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Review: the tranquil British Airways lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

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This is my review of the British Airways Galleries lounge in Terminal 5B of London Heathrow airport.

It is part of our collection of UK airport lounge reviews.  You can see our full list of UK airport lounge reviews here.

If you do look at the list, you’ll see that our coverage of the British Airways Terminal 5 lounges is poor. This is because they are always busy and – short of arriving at 5am when they open – we can’t get the photos we need.

Luckily, a surprise visit to the Terminal 5B satellite lounge at 6.30am last week allowed me to see it with virtually no other passengers. Only three short haul flights were due to depart and as these normally use the main building (Hamburg, Munich, Lisbon) I think the few passengers who could have got in were still in 5A and hadn’t checked their boarding passes. Our last review of this lounge was in 2017.

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

You don’t need to be flying from Terminal 5B to use this lounge. You can go there from 5A via the transfer train or the walkable tunnel. You can ONLY get back to 5A departures by walking at Level -4. You can’t take the train back to Terminal 5A as this would force you into Arrivals and then you’re stuck!

Anyone flying from Terminal 5C is encouraged to use this lounge and then hop back on the transfer train for a further stop to 5C. There are no lounges in 5C.

How do you get into the British Airways lounge at Heathrow Terminal 5 (Satellite B)?

The lounge operates the standard British Airways policies.  To get in you must either:

  • be flying in Business Class or First Class on a British Airways or oneworld alliance partner airline from Terminal 5
  • hold Silver or Gold status in British Airways Executive Club
  • hold comparable status with another oneworld alliance airline

It is NOT possible to get into British Airways lounges for cash, and you cannot use lounge club cards such as Priority Pass

There are two lounges in the main part of Heathrow Terminal 5 which accept lounge club cards – Club Aspire (review here) and Plaza Premium (review here).

The Terminal 5B lounge is open from 5am to 10pm, seven days per week.

How is the BA Galleries lounge in the Terminal 5 satellite terminals?

The lounge is NOT on the same level as the departure gates. You need to take an escalator or stairs up to the mezzanine.

Confusingly you will see a reception desk and entrance on both sides of you. Both lead to the same lounge space – there is no dedicated First Class area – but if you want food quickly you should enter via the desk on the right!

Here is the food selection for breakfast – basically cereals, fruit, yoghurt:

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

and

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

Slightly randomly, hot food had been set up opposite on this temporary table which looked a little cheap:

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

We had been in Galleries First in the main terminal before coming here. The food was virtually identical. Galleries First has scrapped QR-code ‘at seat’ food ordering – all you can now order to your seat is coffee – so all you have is the buffet, and the buffet is very close to this one.

(Unless I was mistaken, there was no menu-based food ordering available from the tables near the buffet in Galleries First. If this has gone then it is a retrograde step with the food offering now worse than pre-covid.)

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

The main bar is by one wall in the main area of lounge. There was no champagne out but I imagine there would have been some on request – at 6.30am I wasn’t in a rush to find out. This is a very classy space though.

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

Walk past the bar and you get to the coffee station and some formal tables. My only criticism is that you have to walk across the lounge from the food area to get to these tables, and if you want food and coffee you need to visit both sides.

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

Tucked away (luckily) is the pop-up Whispering Angel bar. You may have seen PR photos of this as I had. What they don’t convey is how flippin’ huge it is. I used the photo below rather than a ‘straight on’ shot to give you the scale.

It would be huge anywhere, but in the relatively tight confines of the 5B lounge it is totally unnecessary.

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

and

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

Just behind the Whispering Angel bar is a decent kids play area which will keep (very) littles ones amused whilst the parents sit outside knocking back the rose ….

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

Here are a few random shots of the furnishings. As you can see, it’s looking good after a recent upgrade.

The lounge is also very bright, sitting as it does on the mezzanine so you get a clear view out towards the aircraft gates:

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

and

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

and

Review: the British Airways Galleries lounge in the Heathrow Terminal 5B satellite

Conclusion

The British Airways Galleries lounge at Terminal 5B has always been an oasis of calm compared to any of the other BA facilities in Terminal 5 or Terminal 3.

The recent refresh has left it looking good, and the breakfast offering is on a par with Galleries First, for better or worse.

You’d need to be pretty deperate for some peace and quiet to come here and walk back via the tunnel if your flight goes from the main building.

If you are leaving from 5B or 5C, however, you should definitely head out here. Just remember that the shopping options are limited in 5B and 5C so, for safety, pick up anything you need in 5A first.

We’d love to do similar updated reviews of Galleries First, Galleries Club North and Gallieries Club South in Terminal 5 but we’d need to be there at 5am (and only in the summer months) to get enough light and so few people to make it possible!


