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Priority Pass adds two new Heathrow ‘lounges’ you can’t access via Amex – is this sustainable?

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Priority Pass has added two new options at Heathrow Airport. 

In Terminal 5, ‘The Globe’ pub and restaurant has joined the programme. You will find it by South Security, landside.

In Terminal 3, ‘Oceanic’ pub and restaurant has joined the programme. You will find it next to Pret, landside.

Big Smoke

Priority Pass members can visit either ‘The Globe’ or ‘Oceanic’ and get a £15 credit towards their range of craft beers, gins and ‘classic pub food’.

Unfortunately anyone who gets their Priority Pass via American Express cannot use this benefit. I’d say that 90% of HfP readers who have a Priority Pass fall into this category.

You CAN access them via LoungeKey, if you are a HSBC Premier or Santander World Elite credit card holder or similar.

You have the same problem with ‘The Big Smoke’ pub and restaurant in Terminal 2, as well as ‘The Big Smoke’ at London Luton Airport, which joined the programme a couple of weeks ago. All of these pubs are under the same ownership.

There is a grand total of ONE restaurant experience GLOBALLY that Amex-issued Priority Pass customers can use and that is ‘The Grain Store’ at London Gatwick’s South Terminal. Given that this is the British Airways terminal, it is at least convenient for most HfP readers.

This is starting to look bad for American Express in the UK

The addition of ‘Oceanic’ and ‘The Globe’ means that holders of American Express-issued Priority Pass cards cannot access a large proportion of the Priority Pass inventory at Heathrow.

Importantly, the Priority Pass website does not make it clear that holders of Amex-issued Priority Pass cards will be charged £20 if they use their £15 discount at any of these outlets.

The only way you can find out that they are blocked to American Express cardholders is via the Priority Pass app. If you have this on your phone, it will filter out lounges that your card does not allow you to visit, and these two new Heathrow options are not shown.

Why does this happen? My best guess is that Priority Pass wants to charge American Express a higher fee for restaurant visits, as it pays out more than it pays a lounge operator, and that the two parties could not reach an agreement.

This really isn’t sustainable for American Express. It cannot double the number of Priority Pass visits provided with Preferred Rewards Gold (you will receive four per year from October 2022, instead of the current two) whilst the percentage of the UK Priority Pass estate you can access continues to fall.

It doesn’t take a genius to realise that American Express will soon be on the receiving end of a huge number of complaints from Priority Pass holders, either because they were charged £20 for visiting ‘The Globe’ or ‘Oceanic’ or because they have realised they are excluded.

This is something that American Express needs to look at given the existing frustration over being unable to access UK lounges with Priority Pass due to overcrowding. The fee differential cannot be more than £1-£2 per visit, given that no other bank or credit card provider has brought in a similar restriction. It wouldn’t surprise me if Priority Pass is deliberately building up its pub and restaurant portfolio at Heathrow to force American Express into changing its policy.

If you get a free Priority Pass via any other financial product you hold, or indeed pay for one directly, you can visit ‘The Globe’ in Terminal 5 or ‘Oceanic’ in Terminal 3 and get £15 of products on the house.

Both sites are open from 6.30am, seven days per week. ‘Oceanic’ closes at 9.30pm whilst ‘The Globe’ closes at 9pm. Remember that both are landside so you need to factor in time to clear security after your visit.

PS. The name ‘Oceanic’ for the Terminal 3 pub is a subtle reference to ‘The Oceanic Terminal’, which was the original name of Terminal 3 when it opened in 1961.


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 (165)

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

  • Oz_Traveller says:

    Just flew out of Heathrow Terminal 5 and tried to get into both available lounges only to be told they are fully booked?!?!? This is 3rd time in a row travelling through Heathrow and have not been able to use the PP. Complete waste of time and cannot be seen as a benefit from the AMEX Platinum. Disappointing!

    • Grimz says:

      Yes this has been an issue all year and you can’t pre book either. Gold card is getting cancelled!!

      • Grimz says:

        Sorry Platinum is getting binned!!

      • Lady London says:

        Not just this year. Happening regularly in years before Covid, a solid problem for a number of years now at major UK airports

    • Matt says:

      Same here. Various attempts this year at Heathrow T5 (both Plaza and Aspire either via Platinum or PP), on 4 out of 5 occasions being turned away. Similar experience recently at JFK T7 with the Alaska Airways lounge… Perhaps Collinson should also consider re-branding Priority Pass as it does not give Priority to any of its holders…

  • meta says:

    They are definitely listed on the website when logged in with my PP details from Amex Plat.

