10 minutes from most T1 Schengen gates, Hub Convenience fills the basics fast.
Hub Convenience sits airside in Terminal 1, so you hit it after security and before the Schengen gates used by airlines like easyJet and Transavia. It functions as the classic grab-and-go stop: drinks, snacks, last-minute travel items, and a small fridge of sandwiches. Expect standard airport pricing, with bottled water in the €2–3 range and soft drinks closer to €3–4.
The food skew runs from packaged sandwiches and wraps to chocolate bars and chips, useful if you skipped the food court near the Terminal 1 check-in area. Coffee from the self-service machines usually lands in the €2–3 bracket, cheaper than sit-down cafés in the same terminal. If you have under 20 minutes before boarding at a nearby gate, this is a safer bet than queueing at a bar or restaurant.
Non-food stock covers travel chargers, basic toiletries, and a few stationery items, handy if you forgot a USB-C cable or toothpaste at home. Expect typical European newsstand-style branding plus some Lyon snacks and French biscuits around the €4–6 mark. Alcohol is limited to the standard miniatures and a few bottled beers, fine for a hotel fridge but not for serious shopping.
Lines at Hub Convenience spike around the early-morning wave of departures from Terminal 1, especially between 06:00 and 08:00, when several easyJet flights board at once. If you want a specific drink or sandwich before a 07:00–08:00 flight, swing by right after clearing security rather than waiting for the final call.