Yes, St. Pete–Clearwater International Airport has food and drink spots inside the terminal, though the lineup is small and hours track flight activity.
PIE is easy to read. That helps when you’re hungry. You won’t trek across a giant terminal to find a sandwich, and you won’t face a giant food court either. The airport has a small set of places to eat, split between the public side and the gate areas.
That setup shapes the whole experience. If you want a full meal before security, PIE gives you one clear sit-down choice. If you want coffee, a sandwich, a beer, or a quick snack after screening, you have that too. The airport says post-security concessions open 1 hour and 30 minutes before scheduled departures, so timing matters.
Are There Restaurants At PIE Airport? What You’ll See Inside
The current answer is yes. The airport’s shopping and dining page lists food and drink options in Gates 2-6, Gates 7-11, and the pre-security area. So you can eat whether you’re waiting for a flight, meeting someone on the public side, or just grabbing coffee before screening.
Each part of the terminal has its own role. The public side is where you’ll find the fuller meal. Past security, the food shifts toward travel-friendly orders: coffee, breakfast sandwiches, flatbreads, wings, cocktails, beer, grab-and-go snacks, and packaged items.
Pre-security dining
The standout on the public side is The District Pub, a full-service restaurant and bar on the second floor before security. The airport says it is open most days from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., with some day-to-day changes. That makes it the best pick if you want a calmer meal before the checkpoint or if you’re seeing off a traveler and want to sit down together.
There is also a Hudson location between Ticketing A and B with Dunkin’ service plus snacks and travel basics. That spot is handy when you want coffee and something quick without stopping for a full meal.
Post-security dining
Once you clear screening, PIE still gives you real food choices. Gates 2-6 have Dunkin’ for coffee, donuts, breakfast sandwiches, and packaged snacks. The same gate area also has 3 Daughters Brewing, which serves breakfast sandwiches in the morning plus sandwiches, wings, beer, wine, and liquor later in the day.
Gates 7-11 lean a little more local in feel. Mazzaro Italian Market serves hot and cold sandwiches, salads, flatbreads, bagels, coffee, wine, beer, and cocktails. Liquid Provisions adds another bar-and-sandwich stop, while Sand & Sky Shoppe handles snacks and drinks along with souvenirs. So yes, there are restaurants at PIE Airport, but the smarter way to frame it is this: there are enough places to keep you fed, not so many that you can stroll in with no plan.
- If you want a full sit-down meal before security, head to The District Pub.
- If you want a coffee run on either side of screening, Dunkin’ handles that.
- If you want a more local stop after security, Mazzaro Italian Market and 3 Daughters Brewing are the names to notice.
- If you want a drink near Gates 7-11, Liquid Provisions gives you another bar option.
How The Food Options Break Down By Terminal Area
PIE has one terminal, though the food is split by gate zones. The airport’s terminal map helps you match your gate with the nearest place to eat before you buy something in the wrong part of the building. That matters most when boarding starts soon.
| Location | Spot | What You’ll Find |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-security | The District Pub | Full-service restaurant and bar, better for a seated meal |
| Pre-security | Hudson Dunkin’ | Coffee, donuts, snacks, travel basics |
| Gates 2-6 | Dunkin’ | Coffee, breakfast sandwiches, donuts, packaged snacks |
| Gates 2-6 | 3 Daughters Brewing | Breakfast sandwiches, wings, sandwiches, beer, wine, liquor |
| Gates 2-6 | Market 361 | Snacks, drinks, books, gifts, local souvenirs |
| Gates 7-11 | Mazzaro Italian Market | Flatbreads, sandwiches, salads, bagels, coffee, cocktails |
| Gates 7-11 | Liquid Provisions | Cocktails, mocktails, beer, wine, sandwiches |
| Gates 7-11 | Sand & Sky Shoppe | Snacks, drinks, magazines, souvenirs |
That list tells you what PIE does well. Each gate zone has a coffee stop, a snack stop, and at least one place with something more filling. The airport won’t swamp you with choice, though it does a decent job of covering the basics.
