Gate maps show Snack Bar Horizon, reviews don’t
Snack Bar Horizon shows up on several Lomé–Tokoin (LFW) lists, but there are zero detailed traveller reviews, photos, or menus tied to it. Treat it as a basic airport snack counter in Terminal T1 rather than a destination restaurant. Expect simple drinks and packaged items more than full plated meals, and have a backup plan inside the same terminal in case it’s closed or limited.
Lomé–Tokoin Airport runs all passenger traffic through T1, so if Snack Bar Horizon is operating, it sits somewhere in that single-terminal footprint. Most food options at LFW skew small and utilitarian, so plan for quick bites you can finish in under 15–20 minutes rather than a drawn‑out sit‑down meal. If you’re on a tight connection under 60 minutes, assume you’re grabbing something to go and eating at the gate instead.
Pricing data for Snack Bar Horizon doesn’t surface in any currency, but other LFW snack spots inside T1 typically charge the equivalent of €2–3 for soft drinks and €4–7 for simple snacks or sandwiches. Bring a payment card that works internationally and a small amount of cash in West African CFA francs, as some airport vendors in Lomé still lean on cash when card terminals misbehave.
No menu standouts, local dishes, or problem items are mentioned by name anywhere for Snack Bar Horizon, which suggests a short list of basics: bottled water, sodas, maybe beer, packets of chips, and possibly a pre‑made sandwich or pastry. With that in mind, eat something more substantial in Lomé city before heading to the airport, especially for overnight flights leaving after 20:00, when smaller counters in T1 may not keep consistent hours.
Practical tip: land with a full water bottle (refilled after security) and a snack from town, then treat Snack Bar Horizon in T1 as a backup option rather than your only plan for food at Lomé–Tokoin.