Cabin class and same-day premium tickets
International business and first class tickets on full-service airlines typically include lounge access on the day of departure. Some airlines extend access on domestic business (Delta First does not always include Sky Club — check fare rules). Premium economy rarely includes lounges unless you hold status.
International business and first class tickets on full-service airlines typically include lounge access on the day of departure. Some airlines extend access on domestic business (Delta First does not always include Sky Club — check fare rules). Premium economy rarely includes lounges unless you hold status.
Same-day lounge access usually requires departing on that airline or an alliance partner. Showing a boarding pass for economy on a partner may not work at an airline-operated lounge — verify alliance rules before assuming entry.
Elite status and co-brand credit cards
Airline elite status at mid-tier and above often includes lounge access when flying that carrier. Star Alliance Gold, Oneworld Sapphire, and SkyTeam Elite unlock partner lounges on international itineraries. US domestic lounge rules vary — United Club requires a Club membership or premium cabin on many fares even for elites.
Airline elite status at mid-tier and above often includes lounge access when flying that carrier. Star Alliance Gold, Oneworld Sapphire, and SkyTeam Elite unlock partner lounges on international itineraries. US domestic lounge rules vary — United Club requires a Club membership or premium cabin on many fares even for elites.
Airline co-brand credit cards sometimes include lounge passes or discounted membership — the Delta Reserve, United Club Infinite, and Citi AAdvantage Executive cards bundle lounge access tied to that airline. These beat Priority Pass at your home hub if you fly one carrier exclusively.
Credit card lounge networks
Premium travel cards bundle Priority Pass Select (1,300+ mostly independent lounges), issuer-operated lounges (Centurion, Chase Sapphire, Capital One), or both. The Amex Platinum remains the benchmark for breadth — Centurion plus Priority Pass. Match the card to your home airport's lounge landscape before paying a high annual fee.
Premium travel cards bundle Priority Pass Select (1,300+ mostly independent lounges), issuer-operated lounges (Centurion, Chase Sapphire, Capital One), or both. The Amex Platinum remains the benchmark for breadth — Centurion plus Priority Pass. Match the card to your home airport's lounge landscape before paying a high annual fee.
Guest policies differ sharply. Some cards allow two free guests; others charge $27–$35 per guest per visit. Authorized users may or may not get their own lounge membership — read the benefits guide for your specific product.
Day passes, memberships, and independent lounges
Most airline lounges sell day passes for $50–$75 when capacity allows — purchase at the front desk or through the airline app. Priority Pass sells standalone memberships if you lack a qualifying card, though credit card bundling is usually cheaper overall.
Most airline lounges sell day passes for $50–$75 when capacity allows — purchase at the front desk or through the airline app. Priority Pass sells standalone memberships if you lack a qualifying card, though credit card bundling is usually cheaper overall.
Independent lounges (No1 Lounge in the UK, Plaza Premium globally) accept Priority Pass, paid walk-in, or airline invitations. At Heathrow, see /guides/heathrow-lounge-guide-2026 for a terminal-by-terminal breakdown; at JFK, see /guides/jfk-airport-lounge-guide-2026.
UK packaged bank accounts (DragonPass and lounge passes)
UK packaged current accounts from Barclays, NatWest, and other high-street banks sometimes bundle airport lounge access via DragonPass or a fixed annual pass allocation — alongside travel insurance and breakdown cover. These access independent airport lounges, not BA Galleries or Virgin Clubhouse.
UK packaged current accounts from Barclays, NatWest, and other high-street banks sometimes bundle airport lounge access via DragonPass or a fixed annual pass allocation — alongside travel insurance and breakdown cover. These access independent airport lounges, not BA Galleries or Virgin Clubhouse.
Monthly fees of £10–£36 only make sense when you use multiple bundled products, not lounge access alone. Compare against the Amex Preferred Rewards Gold (four Lounge Club visits per year) if you already collect Avios — see /guides/uk-packaged-bank-accounts-lounge-access-2026 for a full packaged-account vs travel-card breakdown.