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Review: BA’s (temporary) Speedbird Lounge at London Gatwick Airport’s South Terminal

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This is my review of the British Airways temporary Speedbird Lounge in Gatwick Airport’s South terminal.

As I wrote in my companion article to this one, British Airways has not been allowed to open its new Gatwick South lounge complex on safety grounds.  It isn’t clear if this problem will take days or weeks to resolve.

In the meantime, these are your options:

First and Gold passengers on all flights and premium ticketed passengers on the Bermuda, New York and Jersey services are using the Gatwick South No 1 Clubrooms which I reviewed here and discussed again in my article yesterday.

All other eligible passengers are using the old Virgin Atlantic lounge in Gatwick South which has been renamed Speedbird Lounge but otherwise is as Virgin left it last night!

There is also the very impressive new No 1 Lounge which Anika reviewed here and which, if you have a Priority Pass, may be a better bet

After I left the Clubrooms, I made the 30 second walk to the Speedbird Lounge.

You can tell from the elaborate entrance signage that BA has known for a while that the main lounges were not going to open on time.  It takes a few days to arrange this sort of thing:

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

Inside, frankly, it was fine – which is what you would expect, given that BA moved in 8 hours after Virgin Atlantic had departed!  All Virgin signage has gone although these clocks are a giveaway:

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

The Speedbird Lounge is a decent sized space.  It was very busy when I arrived but quietened down.  There are also lots of hidden corners where you should be able to find a quiet spot:

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

and

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

and

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

Food, when I was there in the morning, was limited.  The ‘envelopes’ you see in the picture below contain three different types of bacon sandwich – plain, with ketchup and with brown sauce.  That’s your lot!   At least you can get a takeaway for the plane in order to avoid the ‘buy on board’ service.

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

There was also cereal, fruit, croissants etc along with numerous coffee machines and juice.

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

If you’ve got children, there is a decent sized kids room albeit with nothing in it except seating.  I’m not sure if it had more in it in the Virgin days:

Review British Airways Speedbird Lounge Gatwick South

There is also a bar.  I didn’t take any photos but it is in the video below.  There is no self serve alcohol available.

All in all, this is a perfectly satisfactory – albeit not luxurious – lounge that will do the job until the official BA facilities open.  There is certainly no need to arrive at Gatwick excessively early just to visit, however.  I found it substantially poorer than the No 1 Lounge in Gatwick North which BA used as a temporary lounge during 2016, especially in terms of the food offering.

If you have a BA Gold card then you need to decide between here and the Clubrooms.  The food, drink and ambiance is vastly superior in Clubrooms, but the space is small and dark.  It is also designed for groups, so solo travellers will be expected to share a table.

To give you a better impression of what you can expect, here is a short YouTube video of the British Airways (temporary) Speedbird Lounge at Gatwick South.  You can subscribe to our YouTube channel via this page – this is the same link to visit if the video does not automatically appear below.


Getting airport lounge access for free from a credit card

How to get FREE airport lounge access via UK credit cards (April 2024)

Here are the four options to get FREE airport lounge access via a UK credit card.

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with two free Priority Pass cards, one for you and one for a supplementary cardholder. Each card admits two so a family of four gets in free. You get access to all 1,300 lounges in the Priority Pass network – search it here.

You also get access to Eurostar, Lufthansa and Delta Air Lines lounges.  Our American Express Platinum review is here. You can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

If you have a small business, consider American Express Business Platinum instead.

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for the first year. It comes with a Priority Pass card loaded with four free visits to any Priority Pass lounge – see the list here.

Additional lounge visits are charged at £24.  You get four more free visits for every year you keep the card.  

There is no annual fee for Amex Gold in Year 1 and you get a 20,000 points sign-up bonus.  Full details are in our American Express Preferred Rewards Gold review here.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard gets you get a free Priority Pass card, allowing you access to the Priority Pass network.  Guests are charged at £24 although it may be cheaper to pay £60 for a supplementary credit card for your partner.

The card has a fee of £195 and there are strict financial requirements to become a HSBC Premier customer.  Full details are in my HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard review.

HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard

A huge bonus, but only available to HSBC Premier clients Read our full review

PS. You can find all of HfP’s UK airport lounge reviews – and we’ve been to most of them – indexed here.

Comments (54)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Emma says:

    Can someone who’s been to the Speedbird lounge in the afternoon advise what food they have to offer?

  • Carl says:

    OT – 13,400 Avios bonus for subscribing to the Economist is back. This time it’s through Avios.com.

  • Jimmy says:

    Still chaotic here at South Terminal this afternoon. Clubrooms full so I was taken to the no1 lounge instead, via a rather strange back-door route. No 1 lounge busy and noisy, including in the supposedly quiet library where they put me. Apparently the BA first lounge will be open at the end of next week.

  • Carl says:

    OT – Has anyone ever merged two Avios.com accounts under the same name. I accidentally have two different accounts and one is linked to my Iberia account and the other to my BA Executive Club account.

    • Genghis says:

      “Linked to your Iberia account” – in what way linked? You mean the same email address? Is it not possible to transfer the points out via IB or BAEC then?
      If not, just give them a call.

    • mark2 says:

      I too accidentally acquired an additional account but have found it very useful.

    • Alan says:

      Happens all the time due to the silly Avios.com process of trying to match addresses rather than membership number. Live chat on their website can easily merge them for you.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Contact support on live chat during the day and they will link them if you want

  • David says:

    Hopefully just trivial oversight, but the signs directing people to the temporary lounges don’t appear to mention OneWorld status members, only BAEC.

  • the real harry1 says:

    the bacon sandwich offering just sounds like something you can buy in at a moment’s notice – I bet the kitchens are not properly operational for a decent hot spread

    someone @ Gatwick BA has probably done a good job of not turning a drama into a crisis

    if the real lounge opens in a few days, it will have been a perfect demonstration of quick thinking & flexibility – the signs presumably came out of storage/ destined for dump

  • The Original Nick says:

    Slightly O:T, but lounge related. I will be flying in March at the back from LHR to AMS with BA, and connecting to a QR flight to DOH in J. Can I get Oneworld lounge access at LHR as I’m flying in J with QR that same day?

    • Rrd says:

      Yes you can, the QR sector is the international long haul sector so you can get access providing the QR flight is on the same day. You just need your boarding pass/proof of onward travel.

      Note that if on 2 separate bookings BA may not check your bags to your final destination if you have checked luggage.

    • Lady London says:

      Just don’t try it with the nasty staff LAN subcontract to at AKL when you’re in Y to Oz on the early flight then in J from SYD all the way back to Europe on QR on the same day Asking LAN checkin taff for access to the lounge in AKL then daring to politely ask them if the One world rule might apply when they refused got me a 2 and a half hour hell of intensive baggage checking weighing and repacking, every rule being applied minutely such as tiny hand luggage (that was not being applied to multiplrpeople checking in next to me )while this was going on. It was clearly retaliation. I was surprised they did not find an excuse to strip-search me.

      I’ve decided to shelve some flights I had wanted to do with them even though the onboard staff were very kind. Pretty sure the ground staff who were so nasty were subcontracted from Air New Zealand.

  • rams1981 says:

    OT my wife referred me from her gold card for platinum. The card has arrived but no bonus points. Oh oh, looks like they have caught on.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      She should have got atleast 9k points, looks like 18k is for Plat to Plat only now, would drop support a message. Or are we talking about some other platinum?

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