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Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including the SAS Gold Lounge)

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This is our review of the Scandinavian Airlines lounge in Copenhagen.

The visit was part of a trip to review the SAS long-haul business class service which was organised by the airline.

Whilst most of SAS’ connecting itineraries feature short connections that make the most of Copenhagen’s efficient airport, I had booked myself on a longer four hour layover so that I could take a look at the SAS Lounge.

Unlike other airlines, SAS has just one lounge which is located on the Schengen side of the airport, before passport control. There are no other SAS lounges in the airport.

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

That’s great for European-to-European flights, but less convenient if you are arriving from a non-Schengen destination such as London or the US. Fortunately, Copenhagen’s passport control is super quick and I breezed through within five minutes. Admittedly I was using an EU passport but the queue for all lanes was short.

The lounge knew I was coming, because they had photoshopped my face onto their gigantic screens ….!

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

Access requirements for the SAS Lounge

Although it’s technically one lounge, it is split over two floors depending on what status you have.

The lower floor is accessible to anyone flying in SAS Plus or SAS Business, as well as any SkyTeam business class passengers.

The SAS Gold Lounge is on the upper floor. It is accessible to EuroBonus Diamond and Gold members, as well as SkyTeam Elite Plus passengers flying on SAS or another SkyTeam airline.

It’s impressive that SAS allows its premium economy (SAS Plus) passengers to use the lounge, as most airlines do not include this.

The lounge is open from one hour prior to the first SAS departure of the day to 30 minutes after the last departure.

Inside the SAS Lounge

Arriving at the SAS Lounge, you’ll encounter a lounge attendant who will usher you downstairs or upstairs, depending on your status.

Let’s start with the SAS Lounge on the ground floor. It is quite a low space, in part due to the SAS Gold Lounge above:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

The lounge is split into broadly two sides. The main side, which includes a range of seating and a small buffet:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

The other side, which flanks the windows, is a quieter lounge area with floor to ceiling windows, albeit with a view of the pick-up and drop-off part of the terminal and not the runway.

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

There are some board rooms here which you can use or reserve:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

Back towards the entrance, and far away from most of the seating, you also have a kids’ room with door:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

That’s the standard lounge. If you instead turn right at the entrance, you enter the ….

SAS Gold Lounge

Although it’s technically a more exclusive space, and requires a higher level of status, the SAS Gold Lounge is actually the larger of the two. There’s a very hygge, cosy space on the ground floor with windows to the main terminal:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

The rest of the lounge is up the stairs:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

This is a much airier space than downstairs, thanks to the high ceilings and skylights. You are immediately greeted by a staffed coffee bar where you can have an SAS coffee:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

and

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

There are a range of spaces, from a dining area to a lounging area:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

and

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

Like the lounge downstairs, there is a quieter space overlooking the airport car park which also features some semi-private loungers.

Want to freshen up? Showers are available, although the lounge also features two private cabanas with beds! These are not advertised and available on a first-come-first-served basis. Each comes with a bed, toilet and shower but no proper workspace.

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

Skandinavisk toiletries are provided.

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

If you’re looking to work, there’s a large room with plenty of sharing desks perfect for doing so:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

Also inside here you’ll find some private phone booths and a ‘Daylight Booster’ room that blasts you with 4000lux – 10x what you’d get in a normal office environment. Bring your sunnies – it’s bright!

Food in the SAS Lounges

Although there are two lounges, the food offering was broadly similar when I went. It’s not going to blow you away – no Schengen lounge will, given the volume of short haul passengers with access.

The offering consisted of meatballs in a curry sauce, rice, mashed potatoes and plain meatballs:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

A selection of salads and greens:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

Some cheese, ham, soup, that sort of thing, as well as some sweet treats including pasties at the coffee bar:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

In terms of drinks, you have a selection of wines and beers. In the Gold Lounge, you also have a handful of spirits:

Review: SAS Lounge, Copenhagen Airport (including SAS Gold Lounge)

Champagne is not served but a Spanish cava is – Heretat El Padruell.

Conclusion

Your impression of the SAS Lounge(s) will rest largely on your expectations. This is a Schengen Lounge, accessible by all short haul customers, but there are also long haul passengers who typically expect something better. Yet somehow, it is greater than the sum of its parts.

