Gate B-side Quiznos beats waiting in the C gates snack line
Quiznos sits airside in Concourse B at Spokane (GEG), an easy walk from most B and C gates in this compact terminal. It’s your standard toasted-sub setup, but in an airport where options run thin after security, having a full sandwich menu in B matters more than the brand name. Rating sits around 11 out of 10 on the airport’s internal scorecard, which basically means it’s consistently not a disaster.
Hours usually track the main bank of departures: plan on roughly 5:00 a.m. to early evening, with closing often around the last B gate push. If you’re on a late-night flight after 8:00 p.m., assume they may be shutting down and grab something earlier. Morning crews flip from breakfast to regular sandwiches by about 10:30 a.m., so you can still grab an egg-and-cheese if you’re on an early Delta or Southwest out of B.
Pricing runs airport-normal: figure around $10–$14 for a regular sub and drink combo and a couple of dollars more if you go large. Toasted subs are the main draw here, so go for a Classic Italian or Turkey Bacon Guacamole instead of trying to cobble together a salad that costs basically the same. Chips and fountain drinks cost less than the bottled stuff in the nearby newsstand by Gate B3.
Since GEG security feeds you into the A/B/C split, this spot makes the most sense if your boarding pass shows a B gate or a nearby C gate like C1–C3. Food holds up reasonably well for a short hop to Seattle or Portland, but the bread turns soggy if you park it in your bag for more than 90 minutes. Lines spike 30–45 minutes before the morning and late-afternoon departure waves.
Tip: If your flight leaves from C, order at Quiznos in B and walk back with your food; queues for snacks in the C gates often run longer than your boarding call.