet by European standards. No big seating area, no coffee bar, just grab-and-go bags and boxes. If you care about presentation, ask staff to wrap or ribbon a box before they ring you up; they’re used to last-minute gift shoppers cutting it close to boarding.
Use Patchi as your backup plan if luggage space killed your city shopping: walk through Passenger Terminal landside check-in a bit earlier than usual, buy one solid gift box, and you’re covered for any family pickup at arrivals.