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BA Silver and Gold members lose lounge access in Shannon and Cork when flying Aer Lingus

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If you are looking for an example of the unnecessary complexities that airlines and loyalty schemes can impose, you will struggle to beat the lounge access rules for Aer Lingus if you have British Airways status.  The fact that the two airlines are owned by the same company just makes it even crazier.

Two major changes have recently kicked in, which have a negative impact for any British Airways Gold or Silver member.

You need to remember that Aer Lingus is NOT a member of the oneworld airline alliance and so a BA elite member has no automatic right to use Aer Lingus lounges.

BA Gold and Silver members lose Aer Lingus lounge access in Shannon and Cork

What has changed with Aer Lingus lounge access?

As we understand it ….

  • British Airways Executive Club Silver and Gold members no longer have access to the Aer Lingus lounge in Shannon when flying with Aer Lingus
  • British Airways Executive Club Silver and Gold members no longer have access to the Aspire lounge in Cork when flying with Aer Lingus

British Airways Executive Club elite members were previously allowed to use these lounges when flying on Aer Lingus, but ONLY if flying to London. You have never been able to get access if flying elsewhere from Shannon or Cork.

We have no idea why this has been done. An email I saw from an Aer Lingus employee said that the decision had been made by British Airways, who were presumably being billed by Aer Lingus and Aspire.

Where does this leave British Airways elite members flying Aer Lingus?

Here is a summary of the rules following these changes:

In Heathrow:

Aer Lingus has a pleasant lounge in Heathrow Terminal 2.  We reviewed it here.

The rule here is that British Airways Silver or Gold cardholders can use the Aer Lingus lounge at Heathrow.

Your ticket does NOT need to be issued by BA and it does NOT need to be a BA codeshare.  If you have BA status, even a super-cheap ticket booked on aerlingus.com will do the job. No guests are allowed.

BA Gold and Silver members lose Aer Lingus lounge access in Shannon and Cork

In Dublin:

British Airways Executive Club Silver or Gold cardholders can use the Aer Lingus lounge in Dublin.  It doesn’t matter if your ticket has an Aer Lingus or British Airways flight number.

However, this only works if you are flying to Heathrow or Gatwick.

If you fly from Dublin to, say, Manchester you will not get Aer Lingus lounge access in Ireland with a British Airways status card.

In Shannon or Cork:

Following the recent changes, a British Airways Executive Club Silver or Gold cardholder CANNOT use the Aer Lingus lounge in Shannon or the Aspire lounge in Cork.

It makes no difference whether you are flying to London or elsewhere – you are no longer given access.

In Gatwick or Belfast:

And to confuse matters further …. Aer Lingus has no lounges in Gatwick and Belfast, although qualifying passengers (via Aer Lingus status or ticket class) can access the No1 Lounge and Aspire lounge respectively.

If you have a British Airways Gold card, you can use the British Airways lounges when flying on Aer Lingus. In Belfast, this means the Aspire contract lounge used by BA.

No guests are allowed.  More importantly, your ticket must have a British Airways flight number AND have been issued by BA (the ticket number will start 125-).  An Aer Lingus ticket with an EI flight number will not get you in.

British Airways Silver cardholders do not get into the Gatwick or Belfast lounges in any scenario, irrespective of who issued their Aer Lingus ticket.


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Comments (56)

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

  • Trent says:

    It’s not that complicated! Lounge access LHR T2 for Gold and Silver to Aer Lingus lounge on all Aer Lingus flights. Lounge access DUB T2 for Gold and Silver to Aer Lingus lounge if flying to London only on Aer Lingus flights.

    Gatwick and Belfast are long standing BA rules, not EI rules – if you’re a Gold card holder on a ticket bought on the BA website (125-) with a BA flight number, you can access the lounges when Aer Lingus is the operating airline. No guest. I have done this in AMS before, back when BA had a lounge in AMS…

  • Dubious says:

    I can’t help but wonder if this is part of a broader (cross-the-board) cost-saving measure or whether they did some detailed cost-benefit assessment of customer behavior (whether the lounge access encouraged greater spend on BA on other bookings).

  • David Cohen says:

    Also might be worth adding to the article is that in Dublin, you will NOT get access if flying to LCY.

    • polly says:

      Yes David, that happened to me one evening flying to LCY. Was really surprised being turned away. Such weird rules. Luckily the DAA lounges are not so picky. Food and Prosecco have improved in there too, in recent years. And in recent years, a shower added in the main lounge. Risen in standards now possibly to “decent”

    • jkay86 says:

      Given that DUB-LCY is only served by BA (Cityflyer), does this mean that BA status holders do not have access to the DAA lounge in T1?

      • daveinitalia says:

        They do. Supposedly there’s a limit on drinks but they never imposed in when I was there

      • Nick says:

        No idea where the statement above came from, but BACF customers do get lounge access in DUB T1, under exactly the same conditions as Mainline.

        It’s complicated enough without people spreading false rumours as well!

        • David Cohen says:

          You get access to the DAA lounge, yes. But you don’t get access to the EI lounge.

          • jkay86 says:

            Why would one expect to be given access to the EI lounge while flying BA metal with BA status?

  • Tony says:

    What a friggin typical BA mess!!

  • David House says:

    So if flying DUB-LCY in CE on a BA tkt as a goldie I don’t get lounge access?

  • Paul says:

    I can well believe this is a BA decision and down to saving a few bob. Would be interesting to know how Iberia, Qatar and other frequent flyers are treated. While understanding Aer Lingus is not one world how are other IAG carriers dealing with this

    • Stu_N says:

      Never had access to start with, this is legacy of an old Aer Lingus/ BMI deal

      • daveinitalia says:

        It’s nothing to do with bmi. Before BA took over bmi they did not operate to Ireland so if you booked a flight to Ireland with BA it was always on an EI codeshare. There was always bmi flights to Dublin and Belfast so they never had a codeshare agreement with EI.

  • Chris says:

    Does the access for gold card holders in Belfast only apply to flights to London? Or does it include flights to other U.K. airports?

  • Thywillbedone says:

    Have never seen more than a handful of people in the Cork lounge (albeit never travelled at peak times) …given the offering there, not much to be missed.

    • Tim says:

      Cork always seems to have a fair few people going in on BA cards, although the benefit is not advertised. It has Guinness and Taytos (secreted behind the counter) so it can’t be all bad, and actually is a nice refuge from the corridor-like departure lounge

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