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Leeds Bradford opens two new lounges – with the UK’s biggest Priority Pass ‘buy up’

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Leeds Bradford Airport opened the first part of its terminal extension last week, and as part of this it launched what it describes as ‘upgraded lounge experiences’.

There is one new lounge and a refurbished lounge. You can see more on the airport website here.

Both accept Dragonpass and Priority Pass, although a substantial additional payment (£39) is required for the premium lounge.

Leeds Bradford Airport

What has changed at Leeds Bradford Airport?

A refurbished basic lounge, The Avro Lounge

The Avro Lounge occupies the space which was previously known as The Yorkshire Lounge, between Gate 8 and Gate 9.

This lounge is not currently available for booking, either outright for cash or for pre-booking with lounge club cards. It is open for walk-ins using Priority Pass or Dragonpass.

It is described as:

a bright and ultramodern lounge designed to cater for travellers seeking a quiet escape before their flight. From cosy sofas to dedicated workspaces, all with access to power outlets and wifi, the Avro Lounge is the perfect escape before your flight. 

The key thing to note is that The Avro Lounge does not serve hot food and does not offer a full bar service. You will need to upgrade to the other lounge if you want this.

What it does offer is:

  • free hot drinks
  • free cold soft drinks
  • free house beer, house red wine and house white wine, capped at three alcoholic drinks per person
  • free light snacks and fruit platters
  • free kids boxes with savoury snacks and fruit
Leeds Bradford Avro Lounge

In terms of food:

  • at breakfast – fresh pastries, cereals, fruit
  • rest of the day – waiter-served snack platter including olives, tortilla chips and sundried tomatoes to ‘keep you nourished without overindulging’

Here’s some unsolicited reader feedback we received yesterday:

“We had the misfortune of experiencing the Leeds Bradford Priority Pass offering on Sunday. Avro was truly awful. Freezing cold, minimal offerings – beer, red or white wine. When someone asked what the wines were, they were told “it’s red wine from a tap”!

Waiter service but not enough staff, only one girl on when we were there who was restocking, serving, cleaning and was totally overwhelmed (and pretty rude but I could understand why!).

Food: plain tortilla chips, olives and fruit cake, and a bowl of apples and oranges. That’s it. If you’d paid for it, you’d be gutted .…”

As we noted above, you can’t actually pay at the moment, at least in advance. It’s not clear if the offering will change once cash bookings are available.

Leeds Bradford Avro lounge

A new premium lounge, Six Eight One

Six Eight One is a brand new lounge in a brand new space in the terminal extension. Image below.

It is positioned as a ‘premium lounge …. designed for travellers who appreciate the finer details and a touch of exclusivity.’

It is certainly premium priced at £54 per person. There is a £15 discount if you can show a Priority Pass or Dragonpass.

As part of the premium approach, children are banned. You must be 16+ to enter.

Facilities include:

  • Complimentary bar service with four complimentary alcoholic drinks per person
  • Selection of premium beers, wines and spirits served directly to your table
  • Complimentary hot and cold drinks
  • Buffet-style dining

The lounge has its own signature cocktail, the Yorkshire Lass. This is an ‘elegant blend of rhubarb and ginger gin, zesty lemon juice, Passoã, and a touch of Aqua Faba to offer the perfect balance of tart and sweet, finished with a silky smooth texture’.

The food selection looks pretty good.

You can see more on the website, but the lunch and evening selections include (to quote):

Six Eight One lounge Leeds Bradford Airport
  • Meat & Poultry Favourites: French-style chicken chasseur, Moroccan braised beef or lamb tagine with bulghur wheat and tzatziki, or classic British dishes like giant Yorkshire puddings filled with roast meats, creamy mash, stuffing, and rich gravy.
  • Global Flavours: Chicken tikka masala with pilaf rice and naan, or beef madras with flatbread.
  • Vegetarian & Vegan Options: Red Thai vegetable curry, creamy mushroom pie, or plant-based chilli sin carne with rice and salsa.
  • Pasta Dishes: Choose from penne with rich tomato and basil sauce, fusilli with pesto crème fraiche and spinach, or vegan gnocchi with mushrooms, squash, and vegan nduja.
  • Sides & Vegetables: Rotating seasonal vegetables and accompaniments such as roast potatoes, new potatoes, cauliflower, braised red cabbage, and more.

Opening hours

Both lounges are open from 4am to 8pm daily during the summer. The closing time has historically been earlier during the winter.