The food and drink offering is, admittedly, not huge. But I was impressed by the space, particularly the SAS Gold Lounge which feels light and airy, with different zones depending on what you want (A desk to work at? Somewhere close to the buffet? An armchair to relax?)

I’m told SAS will open a much larger lounge when the extension to Terminal 3 opens. Perhaps that lounge will include a differentiated non-Schengen area for long haul customers. For now, however, the SAS Lounge is a cosy place to wait for your flight, as I did.

Coming up will be a detailed look at the SAS business class (review here) and SAS Plus premium economy products (review here).


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 (28)

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

  • Throwawayname says:

    The bit about short haul lounges not being very good is a gross generalisation, there are some pretty solid Schengen lounges out there,

    I’m especially fond of Aegean at SKG with the direct boarding and Pau Casals at BCN where they really make an effort in terms of the catering (something that’s also true for LH at ATH, though the space there is a bit cramped). The AZ one at FCO is also worth a mention as it has some amazing cocktails on offer. I also bet there will be a few places out there that I haven’t visited [recently] and are equally good, if not better.

  • Graham D says:

    “Fortunately, Copenhagen’s passport control is super quick”

    I beg to differ. The past three times I’ve had the misfortune of using CPH, there have been queues in excess of 1.5 hours literally stretching from passport control all the way back to the SAS lounge, so I now actively avoid CPH.

    On my last flight back on BA, the CSD said 11 passengers in Club missed the flight due to the passport control mess.

    Dirty, hot and overcrowded, CPH is by far the worst major hub in Scandinavia.

    As for CPH being efficient, it really, really isn’t.

    • Ian Philip Rogers says:

      I go through once every two weeks, they are jobsworths, God forbid there is a late plane or more than 4 people

    • Danny says:

      Awful airport – with staff that have the personality of a icicle.

    • Kennet says:

      I went through on dec. 18, and it took an hour to get through a completely chaotic line to passport. Non-Schengen passports came through faster. Only two persons to man the entry of EU passports, disabled and crew, while three was manning the non-EU pasport lin..

  • Christian says:

    Agree with Graham’s comment, I used to pass through CPH regularly (until sas left SA) and it’s hit or miss with passport control – EU passport is ok, but on three occasions only a few of the automated gates worked which led to chaos. non-EU lines always v long. Behind passport control it’s a desert. The sas lounge gold area was always overcrowded, very noisy, even in quiet areas people have to have video calls on speaker all the time… Food was very disappointing. Though I have to admit that I’m vegetarian and they are not really well catered for in Scandinavia in general. Outside the lounge, the airport is also often overcrowded, the food and drink options not that great with long waiting times. There’s much better airports for transit / connections.

  • Yvo says:

    Regular traveller to CPH and it’s the exception not the rule that passport control is efficient, always leave longer than expected to get through. It’s a stressful bottleneck.
    For anyone with kids – the aquarium is walkable from the airport so if you have an afternoon flight two hours is plenty in the Blue Planet, they have storage for cases and then you can just wheel yourself round to the airport or take the metro one stop.

  • Charlie says:

    SAS fits very well into Skyteam as we will no doubt hear about tomorrow. Along with KLM serving boxes of tofu and seeds and dodgy cava in biz. Barge and pole to both operators, when possible.

    • Barrel for Scraping says:

      Quite impressive KLM serves cava considering that they’re part of Air France KLM

  • AspirationalFlyer says:

    I’ve used this lounge several times this year. I agree it’s a nice space overall. I agree the barista coffee is good – I had two on my last visit!

    However, the food and drink selection is rather underwhelming. Despite their various faults, the drinks selection is far superior in the BA lounges at Heathrow and Gatwick.

    The SAS lounges can also get rather overcrowded at times, with lots of uncleared plates etc. just flagging this in the interests of balance and because I’ve visited at varying times of the day.

  • Novice says:

    So no hot dish for vegetarians or pescatarians other than mashed potatoes and rice.

  • Adam says:

    Lovely review, due first visit in Feb following a tour of Northern Norway and home with SAS overnight to CPH and then a 10am to non-schengen Dublin. Status match ITA means skyteam elite plus (upstairs hooray). Out of lounge, quick walk to exit Schengen stamp and to gate? Based on the review will get a decent breakfast at the hotel first then rather than expect the big feed at the lounge.

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