Sandwiches in Terminal T without sitting down for table service
Piqniq sits airside in Oslo Airport’s Terminal T, run as a quick deli and sandwich counter at roughly $$ pricing compared to the rest of Gardermoen. Expect made-to-go sandwiches, simple deli items, and coffee rather than a full hot kitchen or bar setup. It works for grabbing something substantial between SAS or Norwegian departures when you do not want another generic convenience-store wrap.
This is a walk-up operation, not a long-meal spot, and that matters when your gate shows boarding in 25 minutes. You order at the counter, grab packaged or pre‑assembled items, pay, and head back toward the T gates. Prices sit in the mid range for OSL: more than a 7‑Eleven in Oslo city, less than the full‑service restaurants in the departures hall. Figure roughly mid‑double‑digit NOK per sandwich with airport markup.
Since there is almost no third‑party detail on Piqniq, treat it as a standard airport deli in Terminal T rather than a destination. The menu leans on cold sandwiches, simple salads, and bakery‑style snacks that hold up in a backpack for a two‑ to three‑hour flight. Coffee and soft drinks round things out, so you can grab both food and drink in one stop before walking to your gate cluster.
No specific crowd complaints or hero dishes surface in frequent‑flyer forums, so expectations should be modest. Think of it as a way to get a sandwich at OSL T when you have 10–15 minutes free, not as a place where you plan your layover around a particular dish. If lines at nearby spots in Terminal T snake out into the corridor, Piqniq can act as a backup option that still keeps you within a short walk of most Schengen gates.
Tip: check prices on the cold sandwiches first; if the numbers look high even by Oslo standards, grab one of the simpler deli options so you are not burning half your food budget before boarding at T.