Colombo Pettah market and local shopping — what's actually worth buying and how do I avoid getting ripped off?
I want to spend a morning in Pettah doing real local shopping, not tourist-shop gems and tea tins at airport prices. But I've read Pettah is chaotic and targeting foreigners is common.
1. What are the best streets/sections of Pettah for specific goods (textiles, spices, electronics, fabric)?
2. How much should I expect to pay for things like sarongs, batik fabric, cinnamon, and dried spices vs the tourist price?
3. Is haggling expected everywhere or only in certain shops?
4. Is it safe for a solo foreigner to wander around Pettah, especially with a camera?
5. Are there any specific shops or market buildings I should prioritise?
6. What's the best time to arrive — is it open on Sundays?
I'd rather spend money in local markets than hotel gift shops.
2 Answers
Pettah is the real commercial heart of Colombo and it is worth the visit — but going in with a map of what's where will save you time.
The layout by product:
- Main Street & Messenger Street: Electronics, mobile phones, watches — don't buy electronics here expecting warranties, but for cables, adapters, and accessories it's cheap
- Second Cross Street / Third Cross Street: Fabric, textiles, batik, sarongs, cottons — the best area for fabric shopping
- Pettah Market (covered): Dried spices, coconut products, dried fish, Maldive fish — incredible variety and proper local prices
- Manning Market: Fruit and vegetables — wholesale scale, best visited early morning
- Sea Street (Pettah gold district): Gold jewellery in the Tamil Hindu quarter near the Kathiresan Kovil — not tourist-priced but know what you're buying
Local prices for key items:
- Sarong: LKR 400–700 (tourist shops: LKR 1,500+)
- 50g of good cinnamon: LKR 150–250
- Batik fabric (per metre): LKR 500–800
- Maldive fish (250g): LKR 200–400
Haggling: Expected in fabric shops and street stalls, fixed price in established shops (look for price tags). Start at 60–70% of the first quote.
Safety: Pettah is busy and chaotic but not unsafe for foreigners during the day. Keep your phone in your pocket in the very crowded areas. It's open every day except Poya (full moon) days.
Best time: 9 AM–12 PM. Avoid Friday afternoons and Saturdays (most crowded).
The spice section of Pettah was one of my favourite hours in Colombo — vendors have bags of cinnamon (actual Ceylon cinnamon, not cassia), cardamom, cloves, black pepper, turmeric, and curry leaf powder at prices that are a fraction of anything you'd find in a tourist shop. I bought a kilo of cinnamon sticks for less than USD 3. Just make sure you can transport it home — check your airline's customs rules for spice quantities.
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