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Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai Terminal 3 Concourse A

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This is our review of the Emirates Business Class lounge at Dubai International Airport.

After trialling Emirates’ new premium economy experience (review here), it was time to return to London on the vaunted A380 business class.

Terminal 3 at Dubai International Airport is split into three buildings, all used almost exclusively by Emirates: Concourses A, B and C. Emirates operates lounges in all concourses, so you are well looked after regardless of which pier you are departing from.

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

If you are on an A380 the chances are high that you will be flying from Concourse A, which was built to accommodate these behemoths. My flight was departing from gate A3.

Emirates has an interesting approach to lounges in Dubai. Concourse A at Dubai has three levels. The ground floor is for shoppers and economy passengers and occupied by duty free shopping, restaurants and cafes.

The upper floors – which occupy the same footprint as the ground floor – are for premium passengers. The first floor is the First Class ‘lounge’ whilst the second floor is the Business Class ‘lounge’. The selling point is that you can board all flights directly from the lounge.

I say ‘lounge’ because it is unlike any other lounge I’ve used. It’s over 16,000 square metres with a capacity for 2,552 passengers.

I’ve used massive open-air lounges before, such as the Qatar Airways Al Mourjan lounge in Doha, but this is different. With an entire floor of the concourse to itself, visiting the Emirates Business Class lounge feels like being in a quiet airport terminal rather than a lounge.

To put this in context, London City Airport – across its airside and landside terminal areas combined – is 17,000 square metres, so virtually the same size as this one lounge.

Let me try and show you what I mean.

Emirates Business Class Lounge access requirements

Access to the Emirates Business Class Lounge is limited by the fact that Emirates is virtually the only airline to fly from Terminal 3: the only other airlines are flydubai (itself owned by Emirates), Air Canada, United Airlines, and Qantas.

Access to the lounge is complimentary if you are:

  • Emirates business class or first class passengers
  • Emirates Skywards Silver
  • Emirates Skywards Gold (+1 guest)
  • Emirates Skywards Platinum (+1 guest and up to 2 children)

Certain Emirates and Qantas codeshares are also eligible for lounge access in Dubai.

Paid access is available if you’re flying in economy or premium economy on Emirates. The rate is around US$160 or £125. It is priced so as to put most people off without removing the paid option entirely. You are clearly going to struggle to get £125 of value in the maximum four hour timeslot you can use the lounge.

The lounge is open 24 hours a day.

Emirates lounges location in Dubai T3 Concourse A

You shouldn’t have any trouble finding the lounge. After passing through security and exiting immigration, simply follow the signs to Concourse A. You need to jump on the air train which will shuttle you there.

On arrival, take one of the many escalators all the way up to departures level:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

Then, walk straight out and you should see a set of escalators. It is well sign-posted:

Head up one floor and you’ll find the First Class Lounge; head up another and you’ll see the Business Class Lounge entrance:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

Inside the Emirates Business Class Lounge Concourse A

Once you’ve had your boarding pass scanned you can turn either left or right. Both sides of the lounge are identical, so it’s best to head to the side where your gate is.

Remember when I said the lounge was the same size as the entirety of Concourse A? It’s so big that they post maps of it inside and advise that it is a 12 minute walk from one end of the lounge to the other!

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

All the functions and services are replicated on both sides: showers, bathrooms, dining areas and smoking rooms.

My gate was on the right hand side. Whilst you’re in the lounge, it doesn’t feel loungey: you need to walk a bit to get to the main seating areas. On the way, you pass a couple of gates and unstaffed Emirates Skywards and Concierge Shopping service desks:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

It’s really odd to see lounge-style armchairs right next to gate areas:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

There is at least a good selection of newspapers:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

…. and each table features a cut flower:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

There are big cutouts in the floor to allow natural light down to the ground floor duty free and shopping areas. It feels like you are in a mall:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

Next to these is a whole run of seating. A lot of these areas are empty because they feel like you are sitting in a corridor (which you are):

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

About mid-way down you’ll find some rooms off the main area. These contain the dining areas and were much more popular because they feel less exposed to the terminal:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

There is also a business centre with workstations:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

…. and a kids room:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

The right hand shower area had 11 shower suites for men and five for women and featured Voya toiletries:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

and

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

At the very far end of the lounge you’ll find a huge ‘Quiet Area’. Bizarrely, this is surrounded by a cluster of gates – eight of them – and has to be the least quiet part of the whole lounge.

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

It was completely deserted when I went. It’s also the brightest space in the entire lounge, totally exposed to the skylights above. Despite that, there are recliners with plastic-wrapped blankets should you want to sleep:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

…. and even a bed!

