Gate-side snack run in T1? This is your 7‑Eleven.
This Seven‑Eleven sits airside in Terminal 1 at Chubu Centrair (NGO), so you can grab last‑minute items after security instead of backtracking to landside shops. It runs long hours typical for Japanese airport konbini, covering early morning departures and late ANA/JAL arrivals. Think of it as your backup plan when restaurant queues spill into the hallway before an 08:00 flight.
Pricing tracks closely to downtown Nagoya 7‑Eleven stores, so bottled tea, onigiri, and sandwiches usually sit around the ¥120–¥400 range instead of inflated “airport pricing.” You’ll find standard Japanese convenience store hits: tuna‑mayo and salmon onigiri, katsu and egg sandwiches, instant noodles, bento boxes, plus an entire wall of snacks from Pocky to Calbee chips.
Coffee and drinks matter here if you skipped the café near security. The self‑serve machine turns out decent hot coffee for around ¥100–¥150, cheaper than the chains near the train station downstairs. Refrigerated cases stock canned chu‑hai, beer, and soft drinks in every size from 250 ml up to 2‑liter bottles, useful if you’re heading landside to nearby hotels.
It also doubles as a travel supply stop. Shelves carry 100 ml‑friendly toiletries, face masks, basic medicine in Japanese packaging, phone cables, and umbrellas, all priced under ¥1,000 in most cases. You can usually grab tax‑free style souvenir snacks in multipacks, though selection shrinks after 20:00 as same‑day travelers clean them out.
Quick tip: hit Seven‑Eleven before the top‑of‑the‑hour departure banks; by 30 minutes before a 19:00 wave of flights, onigiri and bentos thin out and you’re left picking from instant noodles and candy.