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Review: the British Airways Galleries First lounge at Heathrow Terminal 5

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This is our review of the British Airways Galleries First lounge in Heathrow Terminal 5.

There are some unexpected gaps in our airport lounge reviews. We’ve been to every corner of the UK to review airport lounges but there are huge holes in our BA Terminal 5 coverage. The last time we looked at Galleries First was 2012 (not a typo) and it wasn’t even a proper review.

The reason is that the lounges are always so busy that it’s impossible to get the photos we need. However, two weeks I found myself on the last flight departing Terminal 5 and around 9pm I realised that I was virtually alone in the lounge.

British Airways Galleries First lounge review

This allowed me to get enough pictures to show you what you’re missing. It was obviously dark outside when I took the photos so the lighting could be better in places. Unfortunately the lack of people may give a false impression of how calm the lounge is during the day ….

Who can access the Galleries First lounge?

You do not need to be flying First Class to access the Galleries First lounge. In fact, if you are flying in First Class then you shouldn’t be here – you should head to The Concorde Room lounge next door instead.

The requirement for Galleries First is that you are flying on a oneworld carrier (as this is T5 it would only be British Airways or Iberia) either on a same-day First Class ticket or with oneworld Emerald status.

Anyone with oneworld Emerald status (ie. British Airways Executive Club Gold) can access the lounge, with one guest, even if you are flying on a hand-baggage-only economy flight. Separate guest rules apply to Gold Guest List and Premier members.

Entering the Galleries First lounge

There are two entrances into the lounge. Whilst the manned desks are still there, you are only likely to use them if connecting.

Anyone starting in London is likely to enter via the First Wing. This is the dedicated First Class / Gold card check-in and security area at the far south end of Terminal 5:

(Galleries First restricts you to one guest. If you are a BA Gold travelling with more than one other non-Gold, you can check in at the First Wing. However, you cannot use the private security lane or the Galleries First lounge. You need to go back out into the main terminal and use the main security line.)

Once you have cleared security you walk down a passage and you enter the Galleries First lounge here:

British Airways Galleries First lounge

The layout is a bit tricky to explain. Entering via First Wing, if you keep walking you will go directly through the main seating area, past two bars, and eventually emerge on the far side on the terrace:

BA Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

The terrace has a small self-serve wine and champagne bar, and you will occasionally find pop-ups here promoting various brands. The atmosphere is a lot different in daylight. There are around 40 seats out here although most are in groups of four.

British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

You’ll see from the rack above that BA is in no rush to bring back newspapers or magazines, apart from High Life.

Let’s run all the way back to the entrance and do the full tour.

On your right as you enter is this self service bar. New furniture was being installed in this area when I was there, hence the lack of people below – the area was actually cordonned off.

More furniture in the lounge has been replaced in the last fortnight since my visit, so some of what you see below is already out of date.

Galleries First BA lounge Heathrow T5

To your left is another self-serve bar and snacks area:

British Airways Galleries First lounge self service bar Heathrow Terminal 5

It doesn’t scream ‘premium’ and that’s because it isn’t – Gordon’s, Tanqueray, Johnnie Walker Red and Black, Martini, Bacardi etc. There was a selection of Ciroc flavoured vodkas

The old business centre / champagne bar is now a ….

Immediately to your left is a corridor which leads down to what was originally the business centre and the champagne bar.

The business centre was ripped out post pandemic (fair enough, it wasn’t necessary in the 2020s) and replaced by sleep pods in May 2021. These seem to have been a flop and have also now gone.

The pods have been replaced by this uninspiring and windowless area of additional seating, although as few people know it exists it is probably quiet during the day.

British Airways Galleries First Lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

As for the champagne bar? It’s now a hot desking area:

Galleries Lounge Heathrow Airport Terminal 5

The bathrooms – now unisex – are also in this area. There are only cubicles, each containing its own sink.

