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Review: Air France business class lounge at Terminal 2E, Paris CDG (a Virgin Points trip)

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This is my review of the Air France lounge at Terminal 2E (L gates) at Paris Charles de Gaulle.  The lounge opened in 2018 and is impressive, although busy.

I will be following it up with a review of Air France business class from Paris to Dubai. This was part of a long half-term family trip which started with a Eurostar redemption to Paris, a day of sightseeing in Paris and then the flight to Dubai itself.

The saving on taxes and charges by starting in Paris easily covered all of our other costs. We paid just £200 each, vs £470 for a one-way Avios business class flight from London to Dubai.

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

The flight was booked with Virgin Points as I described here.

The Air France lounge in Terminal 2E, L Gates

The L Gates are in a satellite building at Terminal 2E.  This is a bit of a trot from check-in and involves a transit train, although if you are connecting from a UK Air France flight you are likely to be in the same area.

There are two things you instantly notice about the Air France lounge, which still looks good following its 2018 renovation.  The first is that it is enormous – 34,000 square feet, apparently.  This is the best picture I have which shows the scale of it, but there is actually a lot of space behind me too:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

The second thing of note is that it is built on a bridge over a major road.  Cars are shooting under you all the time, although the lounge is sound and vibration proofed:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

The reception desk is manned as you enter but also has a number of automatic scanners.  We scanned our iPhone boarding passes, the scanner turns green and the staff – who presumably have a quiet eye on you – let you walk past them into the lounge.

Looking left and right, all you see is seating and food and drink stations:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

What you don’t see is the large spa area around the corner:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

When I was last here in 2019 I took a shower, and I found the shower suites impressive – large and well maintained, with towels, a razor, shaving cream, toothpaste / toothbrush and deodorant provided. Hopefully nothing has changed. 2019 picture below:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

Next to the showers is a chill out area and this group of day beds, each individually curtained off:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

There is also a Clarins spa which I didn’t check out, but it does look a very impressive facility. It is well ahead of the Elemis spas which used to be in the British Airways lounges.

Food and drink

In truth, the spa and day beds are the highlight of the lounge. As with most airport lounges at the moment, the main seating area was overcrowded and we couldn’t get three seats together until a few flights were called.

We there from around 11.30am so the lounge was drifting towards lunch. As you would expect from France, there is a good patisserie selection (when will Eurostar finally start serving decent pastries on its trains and lounges?!):

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

…. and some hot options (this is pork in mustard sauce):

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

…. and a decent salad selection:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

The food selection looks sparser than it actually was.  The serving area is very large and the dishes had been widely scattered. Pre-covid the lounge had a chef at peak times to prepare food on demand, but the area was deserted mid-morning – I’m not sure if this is still active in the evening.

You wouldn’t have gone hungry although it was clearly not gourmet level.  Duval-Leory champagne was freely available to help yourself:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

…. along with a selection of self-pour wine, although there was a separate bar if you wanted anything more complex than a shot.  This is a PR picture of the smart central bar area:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

In general, when you remember that this is purely a business class lounge, it was a decent selection. (There is an exclusive space elsewhere for the handful of First Class passengers passing through each day – remember that there are only four First Class seats on most flights.) Get rid of half of the people and it would have been great …..

For kids ….

For the kids, one end of the lounge featured a small childrens area although it had little to offer apart from this video games machine:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

There was a separate cordoned off area.  It wasn’t clear who was meant to use this, although there was a group in there:

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

There was no shortage of power points, with most of the seats being separated by small tables which contain plugs.  At least on this trip I had brought a European converter socket – last time I was here, I had smugly thrown my cables into my bag thinking that, as I was off to the Middle East, no converter was needed.

The lounge still hasn’t reinstated third party magazines – the racks were filled with literally hundreds of copies of the Air France inflight magazine and nothing else. I can only assume they are less likely to transmit covid than third party newspapers and magazines …. That said, when I here in 2019 there wasn’t anything in English anyway.

Air France business class lounge review Paris Charles de Gaulle Terminal 2E

Conclusion

The Air France lounge at Terminal 2E (L Gates) in Paris Charles de Gaulle is a modern and impressive space.  If they could just get rid of half of the people in it, it would be great ….

I have a niggling feeling that they could have done a little more to break up the l-o-n-g room although they have tried.  One of the things I like about BA’s Galleries First lounge at Heathrow is that you have a number of totally separate spaces – champagne area, relaxation area, kids room, the terrace, dining area, main lounge area – which makes it feel more welcoming.

Overall, it is a perfectly pleasant place to spend an hour. It is probably best experienced as a couple – you may well struggle to find seats for a group of more than two. It is so busy that if you were on your own I think you’d be nervous about leaving your personal items to take the lengthy stroll down to the refreshment areas.

