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Which 10 UK airport lounges can now be pre-booked by Priority Pass cardholders?

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Many UK airport lounges, particularly in London, are now so busy that it is hard to get in at peak times using a lounge club card such as Priority Pass. This was particularly acute last year, when travel roared back but many lounges had yet to re-open.

To combat this issue, Priority Pass has been working with lounges to let you pre-book slots for £6. Whilst not ideal, it does at least guarantee you a spot when you want it.

Priority Pass has recently loaded five more UK airport lounges into the reservation system, taking the total that offer pre-booked timeslots to ten. It is worth noting that Priority Pass has an indirect shareholding in all ten.

You can pre-book all the following lounges on the Priority Pass pre-book website here. There is also a link to this page in the Priority Pass app on the page for each participating lounge.

You can also make reservations if you have a Lounge Key card via a HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard.

10 UK lounges you can pre-book with Priority Pass

10 UK lounges you can pre-book with Priority Pass

Heathrow Terminal 3

Three lounges are available to pre-book at Heathrow – two in Terminal 3 and one in Terminal 5:

Club Aspire Lounge Heathrow Terminal 3 (review here): opened in 2016, the lounge can accommodate just over 120 guests and is located near Gate 9. In addition to all the usual amenities (wifi, food and drinks including wines and spirits) the lounge also features showers, a quiet zone and (most importantly!) runway views. Reservations are £6.

No1 Lounge Heathrow Terminal 3 (review here): this is a bigger facility than Club Aspire and opened in 2011. This lounge features 12 bedroom pods for transiting passengers – the first of their kind in the UK – as well as showers and a spa. The 10-seat cinema/TV lounge is still operational, whilst food, drinks and wifi are standard. Reservations are £6.

Heathrow Terminal 5

Club Aspire Lounge Heathrow Terminal 5 (review here): this is the only Priority Pass lounge available at Heathrow Terminal 5 – the only other independent lounge is the Plaza Premium, which is a mirror image of this one (Plaza Premium accepts American Express Platinum cards and DragonPass but not Priority Pass). The Club Aspire is a relatively narrow lounge located on a thin terrace near Gate 18. Whilst the natural light and airiness is excellent – it is open to the wider terminal – it is often overcrowded. Reservations are £6.

10 UK lounges you can pre-book with Priority Pass

Gatwick North

Clubrooms Gatwick North (review coming this month): Clubrooms is the top-tier lounge brand in No1 Lounge stable with table service and a la carte dining. As such, Priority Pass charges an additional £15 fee on the door even if you’re not pre-booking in advance. Whilst the food and service here are undoubtedly premium, the windowless room means that it feels like you’re in a basement. Reservations are £15 and include fast-track security.

No1 Lounge Gatwick North (review here): At almost 1000 square metres this is a large facility with panoramic floor-to-ceiling windows occupying what used to be the lower floor of the British Airways lounge. Inside you’ll find a spa and showers available for an extra charge, as well as a small kids play area and a cinema / TV lounge. Reservations are £6 and include fast-track security.

10 UK lounges you can pre-book with Priority Pass

Gatwick South

My Lounge Gatwick South (review here): My Lounge is the cheapest of No1 Lounges brands but that doesn’t mean that the company has cut costs on the design. It looks trendy with industrial-style design, (fake) exposed brickwork and the like. It’s not huge but has been partitioned into a variety of rooms. It also features – uniquely – an outdoor terrace. A small buffet is available, as are self-pour wines and spirits. Reservations are £6 and include fast-track security.

No1 Lounge Gatwick South (review here): Another No1 Lounge, it is relatively small and can therefore get quite busy, particularly during peak times. If you can get in you’ll be treated to a bright, open stylishly designed space with wrap-around windows and warm wood and leather furniture. A central bar dishes out alcohol, although you’ll have to pay for anything more than the basics. A makeshift buffet serves food. There are toilets but no showers. Reservations are £6 and include fast-track security.

Clubrooms Gatwick South (review here): This is the original Clubrooms lounge and opened in 2015. Originally intended to offer genuinely private club rooms, the model has changed somewhat and it now offers a typical lounge experience but with premium table service and an a la carte menu. As at Gatwick North, you’ll need to pay a £15 additional fee whether you reserve in advance or not, so it’s worth pre-booking to get fast-track security bundled in. Reservations are £15 and include fast-track security.

10 UK lounges you can pre-book with Priority Pass

Birmingham Airport

Clubrooms Birmingham (review here): Close to Gate 54, the Clubrooms at Birmingham Airport opened in 2019. Blue wood panelling, large windows and a parquet floor mean this lounge really does make you forget you’re at an airport. As with other Clubrooms, a la carte dining and table service mean you don’t even need to get up. Image above. Reservations are £15.

No1 Lounge Birmingham (review here): Last refurbished in 2019, this No1 Lounge features an unusual mezzanine level with sofas in addition to its dining area and armchairs. A meeting room, TV room and private room can be pre-booked, whilst a small buffet is on offer with alcoholic drinks available from behind the bar – although expect to pay more for champagne or prosecco. Reservations are £6.

Conclusion

You can now pre-book access at 10 UK Priority Pass lounges. Whilst this comes at an additional fee, it does guarantee you entry and at Gatwick you’ll even be able to use fast track security.