    It might be that the app has not been updated yet!

    • Sandgrounder says:

      Always use the amex app, includes non-pp lounges you can use at the same time, no point bothering with pp app other than for the digital card.

      • meta says:

        It’s powered by Loungebuddy which I found in itself is very outdated despite being owned by Amex.

        • Jonathan says:

          Just look at how out of date their shop small map I’d the next time it comes round !

  • Junior says:

    Upper Deck lounge at GLA on Friday had a sign up saying no PP or any cards accepted. Definitely feels like it’s becoming more commonplace.

    • Alan S says:

      They took us with PP a couple of weeks ago, so I suspect that’s possibly a time/capacity issue rather than a ‘blanket ban’.

      Problem with Glasgow is that lounge is the only option at present. Doubt the Lomond Lounge will return anytime soon.

    • JosephH says:

      At Upper Deck, I went in anyway and politely asked if they perhaps they had a space. The lady on the front desk had no idea the sign was out, after checking she said they do sometimes have to turn people away and they tend to just leave the sign there regardless.

      Had a similar experience at a different airport (possibly Oslo?) where they had a similar sign up, and again a polite enquiry at the desk revealed that they expected to be fully booked later, but as we our flight was due to depart sooner than that we could come in anyway. (It may or may not have helped that I suspect we didn’t look like the type wanting to get our money’s worth tanking up on booze…)

  • Scottdogg says:

    I was denied entry to Bristol lounge last week which is annoying when you have to go and buy over priced sandwiches and drinks .
    Its hardy a ‘priority pass’ and more like a, ‘if its quiet, then we might let you in , maybe’ pass .

  • Kevin says:

    This is very disappointing for Amex customers. Thankfully I have Loungekey access via HSBC World Elite MC. As they are landslide, I wonder if it would work if I have a main meal and pint in Oceanic T3 costing £15 then trot over to The Globe in T5 for coffee and desert costing another £15? Perhaps there is such a thing as a free lunch! Do I even need to take a flight anywhere!

  • Scottydogg says:

    I phoned Priority pass to complain of being denied entry with PP at Bristol airport , she took all the details of lounge and date etc
    Hopefully if enough people complain about who are not letting PP members in . Then something might be done , my PP could even threaten to delist them ?
    It definitely is becoming a bit of a joke this ‘priority pass’

    • Rob says:

      As I said earlier though, who wins if Bristol is delisted? Those who could have got in at off-peak times will lose out. Those who could never get in at peak times now won’t get in at all.

      What do you expect Aspire to do? Stop selling passes in advance to the public at £25 so they can get a tenner or so (paid probably 3-6 months down the line) off PP? Stop selling spaces which are rarely taken up, but they are paid anyway, to the airlines?

      • scottydogg says:

        If they were to get delisted then at least you know not to bother.
        If they think they are better off just selling cash passes and to airlines , let them just see if they can survive on that . Dont see why they can pick and choose who they think is more profittable on the day. I dont think you should be on the PP listings if you are turning PP holders away 90% of the time over more proffitable options .
        The card is becoming pointless

        • Rob says:

          They don’t pick and choose who is more profitable on the day. The spots have gone to advance bookers and the airlines. How many people pay £25 on the door for the Bristol lounge?

    • ianM says:

      bristol lounge not worth using imho very dated and food was shocking last time I was in in June. Also closed at 3.30pm when the airport was heaving

  • intransitmostlikely says:

    The SG Amex platinum has already been devalued to the point where I, as a customer of more than 20 years, will most likely not renew in a couple of months. The UK card is likely on the same path.

  • Pockets says:

    I’m not sure Amex Platinum members really need to worry about this. I’ve had PrPass for as long as I’ve had Chase Saph Res from years ago, and the recent restaurant credit/discount additions are mostly more like a parting gift instead of an actual benefit. I prefer quiet and loungey, so just getting a discount for a “free” drink or appetizer at a loud pub is not why I use PrPass. I have even purchased PlazPremium for Heathrow before, because it is preferable to sitting at a loud restaurant (PrPass discount or regular). The last time I used the PrPass discount on food/beverage, it was at the PGA Lounge in MSP airport in February. While it was not impressive, I will say the lounge did have a quiet area; where as most of these discounts do not and you will simply be seated in airport restaurants. So, if you have AmexPlat, I really wouldn’t worry about this “benefit” not being offered, you get so many other benefits already.

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