The second article in this series – click here – will look at Air France business class on a Boeing 777-300, and explain why this is a good way to spend Virgin Points.


How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (April 2024)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Virgin Points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

You can choose from two official Virgin Atlantic credit cards (apply here, the Reward+ card has a bonus of 18,000 Virgin Points and the free card has a bonus of 3,000 Virgin Points):

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

18,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

3,000 bonus points, no fee and 1 point for every £1 you spend Read our full review

You can also earn Virgin Points from various American Express cards – and these have sign-up bonuses too.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for a year and comes with 20,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 20,000 Virgin Points.

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

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with 40,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 40,000 Virgin Points.

The Platinum Card from American Express

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

Small business owners should consider the two American Express Business cards. Points convert at 1:1 into Virgin Points.

American Express Business Platinum

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

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year Read our full review

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Virgin Points

(Want to earn more Virgin Points?  Click here to see our recent articles on Virgin Atlantic and Flying Club and click here for our home page with the latest news on earning and spending other airline and hotel points.)

Comments (32)

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

  • John T says:

    I always chuckle at your discussion of newspapers and magazines in lounges. I haven’t touched either one in about 10 years.

    • BuildBackBetter says:

      I always pick up a newspaper if available. Prefer reading a real paper than staring at a screen.

  • Catalan says:

    It doesn’t look that impressive a space to me to be honest. The food looks like slop too! Much prefer the look and feel of KLM’s Crown Lounge at Schipol.

  • dundj says:

    The cordoned section will be for Flying Blue Ultimate Platinum members. The food in that lounge never looks good, but generally tastes excellent, and the hot food in the evening is normally pretty good.

    The lounge now has a cocktail hour during which a couple of different cocktails can be made for you to drink in the central area of the lounge which is currently a better offering than the K and M gates in CDG.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Used the K lounge from Dubai to BHX via CDG it’s awful. But the food generally tasted very good.

      • dundj says:

        The oldest lounge there now for AF and it is now past its best. Understand they are starting to look at a completely new lounge in that section of the terminal over the next few years.

  • Dev says:

    I’m a big fan of Air France but my god CDG is a maze to navigate. I cannot remember which pier I was going through but the lounge entrance was next to the Rolex store and that was renovated as well. Food options are decent along with great patisserie options. Champagne is free pour as you would expect in France.

    • Gordon says:

      Shame you still have to request champagne in BA lounges, 2 months ago LGW I requested a second glass and after 15 mins it never arrived, Had to leave for boarding so did not challenge. 3 days ago LHR T3 galleries requested a second glass and had to remind the server. Is there a shortage and BA are rationing the stuff.

  • cinereus says:

    Now if only there were any VS redemptions without insane fees even ex-EU…

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    Yeah, time for a new phone camera. Go on – treat yourself as the tax man is paying half of it 🙂 , the 14pro is insanely good (totally wasted on me to be honest) and would make HfP shots look amazing. Your current one gives it a 70s vibe as if there’s cigarette smoke everywhere!

    • Gordon says:

      I agree re cleaning, Also I am an avid iPhone purchaser. I have a 12 Pro and looked at the 14 Pro but apart from the camera upgrades. The main features and ones that you hope you would never have to use, are Crash detection and satellite calling etc. Bear Grylls would benefit from one.

      • lumma says:

        Phones haven’t had a giant leap forward in ages now. Went back to using my old note 8 while getting my note 10 repaired recently and hardly noticed any difference. Camera still took decent enough pictures and it actually has a couple of features I prefer. (Headphone jack, iris unlock, fingerprint scanner on the back)

    • Rob says:

      As I mentioned the other day, I broke the lens on the camera and couldn’t get it fixed quickly so this trip and the New York one immediately after have fuzzy pictures!

      • Mikeact says:

        How on earth did you manage to break the lens on the camera, (phone? )

        • Rob says:

          Dunno, but as they protrude on an iPhone it is easier than it should be. Could also have been a key in my pocket.

  • Froggitt says:

    “The first is that it is enormous – 34,000 square feet, apparently”

    For context, that’s bigger than your average Aldi/Lidl/TKMaxx

    • Panda Mick says:

      For context, that 3,158m2 for those of us in the 21st century 🙂

      or 45x the size of my pokey little flat in putney. Huge!

  • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

    The cordoned-off section is usually open. It’s my go-to quiet space.

    Showers are disappointing in that the glass screen doesn’t extend to the floor so shower water flows out into the rest of the bathroom. No bath mat provided either. And, as is often the case, scant ventilation so you’d want to be having a cool to cold shower to avoid suffocating in heat while drying yourself.

    I do think the food is quite good quality ar the AF CDG lounges, but it is a bit fussy and dainty for want of a better word. Last time I was at the L gates I left the lounge temporarily to go down to the main concourse and the options there are pretty dire too in terms of a proper hot meal.

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

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