If you want to visit a Clubrooms lounge, reservations are a no-brainer. The fee is the same as the supplement you would need to pay on the door anyway, and at Gatwick you get fast track security included.

To pre-book, head to the Priority Pass pre-booking site here (branded as No1 Lounges, confusingly).


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 (91)

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

  • MQ says:

    The worst lounges, to eat rubbish food I wouldn’t eat for free. I’d rather sit at a airport restaurant then spend my time in these horrible corridors. Now PP even have the nerve to charge a fee for you to prebook. Absolutely delusional.

    • Rob says:

      This was introduced at customer request and is, from a business perspective, very smart.

      Long term you need to face facts. PP pays peanuts, around £10. Literally any other way of filling the space – DragonPass, OnTheBeach bulk sales, direct sales, bulk sales to airlines etc – pays a lot more and lounges will continue to do all they can to move capacity away.

      • Lady London says:

        So the issue is PP needs to pay lounges decently and not trouser so much of the membership fees which are not small.

    • BuildBackBetter says:

      How many restaurants at airports get you decent food + availability of tables + water or soft drinks that cost nothing + a sofa to relax after food + free wifi?

      • Gordon says:

        I’ve used various restaurants in LHR & LGW even though I have silver status with BA until the end of 2023, Purely because I prefer a proper meal served to me rather than picky buffet food, I do find the food decent at most restaurants tbh, I have had no problems getting a table over the years whatever time it may be. You pay for your water and soft drinks in the lounge membership or when you’re chasing status, so I would not class them as free, The word Free does give people a warm glow inside though, I’ve never had the desire to drink more than two or three drinks anyway which is hardly going to break the bank, I have found that because the lounges are so busy you do not get a choice of a sofa to relax on because they are all taken. I always use mobile data when it allows,There is free wifi in all London airports so I would not count that as a selling point? That’s my take on it, But Hey Ho everyone is different?.

      • The Savage Squirrel says:

        Describing a 3rd party lounge as “having decent food” is often a HUGE stretch unless your idea of a cracking meal is breadsticks and soggy pasta with one nanolitre of sauce per kg of pasta (one of Rhys’s bugbears too). Let’s face it – it’s usually massively worse than even a mid-range airport restaurants (not a high bar).
        Outside absolute peaks there are plenty of restaurants to give you a table, and to give you free wifi – even just by sitting vaguely near them. Plus water that costs nothing is the law! You really can’t claim a lounge is an upgrade for offering these things.

        • Rob says:

          I have this comfort / privacy / security reference point. Would I be happy leaving my phone and bag on a table in the BA F lounge whilst I went to the loo or went off to get some more food? No bother. Would I do it in the T5 Wetherspoons? No. Would you feel happy leaving a few £thousand of personal belongings unattended in a No1 Lounge? Good question.

          • Gordon says:

            Good = BA F lounge, Bad = No1 lounge and the ugly = Wetherspoons?

  • Alex says:

    I stopped going to PP lounges in the UK. The times that I do go, I usually get something outside and just take it with me.

    Only exception is the Grain store, which I like.

  • Bumblebee says:

    Anyone know if the centurion lounge in Heathrow is really busy too ? Hopefully using it Friday, but have reserved a pre pay lounge anyway .

    • Iain says:

      I was in a Friday afternoon from 3 to 5pm a couple of months ago and I’d say it was about 3/4s full. You should be fine especially if a solo traveller.

  • John says:

    The ability to reserve access goes some way towards placing card holders on an equal footing with direct bookings; although I understand people have qualms about paying for “free” access, it’s obvious that card holders would be discriminated until the revenue pots equalised. The next major area for HFP and industry focus should be the diminution in standards and service relative to pre-Covid. I have been through the Aspire Lounge at LTN twice in recent months (no pre booking option) and the experience is frankly horrid. Overcrowding, minimal food offering, minimal free options at the bar (no free pour), broken equipment (out of order coffee machines and drinks fountains), filthy and poorly-maintained toilets, no Wi-Fi (since Covid re-opening), and a ritual scolding on entering for not having made a reservation — which is impossible with PP.

    • Rhys says:

      You can blame understaffing – and the B word – for most of those…

  • VALittleRed says:

    Is the three lounges available to pre-book at LHR Terminal 3 a typo? As you have only listed two?

  • Paul says:

    I won’t be using my PP in UK airports or renewing my card. Its a ripoff to charge again for something I’ve already paid for. No where else I’ve travelled has this extra charge. How do they all manage to cater for everybody?

    • Rhys says:

      Far fewer passengers with lounge access. There is a very high saturation level in the UK (similar in the US) thanks to credit cards, On The Beach etc. Not the same in eg. Germany where credit cards are largely spurned.

  • S says:

    Slightly off topic but what are my odds of getting into PP T5 with DragonPass at about half one next Monday….

  • Sian says:

    Looking forward to the new Escape lounge at BRS wish we could pre-book that. There were still signs for the Aspire lounge which is now closed. Bristol Airport was crazy busy last week and to the person who said they would rather pay to eat in a restaurant it was so busy with nowhere to sit and people were ordering food and and walking around with it.

    On a positive note the Plaza Premium lounge (next to BA) in Rome was great!

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