Right after security at GND, the Duty Free Perfume Shop is your last reliable spot for fragrance before boarding. It sits airside in the small departures area at Maurice Bishop International, so you’ll see it on the way to the gates after passport control. Stock focuses on mid-range designer brands rather than ultra-luxury lines, and bottles are usually priced in USD with tags also showing Eastern Caribbean dollars.
Hours roughly track the day’s international departures, so it tends to open about 2 hours before the first outbound flight and close after the last evening bank. Selection leans on 50 ml and 100 ml bottles, with typical duty free savings of around 10–20% compared with US or UK high street prices, depending on the brand and current promos. Expect standard names from big houses rather than niche perfumers.
The shop sits within a 2–3 minute walk of the main gates, so you can duck in after you clear security and still be at your boarding door quickly. Staff usually offer paper test strips and quick spritzes, which helps when you only have a 30–40 minute wait. Stock is more focused on fragrance than cosmetics; makeup and skincare shelves are limited compared with larger Caribbean hubs.
Cashiers take major credit cards and generally accept both USD and XCD, though change sometimes comes back in local currency. If you care about price, check the printed duty free list at your home airport and compare; for some brands the savings out of Grenada are marginal. One last tip: decide on a scent before you hit the shop, so you’re not doing full-on smell tests 15 minutes before boarding a 4–5 hour flight.