Near the International departures area, Montblanc handles the premium gift run.
You’ll find this boutique airside in the International terminal, so it’s an option after immigration and security, not landside. Think last-minute “serious” presents rather than cheap souvenirs. Staff usually target outbound Australia, Europe, and Japan flights, and they know cut-off times for many of the evening departures.
Core stock hits the usual Montblanc mix: black resin pens, mechanical pencils, leather wallets, small cardholders, and a few business bags. Prices track global boutique levels in EUR and USD equivalents, often slightly above downtown Bali options once you convert IDR, so this isn’t where you come to hunt a discount.
Duty-free pricing does appear on some fragrances and smaller accessories, but don’t expect huge drops compared with a city store in Singapore or Jakarta. Figure that a standard ballpoint pen here still runs roughly high three to low four figures in IDR thousands, versus something you’d grab in the main duty-free for under IDR 500,000.
Service skews hands-on: staff open cases, demo refills, and offer engraving information in English and Indonesian. Stock of limited editions can be hit-or-miss, especially around Christmas and July–August Australian school holidays, when popular pen lines sell through before the late-night bank of flights.
Fastest play: walk in with a target—pen, wallet, or fragrance—and a hard time limit based on your gate call. If you care about price more than brand, compare similar items in the general duty-free first, then backtrack here only if Montblanc branding actually matters to you.