Near TLV Terminal 3 departures, KSP covers last-minute tech gaps.
KSP in Terminal 3 sits airside in the main duty free zone, so you hit it after security and passport control, not landside. It runs long hours aligned with international departures, which at Ben Gurion often means late-night and early-morning flights. If you realize at 02:00 that your charger is missing, this is one of the few spots still open with electronics on the shelf.
The store focuses on practical tech: cables, power banks, basic headphones, travel adapters, keyboards, and small peripherals tied to Israeli standards and 220V power. Prices track closer to regular KSP street pricing in Israel than typical airport markups, but you still pay a bit more than in a city branch. You won’t find full-size laptops in depth here, but you can usually grab mice, SD cards, and basic accessories fast.
Inventory is tuned to short-stay fixes for Terminal 3 passengers, not long browsing sessions. Expect a decent range of USB-C and Lightning cables, wall plugs that fit EU and UK sockets, and power banks that comply with airline battery rules. Staff swap stock frequently around peak departure waves for El Al and other long-haul carriers, so if something’s missing, ask; it may be in the back, not on the front rack.
Practical tip: check your cables and adapter type before leaving your gate area; if anything’s off, KSP in Terminal 3 is the quickest electronics stop before you board.