Britsih Airways Galleries First lounge toilets

and

British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5 toilets

I couldn’t access one of the showers. They are apparently in need of refurbishment but I don’t have any first hand experience of them.

The exit

Head back to the main area and continue walking towards the terrace, you come to the exit (the only exit – you can’t leave by the First Wing entrance). This is also the way in if you are in transit.

British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5 exit

The dining area

Continue walking, past this group of monitors (PLEASE BA, convert one of these into a flight information screen!):

British Airway Galleries First Lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

…. and you see a large area running off to your left. This contains the buffet and coffee stations.

During the pandemic, BA introduced ‘at seat’ food ordering in Galleries First. This was fantastic. Apart from the obvious benefit of not having to leave your seat and baggage to get supplies, the food you received was restaurant style, as a proper plated meal. Everyone loved it and declared it the way forward. So …. BA scrapped it.

You’re now back to the buffet only. You can still order drinks via a QR code from your seat but that’s it. I honestly don’t get it – a new system was developed which everyone agreed was a huge improvement in every way (except possibly the cost) from the old one, and it was dropped.

The first area contains a number of Union Coffee-branded drinks stations. If you like stocking up on clasic British biscuits, as my son does, you’ll be very happy here!

Galleries First coffee heathrow terminal 5

Before you get to the buffet you’ve got sandwiches and cake:

Galleries first lounge heathrow terminal 5 sandwiches

…. a salad bar:

British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow terminal 5 salad bar

… and, erm, the kids play room!

Galleries First kids play room heathrow terminal 5 lounge

Here is half of the hot food area. Late at night, it was an odd mix of pies, fishcakes, pasta, curry, rice etc. The quality is not bad, to be honest – I don’t want to give the impression that it’s just ‘slop’ because it isn’t. However, it is fundamentally the same food that is served in the two Galleries Club lounges in Terminal 5A.

British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5 lounge buffet

In terms of seating you’ve got a variety of options, assuming you don’t want to carry it back to your lounge chair. This is behind the buffet:

British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

There are long tables like this:

Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

…. and some standard cafe-style seating:

British Airways lounge FIrst Class Heathrow Terminal 5

I haven’t shown you much of the main seating area. This is mainly because, at 9pm, it was very dark. It also gets a bit dull showing lines of leather armchairs!

It’s worth highlighting this staffed bar – the only staffed bar in the whole lounge – which has had a facelift recently. This is meant to be a ‘premium’ bar, stocked with products chosen by BA’s Master of Wine. I’m not sure what champagne is currently available but you should approach with modest expectations.

British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5 bar

Here is one run of seating to give you a feel:

Galleries First lounge London Heathrow Terminal 5 British Airways

and

British Airways Galleries First Class lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

As I said above, a lot of the furniture in the lounge was changed in the week after I was there. Here is a shot of the same wine cooler above showing the new-style chairs (thanks to Shane for this):

Review British Airways Galleries First lounge Heathrow Terminal 5

Whilst the main business centre disappeared a couple of years ago, there are still a couple of terminals and a printer in a small area near the entrance to the balcony.

Conclusion

I use the Galleries First lounge a lot, and have come to accept its various quirks. If you look at it as what it realistically is for most users – a space for Gold card holders to use before catching a short haul flight – it does the job.

The food and drink, and the general overcrowding (unless you’re on the last flight out as I was!) are arguably acceptable for this ‘Gold card member flying to Milan’ market.

It’s a quirk of the BA structure that a non-status member on a £4,000 Club World ticket will be sent to the inferior Galleries Club lounges, whilst a Gold on a £39 one way economy ticket to Amsterdam can come here. Remember that anyone with a First Class ticket won’t be in Galleries First – they will be in The Concorde Room next door with proper restaurant-style food and service.

It is also worth stressing – because I think many forget this – that the ability for a BA Gold to get from a taxi to Galleries First via the First Wing in under 10 minutes is a real perk, unmatched at any other European terminal.

