Just past security in T1, Coach sits on the main fashion strip
This Coach boutique in Yangon International Airport’s T1 focuses on leather bags and small accessories, not luggage. You’re looking at US-style mall pricing, so think around USD 250–500 for most handbags and smaller pieces from current collections. It’s a standard airport shop setup: glass frontage, bright lighting, and shelves of logo-heavy totes, crossbody bags, and wallets aimed at quick decisions before boarding.
The store sits airside in Terminal 1, after security, so you don’t need extra time for checks to pop in before a regional flight. Hours loosely track international departure banks, usually opening early morning and staying open into late evening when long‑haul flights cluster. If your gate is deeper in T1, expect a 3–7 minute walk back depending on how fast you move and how distracted you get by neighboring fashion brands.
Inventory at this Coach leans toward core styles rather than the latest runway drops, with plenty of logo canvas and a smaller rack of leather crossbodies. Wallets, card holders, and key fobs sit under USD 200 and make quick gifts. Bigger men’s messenger bags and backpacks sit closer to the USD 400–600 range. Don’t expect heavy discounting; promo pricing is rare, and you’re mainly paying for last‑minute access in RGN.
Card payments in both MMK and major foreign currencies run smoothly; plan on chip‑and‑PIN for most non‑Myanmar cards. Staff are fine with quick in‑and‑out browsing, but they do keep an eye on limited‑edition and higher‑ticket items in the glass cases. If you’re tight on time, walk the front display in under 3 minutes, snap a photo of any style number you like, and compare online prices at the gate before committing on the return leg.