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Which British Airways lounges have pre-flight dining?

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British Airways has been offering pseudo-table service at many of its lounges since covid forced it to roll out QR-code ordering, but this had long been preceded by something it calls ‘pre-flight dining’.

Available at a handful of British Airways lounges worldwide, pre-flight dining offers an upgraded lounge dining concept with table service.

BA Lounge Johannesburg Concorde dining room 2

What is British Airways pre-flight dining?

Pre-flight dining is a concept British Airways offers in several of its lounges but predominantly in the United States.

The majority of flights from the US to the UK are overnight red-eye affairs, and with the tailwind of the jet stream virtually all flights are shorter than their outbound counterparts. Even West Coast flights, such as those from San Francisco, have a flight time around 9 hours – on average, 90 minutes less than on the way out. When you consider taxi, takeoff and landing, your time between when the seatbelt signs turn off and when they come back on again is reduced to eight hours or so.

On East Coast flights the effect is even worse, with actual flight time hovering around the six-hour mark.

All that means is that for a lot of people – and particularly for business travellers – getting a good night’s sleep is more important than dining on board.

With that in mind, British Airways offers pre-flight dining. This is a restaurant-style table service at key lounges where you can eat before you step on your flight. You can go straight to sleep as soon as the seatbelt sign is off, and wake up refreshed in London the following morning.

What’s on the menu with British Airways pre-flight dining?

Last time I was in the Washington Dulles First Dining Room I had scallops (see below).

British Airways periodically changes the menu in its dining rooms, and in many cases it will also vary by location. Here is an example menu from the US lounges, provided by BA:

Starters:

  • Heirloom tomato gazpacho (choice to add crabmeat)
  • Tuna poke

Salad

  • Summer vegetable salad – heirloom tomatoes, charred asparagus, cucumber, mozzarella, balsamic vinaigrette with toasted sourdough

Main course

  • Chicken paillard, Satur Farms rocket, roasted tomatoes, shaved fennel, lemon vinaigrette
  • Prawn Masala curry, basmati rice, naan bread and coriander chutney
  • Tagliatelle pasta, choice of lamb bolognaise or vegetarian bolognaise
  • British Airways burger – angus beef short rib blend, brioche bun, lettuce, tomato, pickle, choice of cheddar, blue cheese, American cheese, bacon, sautéed mushrooms and onions

Dessert

  • Fig almond tart, vanilla gelato
  • Lemon posset, shortbread cookie, candied lemon, mint
  • Selection of ice cream and sorbets
  • Selection of cheese
British Airways lounge Washington Dulles scallops

Where does British Airways offer pre-flight dining?

There are currently seven airports where pre-flight dining is available:

Boston Logan International Airport

Concorde Dining is available for First Class passengers in the British Airways lounge in Terminal E, opposite gate E11. Pre-flight dining is open from 4pm.

Chicago O’Hare International Airport

Concorde Dining is available for First Class passengers in the British Airways lounge in Terminal 5, near gates M11 & M12.

Johannesburg OR Tambo International Airport

First Dining is available for First Class passengers in the British Airways lounge in the International Departures Terminal, on the mezzanine level.

Newark Liberty International Airport (New York)

First Dining is available for First Class passengers in the British Airways lounge in Terminal B, near gates B50-B58.

New York JFK International Airport

JFK currently has three dining rooms.

The Concorde Dining Room is for First Class passengers only, whilst First Dining is available for anyone with BA Gold or oneworld Emerald status. Both are in Terminal 7, after security.

There is a third dining room for Club passengers available to anyone flying in Club World.

San Francisco International Airport

First Dining is available for First Class passengers in the British Airways lounge in Concourse A of the International Terminal.

Washington Dulles International Airport

First Dining is available for First Class passengers in the British Airways lounge in Concourse B, after security. Dining is available from 4pm. Our review is here.

Can I use pre-flight dining if I’m a BA Executive Club Gold or Silver member?

Last year, British Airways made some sweeping changes to the access rules for its pre-flight dining facilities.

The change means that all Executive Club Silver and Gold members can use the pre-flight dining facility at North American lounges.

Historically, pre-flight dining required you to hold a ticket for Club World or First. Anyone who was flying in World Traveller or World Traveller Plus, and who was in the lounge on the back of their Executive Club status or because they had been guested in, did not qualify.

