Gate-side handicrafts and sweets near Terminal 1 departures
Indita Mía sits in Terminal 1 at Guadalajara International Airport, in the main departures shopping strip after security. It leans hard into local flavor: think Mexican candies, regional snacks, and artisan-style souvenirs you can throw into a carry-on without repacking your whole bag. Prices run mid-range for an airport in Mexico; figure around 80–150 MXN for packaged sweets and 200–400 MXN for small gift items.
This is a quick in-and-out stop if you still need last-minute gifts before a Volaris, Aeroméxico, or Viva Aerobus flight out of T1. Shelves skew toward boxed candies, bottled sauces, and colorful trinkets rather than high-end duty free. Expect typical airport markups of about 20–30% over city shops in Guadalajara, but still less painful than buying similar items at a resort.
Focus on items that travel well: sealed dulces de leche, individually wrapped Mexican candies, and vacuum-packed snacks that survive a 3–5 hour flight without mess. Skip anything in glass if you’re tight on space or carrying only a small 7–10 kg cabin bag, since the packaging can be bulky and heavy.
Plan 5–10 minutes here before boarding; lines at the single register spike in the 06:00–08:00 and 18:00–20:00 departure banks. Tip: snap a photo of ingredient labels in Spanish at Indita Mía if you have allergies, so you can show them easily on your next trip into town.