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What are American Express Centurion airport lounges, and where are they?

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One of the perks of holding premium credit cards, and particularly American Express cards, is that they often come bundled with airport lounge access.

Historically Amex had contracted with airlines to offer lounge access. In recent years, however, it has started building its own lounge network, and there is now a large network of American Express and Centurion branded lounges.

Last month, American Express opened a new Centurion Lounge at Washington’s Reagan National Airport. This is a good excuse to take another a look at the Centurion Lounge network. Despite the name, you get in by showing an American Express Platinum card.

What are American Express Centurion airport lounges, and where are they?

Why did American Express get into the airport lounge business?

15 years ago, American Express started to lose contracts with the major US airlines which allowed Platinum cardholders to use their lounges. 

Today, the only arrangement that is in place with a US airline is with Delta. Even this is restricted to the Platinum cardholder only, with guests only allowed for an additional fee.

In response, American Express decided to launch its own proprietary airport lounge network and the first Centurion lounge opened in Las Vegas in 2013.  They have been seen as a welcome breath of fresh air in the US, where airport lounges are substantially lower in quality than those in Europe and Asia.

US airport lounges tend to operate on a ‘club’ system with paid memberships – having status is not enough to get you access. You have the odd situation where a British Airways Executive Club Gold or Silver member can use their card to access an American Airlines lounge but an AA top-tier flyer cannot.  You are also expected to pay for food and some drinks in certain US lounges.

Amex has branded its lounge network as ‘Centurion Lounges’.  This causes some confusion because many believe that you need an American Express Centurion card to enter, which is not true.  Access is gained via a Platinum (or Centurion) card, issued in any country.

What are American Express Centurion airport lounges, and where are they?

Where can you find Amex Centurion lounges?

At present, there are Centurion lounges at:

  • Atlanta (Concourse E)
  • Buenos Aires (Terminal 2)
  • Charlotte (Concourse D/E)
  • Dallas / Fort Worth (Terminal D)
  • Denver (Concourse C)
  • Hong Kong (Terminal 1)
  • Houston (Terminal D)
  • Las Vegas (Concourse D)
  • Los Angeles (Tom Bradley International Terminal)
  • London Heathrow (Terminal 3, all images here are from Heathrow)
  • Melbourne (Terminal 2)
  • Mexico City (Terminal 1)
  • Miami (Concourse D)
  • Monterrey (Terminal A)
  • New York (La Guardia Terminal B)
  • New York (JFK Terminal 4)
  • Philadelphia (Terminal A)
  • Phoenix (Terminal 4)
  • San Francisco (Terminal 3)
  • Sao Paulo (Terminal 3)
  • Seattle (Central Terminal)
  • Sydney (Terminal 1)
  • Washington National Airport (DCA Terminal 2)

Stockholm has what is effective a ‘Centurion Restaurant’ which re-opened after major expansion this year. It is called ‘American Express Lounge by Pontus’ and is effectively a smart restaurant where the meals are free!

A Centurion Lounge is due to open at Tokyo Haneda airport in 2025. Newark will follow in 2026.

What are American Express Centurion airport lounges, and where are they?

The first ‘proper’ overseas lounge was Hong Kong, as we covered here. The London Heathrow Terminal 3 lounge opened in 2021 – you can read our review here.

There is also, confusingly, a group of other American Express lounges, which are not always branded as ‘Centurion’. These are generally lower quality than ‘real’ Centurion Lounges. American Express is slowly rebranding them, with the Australian and North/South American lounges now officially Centurion branded.

The two remaining lounges which are not yet rebranded are, I think, in Delhi and Mumbai.

What do Centurion lounges contain?

American Express has set up a special website where you can find all the details of each lounge, including opening times and facilities, here.

Depending on the airport, you will find a cocktail bar, premium wines, hot and cold food, a family room, a computer bar, a spa suite offering free 15-minute treatments and shower suites.

Just because you are using a particular airport does not mean that you can get to the lounge, of course.  It depends on what terminal you are in and how international and domestic passengers are segregated. This isn’t a problem at Heathrow Terminal 3 which does not have any dedicated domestic areas.

Who can use Amex Centurion lounges?

Unfortunately, Centurion lounges in the US have been a victim of their own success and now suffer from overcrowding at peak times.  The entry requirements have been tightened up over the years and you can no longer bring in unlimited children or spend the whole day there. 

Amex has started extending some of its existing lounges. The Centurion Lounge in San Francisco has now nearly doubled in size to almost 3,000 square meters.

Anyone with the following cards can use Centurion lounges:

The Platinum Card from American Express

50,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

American Express Business Platinum

Up to 80,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

Holders of the Centurion Card (sometimes called the Black Card) also have access, although as this card is invite-only we won’t be focussing on it.

UK Platinum Card members are now restricted to two guests although additional day passes can be purchased.

Holders of US-issued Platinum Cards are not allowed to bring guests into Centurion lounges unless they spend $75,000 per year on their card. This rule does not impact UK cardholders.

For the US lounges, you must be 21 years old to enter – unsupervised – if there is a self-service bar.  Lounges with a staffed bar accept unaccompanied guests from age 18.

Are Amex Centurion lounges any good?

Generally speaking the answer is yes. Centurion lounges are well designed spaces with good amenities and normally excellent food and beverage options. You can see our Centurion Lounge reviews here:

As you can see here, we rank the Centurion Lounge at Heathrow Terminal 3 as the fifth best in the terminal. Don’t misunderstand this – Terminal 3 features an unusually high number of outstanding lounges including Cathay Pacific (x2), Virgin Atlantic and Qantas. At almost any other airport a Centurion Lounge is one of, if not the, best.