This has now changed. Anyone with access to a lounge with pre-flight dining, which includes New York JFK, Boston, Chicago and Washington, will be allowed to eat in the restaurant. Unfortunately, Johannesburg is not included – you still need to be flying in First to qualify.


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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.

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

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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.

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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.

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

Comments (57)

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

  • RobH says:

    Morning, slightly off topic, but still BA related. Has anyone tried watching their own media in Club (new seat) using the USB? Looking here:
    https://www.britishairways.com/en-gb/information/entertainment/information-and-faqs
    It says you can, but very little else – is it just a device you can conect or can you use USB stick with video files on it (and if so, what format do the files need to be it?)
    Thanks for any assistance.

    • Mikeact says:

      Should post in the BA forum.

    • Andrew J says:

      This topic is about pre-flight dining which this query does not relate to.

      • lumma says:

        It’s been a while since I saw the comments police show up.

        Alternatively you could just answer his question if you know the answer or ignore if not.

        • gordon says:

          Then there would have only been one positive reply to the question and not two negative ones to read unnecessarily….

          • Alex Sm says:

            It all started with an OT comment… it’s not even a Bits article after all. If people do not want to follow the etiquette and do not respect the efforts of the HfP team which created the forum and appropriate channels for comms, why should people answer a random question?

          • Brian78 says:

            Yep. It’s obvs not been posted in the right place but why get so hot and bothered about it?!

          • mvcvz says:

            Three. Now four.

        • Alex Sm says:

          Some etiquette is obvious and it’s good when the readers community looks after that

          • RobH says:

            OK, lets forget it then, so in the 5 or so years I’ve been reading the site I have never really noticed a hostile response to a question posted to an article. (In fact over the years I’ve seen lots of questions posted to articles). I don’t want to cause any issues, I just had a question to ask that I thought some kind sole may be able to answer.

            Hopefully this site does not go the same way as the Kodi site – now there is a really agressive and hostile environment! – and I’d hate to see this site deteriorate into that!

          • gordon says:

            Well that’s a further 2 comments that would not have been needed if the question was courteously answered or ignored, And the guy still none the wiser….

          • Hak says:

            Could simply ignore it or answer it! Simple. Hilarious.

          • Ken says:

            Each to their own , but weird hill to die on.

          • lumma says:

            It’s an article about flying BA, so the comments will likely be read by people who fly BA. I think it’s not even that “off topic”.

            The forums haven’t really worked imo, I occasionally drop in and out of them but having read the site for years, off topic comments in the bits articles or the daily chat article worked far better.

    • Richie says:

      Take a USB stick with you, that’s also USB C. Take plug adaptors with you. Take leads with you. Avoid MacOS only video files.

    • Mike Hunt says:

      Rob H – perhaps post your question somewhere relevant in the forum section for a knowledgeable reader to helpfully answer rather than spamming an article relating to pre flight meals

      • gordon says:

        @Mike Hunt, I think enough has been said on this matter. Let’s move on, It’s getting a tad boring now…..

  • MisterE says:

    BA F passengers also have access to pretty good Qantas lounges & pre flight dining in Sydney and Los Angeles (possibly others)

  • Safety Card says:

    This week I flew back in BA First from DFW can could use the AA Flagship First Dining Room which was fantastic. Amazing service, excellent food, made the 5 hour delay bearable!

  • planeconcorde says:

    QR code pseudo-table service wasn’t available for even hot food last night in the LHR T5A BA galleries south lounge. It was back to self serve for everything.

  • John says:

    Why would they exclude Jo’burg? Do non-status companions of silver and golds have access to F preflight dining if on the same CW booking?

  • Chris says:

    I’m willing to be corrected, but pretty sure that the Chicago info is wrong (at least based on my most recent visit a few weeks ago!). The F lounge (the one between M11 and M12) has permanently closed. There is now just a single lounge. It does offer pre-flight dining of sorts, but the same for all passengers. And it’s a fairly miserable, windowless space that feels like something straight out of 1998!

  • kt1974 says:

    Hi, out of interest:
    What about Club passengers (non-status) – surely pre-flight dining is more important for them, especially with Goodnight service flights (or have they gone too?)
    And what about guests of status passengers?

  • Andrew J says:

    You seem to have missed out the Concorde Room at LHR T5 which offers pre-flight dining.

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

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