SAS Travel Market sits airside in T2 after passport control
You hit SAS Travel Market soon after security in Terminal T2, in the main departures area at Zvartnots. It’s one of the larger walk-through style shops, so you’ll probably pass it on the way to most gates. Stock rotates a bit by season, but expect a mix of Armenian souvenirs, liquor, snacks, and last-minute travel basics all under one roof.
Pricing skews airport-level, with snacks starting around 800–1,000 AMD and small boxed sweets from 2,000–3,500 AMD. Duty-free alcohol runs closer to European hub pricing than downtown Yerevan, so buy here only if you care about carrying less from the city. Souvenir magnets and small trinkets tend to sit in the 1,500–3,000 AMD range, with higher-end crafts and gift packs going up from there.
SAS Travel Market generally keeps hours aligned to international departures, often open from early-morning banks around 03:00 through late-night waves after 23:00. If you’re on an odd-hour flight with carriers like Wizz Air or Armenia Airways, you can usually count on it being open while boarding is called. Staff handle payments in AMD, major cards, and usually euros or dollars at the day’s posted rate.
Food-wise, think grab-and-go: packaged chocolates, nuts, and chips, plus bottled water and soft drinks in the 300–800 AMD band. Use it for plane snacks, not a full meal; EVN’s actual cafés and fast-food spots sit elsewhere in T2 and give better value on hot food. Alcohol miniatures are handy if you’re heading to a dry hotel or late arrival in another city.
Quick tip: if you want Armenian sweets like churchkhela or dried fruit for gifts, buy them here only if your boarding time is inside 45 minutes; otherwise, check landside shops in Yerevan first for better variety and prices, then use SAS Travel Market as backup before your gate.