After security at FNT, this is often the snack line
Auntie Anne's sits in the small post-security concourse at Bishop International Airport, right by the gates and across from the other main options: Starbucks and a single bar. Price-wise it’s a straight $ snack stop, with pretzels and drinks usually under $10 total. Think “grab a bite before they call Group 3,” not a sit-down meal.
You’ll find the stand past security in the main departures area, within a short walk of every gate in this one-terminal airport. Hours track flight banks, so it’s typically open for the early morning departures and shuts not long after the last evening flights; late-night delays can mean closed shutters by 9–10 p.m. If you’re on a first-out 6:00–7:00 a.m. flight, this and Starbucks are often the only things running.
Standard Auntie Anne's menu here: original salted pretzels, cinnamon sugar, pretzel nuggets, and pretzel dogs, plus fountain drinks and lemonade. Expect around $4–$6 for a pretzel and a few dollars more if you add a drink. Portions are decent for a holdover snack but this won’t replace the burger you skipped on I‑75.
Regulars in FNT reviews talk about eating a full meal in Flint or Detroit beforehand and using Auntie Anne's only as a tide-me-over snack before boarding. If you land hungry off a 90-minute flight and turn around onto another, a pretzel dog or nuggets order is the move to carry down the jet bridge. For kids, the nugget buckets are easier to manage in tight gate seating.
Watch out for: FNT doesn’t have many food outlets, so during a 5:00–7:00 p.m. departure bank this stand can draw a line 8–10 people deep, and options may run low close to closing. Tip: if you see your flight time on the screen at the end of the concourse, stop here first, grab a pretzel and drink, then pick a seat near your gate instead of waiting to decide.