A dress code applies – no shorts, baseball caps, football shirts or fancy dress allowed.

No groups of more than four adults are allowed.

What does it cost?

The Avro Lounge can be accessed for free with Priority Pass or Dragonpass. Online cash bookings are not currently possible but the link is here.

When they are available, pre-booking will also be possible for Priority Pass and Dragonpass holders, presumably for a small fee.

Six Eight One costs £54 per person when pre-booked. Priority Pass and Dragonpass holders get a £15 discount, although at £39 this is easily the most expensive ‘buy up’ option of any UK airport lounge. The Priority Pass website does not reflect this option – it only shows The Avro Lounge – but the airport website confirms the above pricing.

You can find out more about the new lounges on the Leeds Bradford website here.

Comments (62)

  • Paul says:

    The pic at the top is of the rejected new terminal. LBA has had a terminal extension and current terminal being refurbished instead.

  • Thegasman says:

    I’m in favour of the limit on alcoholic drinks & 3-4 per person should be plenty for anyone but only if they use these savings to provide better food/soft drink options. Sounds like the Avro lounge is just cheap skating on everything though. At least it might mean Priority Pass entry is possible in the mornings & it should be a more relaxing environment without all the drunken louts.

    • John says:

      I’m glad the alcohol police are here to save us from ourselves. Thank you for your service.

  • ed_fly says:

    £54 for four drinks and some buffet food…. I’ve some sympathy with the previous poster regarding how many alcoholic drinks should be consumed in a lounge. But that price point is not offering value to me. To be fair I don’t know what f&b options are available at LBA. But I’d rather take my money elsewhere

    • JDB says:

      The price point may be wrong but the concept of charging to improve the quality of both offering and guests is here to stay and can only be a good thing for those who want better, more civilised lounges.

      • ed_fly says:

        Don’t disagree with you, just not sure that a vat of ‘penne pasta with rich tomato and basil sauce’ or ‘giant Yorkshire puddings filled with roast meats’ sitting on a buffet counter under a hot lamp is delivering on quality. As stated I don’t know LBA, but in general, I’d probably opt for a restaurant, with a nice glass of wine that I’ve chosen, hopefully from a reasonable list.

  • Charlie says:

    I recall the last time I slurped a Yorkshire lass, the taste was definitely more tart than sweet, and the finish was neither silky or smooth.

  • TimM says:

    EasyJet always defaults to Leeds & Bradford airport for me, presumably because a cookie remembers my post code but LBA is such a sod to get to. I was dismayed when the very expensive ‘upgrade’ was announced not to include even a rail link! LBA may be geographically my closest airport but it is two trains and a lengthy bus connection away. Even by car, the awful journey around the outside of Bradford is unfathomable.

    Much as I detest Manchester airport, it at least has a train station (it would have been two stations if HS2 had not been cancelled).

    So the lounges at LBA are purely academic. It sounds like they have not even got their value equations right. It would be better to take your own pork pies, wine glasses and treat yourself to a bottle of plonk from duty free.

  • Jack says:

    I’ve had the misfortune of a visit to the Avro lounge, it’s cold, uncomfortable and the food offerings are woefully inadequate. Profiteering at its finest. We’ll done LBA

  • Barney Boy says:

    This is just a continuation of price increases for any ancillary products at LBA. Fast Track is now £9. When I booked FT for Easter it was £6 albeit booked well in advance. Prior to that the FT was pathetic in that you save around 5 mins.

    The old Yorkshire lounge was decent enough and had no issues accessing it using PP. It was maybe this time last year you could pre-book through LBA if you had PP for £20. Ridiculous. Whilst I’d be happy to pay say £6 to pre-book through PP at Manchester who pays £20 per person to pre-book a PP visit in a paid lounge.

    At Easter there was a queue of 20+ people waiting to access the lounge and needless to say they weren’t admitting PP members.
    The whole pricing strategy isn’t well thought out. The lounges will likely fail to attract repeat business.

    Parking has gone the same way. Paid more for 4 days at LBA at Easter than 9 days at LHR.

    A drinks limit isn’t an issue given this isn’t a hub – generally you’ll get an hour in a lounge at LBA, but this takes away any premium feel.

    Personally we have already begun to use MAN more even though LBA is 30 mins closer as the whole experience at LBA is just average and the pricing and now reported quality just isn’t what you want or expect.

  • broomy23 says:

    This article affirms my belief that it is better to sit in the terminal than pay for PP or lounge access. Lounges are often busier as well…

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