Of course, the best British Airways lounge in Terminal 5 is probably the mixed Business / First Galleries lounge in the 5B satellite which we recently reviewed here. It has now finished its upgrade with a new hot food live cooking area.


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 (145)

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

  • Amy C says:

    Piers Morgan once quietly approached me and asked me for the wifi password in this lounge. Haven’t been in it for about 7 years though. I hate unisex toilets and all BA lounge toilets are generally pretty awful. I don’t think I am missing much now I am relegated to the Club lounge.

    • daveinitalia says:

      Wifi passwords aren’t needed now in the BA lounge presumably to avoid having to interact with him. I wonder if he’s GGL or Prem now as I’ve seen him mention the Concorde Room on Twitter but perhaps he just has that when flying F

    • Novice says:

      I hate that sink. It’s tiny. How are you supposed to wash hands properly and i wash half of my arms as well.

  • AspirationalFlyer says:

    I agree about the T5B Lounge. I prefer it to the First Lounge. Food more or less the same, much quieter and friendly staff. Maybe the drinks selection is not quite as good, but I was given champagne on request and there were multiple bottles of Whispering Angel on ice.

  • Ggos1 says:

    I genuinely thought this was a review of Galleries Club; the decor, appearance, food and drink options.

    Not missing out much am I?

    With all the devaluations of Gold benefits, so I read, including Avios earning. What point is there in Gold/OWE status now when looking wholly at BA?

    Some of the QR and CX lounges are a genuine upgrade on their Business Class lounges – BA use the same decor and food for first and biz lounges (excluding CCR).

  • Mr O says:

    I visited both the south Galleries and first lounges last night. The wine (apart from First has the cheap champagne vs Prosecco in business) and food was literally identical. I also really miss the QR menu, it was a great addition.

  • Andrew J says:

    The food ordering was available (albeit not from a QR code) before the pandemic – the burger and chips was always good. Then they elevated it for the pandemic years to avoid buffets and we had the delight of being brought afternoon tea on a cake stand etc. And now it’s back to a buffet.

    I did have the misfortune to go to Galleries Club a couple of months ago as my parents were travelling with me in Club without status and I did notice the far lower quality and selection of food compared to Galleries First, for example ham instead of smoked salmon sandwiches – so it doesn’t seem to be the same provision.

  • Harry T says:

    Yeah the main advantage to being Gold is the ability to get through First Wing security in under 5 mins, as I did last night, when arriving from landside. Even when connecting, I usually prefer to use the eGates to cross the border and then go through TFW. Flight connections and “normal” security is usually full of clueless people who can’t follow basic instructions.

    The toilets need refurbing and the food is often very repetitive and basic.

    • Harry T says:

      I should say that in terms of the actual lounge, I prefer the First lounge at Gatwick, which I visited again the weekend before last. The food is much better, the place is generally in better nick, and you can still order food via QR code (including a burger that was worth ordering twice).

  • Mark says:

    Was guested in here when flying with a BA gold member a few years ago and remember thinking then it felt 80% the same as the club lounge. I would still take the T5B lounge over this, always quieter than the main terminal in my experience

    • Ross says:

      I’m sat in T5B now after struggling to find a seat in the first lounge. Despite the small inconvenience of my flight leaving from the main terminal, the B lounge is substantially more quiet and the food is better in my opinion (especially with the live cooking and general revamp). Just don’t tell too many people!

  • HAM76 says:

    The picture of the washroom doesn’t do it justice. In reality it’s more disgusting. BTW, the difference between Concorde and First washrooms is that the former have an additional bidet that is in dire need of replacement, too.

    The hot food option looks identical to what I had in Galleries Club 10 days ago, except it being nicer arranged. Now that I’m back to gold, I hope that at least the wine selection is still a bit nicer than in Galleries Club.

    In MUC (which has a dedicated First class area with security, too) it doesn’t take more than 10 minutes from train to lounge, either. HAM can be pretty quick, too. I often catch the S-Bahn train 10 minutes after landing.

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