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

There was a small staffed bar here, as well as some self-serve coffee machines and snacks including stuffed dates:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

It was, at least, very quiet during my stay!

Food and drink in the Emirates Business Class Lounge in Dubai

Food and drink is available only in certain parts of the lounge, which Emirates labels as ‘Fine Dining’ on its map. This may be an exaggeration ….

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

The dining area was long and thin and featured two buffets at either end. I thought they were both identical until I realised that one had more Western food whilst the other had more local and Asian products. There is no signage to make this clear.

There were some decent salads available:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

In terms of hot food, there were probably six different buffet servers on each side, stocked with things such as chicken teryaki, dal makhani and other curries. I enjoyed the salads but calling it ‘fine dining’ might be pushing it ….

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

For those with a sweet tooth there were a selection of desserts as well as an ice cream stand:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

The good news is that drinks, including Moet & Chandon, are all available for self-pour. This was all good stuff, including 2008 vintage reds, and far above your usual lounge wine. It was let down by the rubbish presentation, which made it look like the cheap plonk you’d get in a contract lounge:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

In fact, the entire selection of spirits looked a bit forlorn:

Review: Emirates Business Class Lounge, Dubai T3

Emirates has a vast wine cellar with millions of bottles. Why not turn that into a feature of the lounges? You could even offer wine tasting flights.

A sense of drama or occasion was missing.

Conclusion

It is hard to describe what the Emirates lounges in Dubai are like if you have never been inside them yourself. I thought I had a good idea of what to expect based on what Rob had told me, but I didn’t quite get it until I was in one.

The choice to dedicate entire floors to the lounge is an odd experience. The benefits are that it is huge and you’ll always find somewhere to sit. Boarding your plane directly from the lounge is a novelty too.

The downside is that it feels like you are simply in a posh airport terminal, which doesn’t feel as cozy or secure. In a normal airport lounge, I wouldn’t think twice about leaving my bag, passport or laptop out whilst I nipped to the toilet or for a drink. I didn’t do that here.

To be perfectly honest, I was slightly disappointed by the Emirates Business Class lounge. As one of the airline’s flagship lounges I wasn’t particularly ‘wowed’ by anything. The food was okay, but arguably inferior to the Emirates Lounge at Heathrow.

(Things might be better at the Concourse B lounge, which I understand is more recently refurbished and features a Champagne Bar and Costa Coffee station.)

Overall, it felt like the Emirates ground experience at Dubai Airport – including the ‘premium’ check-in areas – simply didn’t match the high level of service onboard the aircraft.

The next part of this series will look at Emirates A380 business class.


How to earn Emirates Skywards miles from UK credit cards

How to earn Emirates Skywards miles from UK credit cards (April 2025)

Emirates Skywards does not have a UK credit card.  However, you can earn Emirates Skywards miles by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards.

Cards earning Membership Rewards points include:

Membership Rewards points convert at 4:3 into Emirates Skywards miles which is an attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 0.75 Emirates Skywards miles

The American Express Preferred Rewards Gold card earns double points (2 per £1) on all flights you charge to it, not just with Emirates but with any airline.

Comments (46)

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

  • Ravi says:

    Great review, but I’d clarify that leaving one’s bag, passport or laptop out whilst nipping to the toilet or for a drink is normal and safe in Dubai as a whole, so you’d have definitely been fine to do so in the Emirates business lounge!

    • dp says:

      Agreed. People leave their cars unlocked with the keys in the ignition without issue!

      • willmo says:

        And by contrast I know someone who has had their passport stolen while nipping to the toilet in the smaller BA lounge in Milan Linate.

    • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

      It might be safe from a crime perspective but for most people with a half-decent corporate security policy, it’s a massive no-no to leave a work laptop unattended at any time.

  • John says:

    I haven’t been to this lounge but I did go to the First Class one before covid – in my opinion the negatives Rhys mentions were “solved” on the First level. I’d say the J level at DXB feels inferior to the LHR lounge because that is a combined J/F

    • Matt says:

      Agreed, the flagship lounges are the first lounges at DXB, the business lounges caters to volume. LHR doesn’t have a separate first class lounge as far as I’m aware for Emirates so they have to enhance the F&B offering.

      • Rob says:

        Nothing amazing about the F lounge in my view – it’s the same size for a start.

        • Chabuddy Geezy says:

          Free spa treatments in the F lounge are a nice feature.

        • Matt says:

          Same size for far fewer passengers though, there are times when the business lounges feel like you’re in Dubai Mall.