Getting airport lounge access for free from a credit card

How to get FREE airport lounge access via UK credit cards (April 2025)

Here are the five 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 1,500 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

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee 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 – 30,000 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 £290 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 good package, but only available to HSBC Premier clients Read our full review

Got a small business?

If you have a small business, consider American Express Business Platinum which has the same lounge benefits as the personal Platinum card:

American Express Business Platinum

50,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

You should also consider the Capital on Tap Pro Visa credit card which has a lower fee and, as well as a Priority Pass for airport lounge access, also comes with Radison Rewards VIP hotel status:

Capital on Tap Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits 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 (128)

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

  • tony says:

    Certainly looking a lot smarter than the last time I was through in May.

  • Erico1875 says:

    What’s wrong with getting there at 5AM? It’s not like going to war torn Yemen for a news story

  • ukpolak says:

    IIRC the done thing if travelling from 5A or 5C was to show your boarding pass at the satellite Starbucks outlets, as you’d get (was it) £15 of whatever-you-like merchandise. It was like some secret tip shared amongst a handful of us LH travellers.

  • Bluekjp says:

    You write ‘Do not take the train back to 5A’. I didn’t think that you could get back on the train to 5A from 5B otherwise this would mean Heathrow’s cardinal rule being broken of departing passengers mixing with arriving passengers. When you go back down to the transit at 5B the doors only open on trains going to 5C departures. For trains heading back to 5A, which is every other train, the transit doors do not open on that side of the train so that you cannot board the train which is full of arrivals passengers.

    • Expat in SJC says:

      You can’t. All the signage makes that clear. Zero idea why Rob thinks you can. It would mean going to T5C on the train, somehow remaining on the train during the security check and returning back with arriving passengers.

      • Paul says:

        Because you can, and people accidentally do. You can get back to the train platform, going towards C, at C there isn’t a security check before the train goes back for arriving passengers

        • LittleNick says:

          What happens when you do out of interest? Does one clear immigration and go through security again via the main entrance or go through transit security? Do they have to reset your security clearance as the system has you in the departures area?

        • Traumahawk007 says:

          I assume you just walk back to 5A on the tunnel that took you to 5B effectively against the traffic flow and use the lift.

      • Tom B says:

        Why make comments like this when you don’t know for sure they are true!? You definitely CAN as it has happened to me before. I had all my duty free alcohol confiscated because I was a ‘dirty passenger’ and had to go through security again.

        I also use Terminal 5B satellite lounge all the time for work flights and the staff at the desks more often than not warn me not to get the train back if my flight is departing from 5A.

  • Cwyfan says:

    Does anybody have a list of what destinations usually depart from B and C?

    • Expat in SJC says:

      Mainly long haul routes with a couple of random short haul exceptions.

    • Frances Morris says:

      I’m going to Philadelphia – I think that goes through 5b. I’m First, but was planning to have lunch at Galleries. then hoof it to 5b. This review is about breakfast, so not sure what the offerings would be for lunch. Still undecided now…

      • jjoohhnn says:

        I went from 5B to Philly in 2022 but its never definitive until you get their.

  • Ben says:

    I wonder how much BA gets paid by LVMH for hosting the Whispering Angel bar and how long the contract is for.

    • blenz101 says:

      Presumably BA / BaxterStorey are happy to hand over the space in return for the free rosé which would in turn cut their operating costs.

      • Rob says:

        You’re well off. My guess is £10,000 per week paid to BA plus set up costs.

        • executiveclubber says:

          How can someone’s guess be “well off” against someone else’s guess?

          • Rob says:

            Because I have a good idea of how BA works. We would have charged WA £5k per week if they wanted to slap their ads across HfP in all our key slots – albeit they get more visibility here than T5B.

            No-one is booking Business on BA purely to visit a 5B pop up bar so it needs to make money in its own right.

            Remember that Amex paid BA over £250m in Jan-June of this year. These are the sort of numbers that all other partnerships are judged against. That’s why a lot of small groups have lost their Avios contracts, like Alan Boswell.

          • blenz101 says:

            Fair enough if you think it needs to be profitable but I still think consideration would be given to the amount of free product being given to BA customers at the expensive of product that would otherwise need to be bought will be a factor. Perhaps not quid pro quo but certainly substantially less than if a business wanted to set up shop to promote credit cards or home insurance.

  • Andrew Hague says:

    The only trouble with this lounge is that you only get advised of your gate an hour before your flight ( unless I’m missing something )

    • Rob says:

      This is (allegedly) due to a deal with Heathrow to protect revenue in the 5A shops. BA knows your gate when you check in and if you’re dropping baggage they will tell you at that point.

    • Numpty says:

      The lounge staff often volunteer the gate no. number, often without asking.

  • dannyrado says:

    OT:

    I’m not seeing any RFS today. I’m not overly familiar with the BA website, but they were there for every day, last night.

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

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