Souvenir Guide · Where to Buy

Airport vs City —
Where to Buy Each Kind of Souvenir (and Where You’re Being Lazy)

The Airport’s Real Strengths · The City’s Unbeatables · The Departure-Day Timeline


The Honest Matrix

“I’ll just get it at the airport” is either a fine plan or a small tragedy, depending entirely on the category. Here’s the matrix, learned the hard way so you don’t have to.


✈️ What Airports Do Well

Boxed omiyage sweets — prices are fixed nationally, so Tokyo Banana costs the same at Haneda as at the station; buying your last-day nama sweets airside is correct strategy. Kit-Kat gift boxes — airport selection is genuinely strong. New Chitose specifically — Hokkaido’s airport out-stocks its own downtown (see the Hokkaido guide). Duty-free liquor and cosmetics — real savings on standard-brand whisky and beauty counters after security.

🏙️ What Only the City Has

Everything with soul: crafts, knives (Kappabashi/Sakai), pottery, stationery flagships, vintage fashion, drugstore depth (airport branches carry 10% of the range at 110% of the price), supermarket pantry hauls, and regional snacks from other regions — the airport only stocks its own region’s royalty. Rule: anything you’d describe with a brand and a neighborhood, buy in the neighborhood.


The Departure-Day Timeline

T-minus 3 days: crafts, stationery, clothing, drugstore and Donki bulk (tax-free sealed bags — don’t open). T-minus 1 day: supermarket pantry, chocolate in cool weather. Departure morning: station sweets hall for nama boxes (the Gransta method). Airside: duty-free alcohol, one last Kit-Kat sweep, the Royce fridge at the gate if Hokkaido was skipped. This ordering respects the two real constraints — expiry dates and luggage weight — and leaves nothing important to airport luck.

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