You can find out more at the dedicated Centurion Lounge website here.


Getting airport lounge access for free from a credit card

How to get FREE airport lounge access via UK credit cards (October 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 1,500 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

50,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

If you have a small business, consider American Express Business Platinum instead.

American Express Business Platinum

Up to 80,000 points when you sign-up 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 £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

PS. You can find all of HfP’s UK airport lounge reviews – and we’ve been to most of them – indexed here.

Comments (28)

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

  • Neil says:

    Anyone had experience of the lounge in Mexico City?

    • Matt says:

      It is fantastic. Amazing food maybe one of the best lounges I’ve ever been to in Mexico city.

      • JDB says:

        @Matt – I take it you are referring the Centurion Lounge at MEX T1 before security? The airside one is tiny and often has a waiting list.

        • Matt says:

          The one before security yes, which does reduce the time you can spend there. I didn’t know there was an airside one!

          There was a typo in my previous answer, I thought that the lounge food in this one was the best lounge food (outside Asia) I ever had, really high quality, waiter service.

    • Nik says:

      There are multiple Centurion lounges at MEX. My experience at T1 was great

      There is a lounge before security. It is slightly hidden and not well signposted (it’s immediately to the left of the security area). I had a 12-hour connection and the lounge staff thankfully waived the ‘no access until 3-hours before flight’ rule. The menu has prices on it but I did not have to pay anything as a UK cardholder. There is a side room where they offer complimentary treatments. My wife had a head/shoulder massage. My daughter wanted to get her nails done but treatments are not available for under-18’s. There was table service for food and drinks. The service was prompt and efficient

      The lounge after security is also good. Same deal with the food and drinks. Prices on menu (no charge as UK cardholder) and table service. No treatment room that I can remember

  • Greg says:

    I used to enjoy the Diners Club lounge at Heathrow T1 which they shared with South African and Icelandair. I also used Diners club elsewhere quite often.

    Do they still exist ?

    • Jonathan says:

      I thought that Diners fully wrapped up their UK personal consumer market before Covid, and closed all accounts.

      A few months ago, I was in China Eastern’s lounge in ICN, and someone came to the reception seeking access with their Diners card, and got turned away.

      The lounge was round the corner of the pay-to-use lounge, which had a queue of several people to enter, needless to say I was glad when I found CE’s lounge, which probably only had about 3-4 other customers in throughout my entire stay there !

  • Ben Y says:

    I’ve only been to three so far – Heathrow, JFK and Buenos Aires. In Buenos Aires I’d forgotten to bring my card and showed them my app. They then told me about three times that lounge access is strictly on presentation of a physical card, then let me in anyway.
    I really liked Heathrow. I was only there for breakfast but the breakfast buffet was very good and it’s a very nice lounge. I also liked Buenos Aires a lot – good selection of drinks and snacks, and also a limited range of food cooked to order. JFK felt a bit more tired and certainly looked a lot more “used” than the other two. The food also wasn’t very good, with the exception of the buffalo wings (a special as it was superbowl night).

  • brian says:

    Big fan of the São Paulo lounge. Usually operating at no more than ~20% capacity ahead of the BA flight at 16.00. Small children’s room for our 4 year old to hang out in and watch some TV. Caipirinha’s from the bar. Decent food offering. Dedicated “Beach” area if you want somewhere even more relaxing.

    Probably my favourite lounge.

  • Andrew says:

    In April this year, I went into the Heathrow Centurion. Whilst I was flying with Delta and able to use the Virgin Upper Class Lounge as I had not had the chance to try the Centurion Lounge I thought I may as well go and see what it was like. Maybe I was unlucky but I thought it was dreadful. Packed, (I think i grabbed the last seat) and the food was awful. It was much smaller than I expected and a real disappointment. Had a quick coffee and then went back to the Virgin lounge which is far better.

    On the way back from the USA, I went to the Centurion Lounge at Atlanta Lounge – this was far far better than the one in Heathrow. Much bigger which meant even though it was busy there was a lot more room and the food was good. A real improvement over the one in Heathrow

    • Lee says:

      Agreed! It is badly managed, the food is dreadful and even the “superior” drinks formy Centurion Card are

  • Jay says:

    Did you miss the Mumbai centurion lounge?

    • Rob says:

      Is it now branded Centurion? Delhi seems not to be. If it is we’ll move it up the list (it is mentioned further down).

  • Ollie says:

    Do the same tipping expectations apply to Centurion lounges as nearly every other service business in that country? Last time I was at the LGA Centurion lounge, I was reading a book at the bar and making my way through the cocktail menu. Every few minutes one person or another was stuffing a couple of dollar bills into the tip jar, without much by the way of a thanks from the bartender, and sometimes even without him noticing. One chap even (I’m sure intentionally) got his cash out before ordering and made It fairly conspicuous that he expected to be served first. It seemed all very de rigeur for them as if they were depositing money in some sort of vending machine in return for their drinks. It seemed so automatic for them that I was quite surprised how much money was being deposited for supposedly complementary drinks (and the service required to furnish these drinks).

  • MKB says:

    As a mere Platinum, I was turned away at both of the Centurion lounges I tried in the past few months due to being full. They are even worse than Priority Pass for availability in my experience.

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