Opposite several A-gates, La Martina runs full-polo merch mode
Right in Terminal A’s airside shopping strip, La Martina leans hard into Argentine polo culture with branded shirts, leather accessories, and souvenirs carrying the La Martina logo. You’re past security already, so this is a last-minute stop before boarding rather than a pre-check-in errand. Prices sit in typical airport-boutique territory: expect around US$60–90 for polos and upward of US$150 for leather bags.
The shop mainly targets carry-on friendly items under 1 kg, so belts, caps, wallets, and small leather goods are the easy grab here. Stock focuses on adult sizing; don’t expect a big kids section beyond a few smaller T-shirt sizes. If you want something that actually says “Argentina” plus a recognizable local brand, this is more specific than the generic souvenir kiosks dotted through Terminal A.
Quality sits above the usual fridge-magnet stands near gates 1–10, but you pay for the branding. Logo-heavy pieces dominate the front racks, while more low-key items sit toward the back of the store. If you’re tight on pesos, lean toward accessories under ARS 60.000 rather than apparel. Staff usually handle tax-free paperwork for qualifying non-resident purchases when the spend crosses the current refund minimum.
Figure on 10–15 minutes here: 5 to scan sizes, another 5 to test a belt or bag fit, and a few minutes at checkout if someone ahead of you is processing duty-free forms. One tip: snap a photo of the price tag with your phone’s currency-converter app before committing; card terminals in Terminal A often default to dynamic currency conversion that’s worse than your bank’s rate.