        • John says:

          It’s understandably hard to think of an airline that has international first class and still offers an above average international business class lounge (I don’t think we can count Qatar). But it’s a long time since I flew international J and there may be some out there

  • WorldTraveller says:

    I think the part about this lounge not feeling secure is a bit overdramatic. Not only would I leave all my belongings unattended for hours on end in this lounge, but I’d do this almost anywhere I go in Dubai as petty thefts are virtually non existent there. I left my wallet and passport once on a beach bed for 2h out in the open and they were fine. Everyone does this. Dubai is one of the safest cities in the world for a reason.

    • Rhys says:

      Yes but – psychologically – it doesn’t feel this way!

    • flyforfun says:

      “I left my stuff unattended on the beach because it was Dubai” is not a statement I’d want to be writing on an insurance claim form. Regardless of how safe you feel somewhere, thefts can occur and if you didn’t take some type of preventative measure, I would imagine the insurance company may try to find a loophole in paying you out. I use to work for an insurance company and that’s why I say that!

      • jjoohhnn says:

        Yes. And try explaining to work why their company device with data on has gone missing having been left unattended! I’ve seen people leaving them unlocked too so its ripe pickings for someone to undertake a data breach! I’d be fired if device was left unattended (in a lounge) and nicked!

    • HampshireHog says:

      Yes but many passers by are foreigners in transit in a lounge, I never leave my valuables unattended in any lounge. It may be a low risk but the consequences of loss are immense

      • LittleNick says:

        It’s very annoying when travelling solo, as if I need to go to the toilet, grab food/drink I then need to pack up my laptop etc and the seat I was sitting in then looks vacant when I’m just away for a few mins

        • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

          Littlenick I carry a spare magazine and a book for the secondary purpose of usefully indicating an occupied table.

  • Jayne says:

    We visited this lounge twice last month and were hugely disappointed. It’s huge and so impersonal, not at all welcoming. Food was meh, hardly any staff around with lots of empty desks which makes it feel abandoned. Really enjoy flying with Emirates but don’t rate the lounge.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      The pictures look like it would be a terrible place to spend those couple hours before a flight. I hope they rethink the designs for their new airport

    • Bagoly says:

      Comes into its own during IRROPS!

  • Paul says:

    I’m definitely in the “feels a bit impersonal” camp, but am aware that at least in part that’s down to all my layovers bar one being between midnight and four in the morning when my mind and body are just wanting to move on. It felt much better the one time I was there during the day.

    If you have a really long layover (10+ hours?) Emirates and in Business or First will provide you with a hotel room and transport. Some American friends we met up with in Vietnam had done this and essentially had a day out in Dubai.

  • willmo says:

    Did you pay to enter the F lounge? Will we be getting a review of that?

  • Roger says:

    The smoking lounge is great, very quiet and comfortable with waiter service, and it does not stink of smoke.

    • peckishpassport says:

      +1!

      Service in the smoking lounge is exceptional. They’ll even offer to bring you items from the buffet! I am the occasional smoker, but I agree it hardly smells of smoke in there.

    • mvcvz says:

      I bet it does to a non-smoker.

  • jjoohhnn says:

    “Costa Coffee station” sounds very economy! Why would they put that in a business lounge?!

    • Mark S says:

      They give you free drinks and pastries/cookies. I guess Emirates view it as an additional perk rather than you having to pay for a coffee from Costa in the main concourse.

      • jjoohhnn says:

        Is Costa seen as a premium brand in Dubai??!

        • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

          Not premium but it is definitely valued by the locals. Coffee chains are a big deal for them; often being the place they’ll go to while the night away. If one leaves the Dubai Marina Mall after say 10pm, it is typical to see locals still comfortably in situ at the Starbucks and Caffe Nero branches opposite one another beside the entrance to the mall.

          • Tom says:

            Costa Coffee is probably higher quality than the coffee on offer in 90% of global lounges (even the supposed high end ones) which is poor quality beans and from a fully automated machine. Ironically, this includes the EK F lounge underneath!

        • blenz101 says:

          Emirates hold the franchise for Costa Coffee in the UAE so all branches are under their management anyway.

          Whilst there are plenty of self serve coffee machines throughout the lounge having essentially a branch of Costa Coffee where the products are free.

          I find it an improvement grabbing a barista made coffee to go before my flight rather than something from a machine.

        • jjoohhnn says:

          BA used to use Union coffee in the lounges, not sure if that is still the case, but definitely an upgrade on Costa beans! Not sure if their machines make a better cup than a Costa barista – i drink my coffee black, so theirs no milk art stuff they can achieve anyway!

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