Opposite several T1 fashion units, Mandarina Duck focuses on bags and travel gear more than clothing. You’ll see it on the main airside walk after security in Terminal 1, before most of the food options. Stock skews toward carry-ons, soft luggage, and daypacks, with a smaller line of wallets and accessories. Labels are mostly Mandarina Duck’s own, so don’t expect luxury multi-brand variety.
Prices sit in mid-range territory for an airport fashion shop: cabin bags typically run above USD 150, small crossbody bags around the USD 70–120 mark, and leather pieces higher. This isn’t a duty-free bargain stop; think city-mall pricing moved airside. Cards are widely accepted and prices post in kyat with rough USD equivalents on some tags.
The draw here is last-minute luggage fixes for T1 departures. If your zipper dies or a wheel snaps before a Yangon–Bangkok hop, you can usually walk out with a new cabin-size spinner that fits standard airline rules. Straps, pouches, and document holders help tidy up hand baggage ahead of regional flights out of Terminal 1.
Service tends to be quick, since the footprint is small and staffing is usually at least two people during main departure banks in T1. Fitting space is limited, so treat it as grab-and-go accessories rather than a full fashion browse. One tip: check cabin-size labels against your specific airline’s limits before paying; not every “carry-on” here works for stricter regional carriers.