What To Expect From Meals At PIE
If you’re picturing a long lunch with lots of choice, dial that back. PIE’s food scene is more practical than sprawling. The upside is speed. The menu mix works well for travelers who want breakfast, coffee, a casual hot meal, or a drink before departure.
That gives the airport a few clear sweet spots:
- Breakfast: Dunkin’, Mazzaro, and 3 Daughters all give you an early-day option.
- Lunch or dinner: The District Pub, Mazzaro, 3 Daughters, and Liquid Provisions all fit here in different ways.
- Drinks: The District Pub, Mazzaro, 3 Daughters, and Liquid Provisions all serve alcohol.
- Fast grab-and-go: Hudson, Market 361, Sand & Sky Shoppe, and Dunkin’ are the easiest plays.
If you have kids, picky eaters, or someone who wants a full meal before the checkpoint, the public side can be the safer bet. If you’re flying solo and mostly want to stay close to your gate, eating after security is often smoother. PIE is small enough that this choice feels manageable.
One smart move is to decide before you get in line for screening. If you’re flying from Gates 7-11 and you like sandwiches or a bar stop, eating after security makes sense. If you want a slower sit-down meal, eat first and clear security after. That small choice can save you from rushing through both dinner and boarding.
When Bringing Your Own Food Makes Sense
PIE has enough food for most travelers, but there are times when packing your own snack is the better call. Early departures, dietary limits, tight budgets, and picky kids can all tilt the math. The good news is that the TSA food rules allow many solid foods through the checkpoint. Spreads, sauces, and other soft items are where people get tripped up.
If your plan is to bring food, pack with the checkpoint in mind. Solid items are usually easier. A sandwich, crackers, fruit, or a protein bar will move through screening with less drama than yogurt, dip, soup, or a container full of sauce. If you’re unsure whether something counts as a liquid or gel, keep it small or buy it after security.
Foods That Travel Best
Dry snacks, whole fruit, plain sandwiches, and protein bars are usually easier to carry, easier to screen, and easier to eat at the gate.
| If You Need | Best Move At PIE | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| A sit-down meal before a flight | Eat at The District Pub before security | You can settle in before the checkpoint clock starts |
| Coffee and breakfast after screening | Use the Dunkin’ nearest your gate area | Fast order, familiar menu, easy timing |
| A local-feeling meal | Pick Mazzaro or 3 Daughters | Both feel less generic than a standard chain stop |
| A drink before boarding | Use Liquid Provisions, 3 Daughters, Mazzaro, or The District Pub | You have bar service on both sides of security |
| The lowest-cost backup plan | Bring solid snacks from home | You avoid airport prices and keep your timing flexible |
Best Plan Before You Head To PIE
The airport’s food lineup is good enough for most trips, though it pays to treat it like a small airport and not a giant one. Show up expecting a few reliable options, not endless choice. That mindset fits PIE well.
A simple plan works best:
- Check your gate before you buy food.
- Decide whether you want a full meal before security or a faster stop after it.
- Build in time if you’re flying early, since post-security spots open around departure windows.
- Pack a snack if you need strict meal timing or limited-ingredient food.
If you do that, the airport is easy to handle. You can get coffee, breakfast, a sandwich, wings, a beer, or a sit-down meal without much fuss. PIE has restaurants and food counters, and while the list is short, it handles the basics well for a smooth travel day.
References & Sources
- St. Pete-Clearwater International Airport.“Shopping & Dining.”Current list of pre-security and post-security food, drink, and snack options at PIE.
- St. Pete-Clearwater International Airport.“Terminal Map.”Shows the terminal layout and helps match dining options to Gates 2-6 and Gates 7-11.
- Transportation Security Administration.“Food.”Explains which food items can go through airport security and where liquid-style foods can cause issues.
