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Review: We visit Saudia’s new lounge in Heathrow Terminal 4

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Back in April, Saudia, the Jeddah-based airline, opened a new lounge in Heathrow Terminal 4.

The airline has worked with Plaza Premium on the design, fit out and operation.

Plaza Premium had leased the former two level SkyTeam lounge at Heathrow T4, opening up a new, larger Plaza Premium on the ground floor. Saudia has now taken over what was the upper floor of the SkyTeam lounge as its own space.

On Wednesday, I went down for a tour.

Saudia opens new (SkyTeam) airline lounge at Heathrow Terminal 4

Our visit was hosted by senior members of the Saudia team from Jeddah, which gave us an opportunity to talk in broader detail about what is happening with the airline.

Saudia is on the move ….

If I’m honest, Saudia – in my mind – was not an airline I saw as a top tier carrier. My view started to change when I saw a mock-up of their impressive A321XLR seat at World Travel Market last November, and there is a lot more going on:

  • since 2016, Saudia has jumped from 82nd to 17th in the Skytrax ‘Best Airline Staff & Service’ table
  • for June 2025, Cirium ranked it No 1 globally for on-time departure and arrival performance – a crazy 91.3% on-time arrival rate and a 90.7% on-time departure rate, across almost 17,000 flights
  • some aircraft have full suites in business class, including ‘double bed’ suites
  • it has 118 aircraft on order, plus another 73 for its low cost offshoot flyadeal
  • as well as London, it is opening dedicated lounges in Paris, Istanbul and Dubai
  • having just announced flights to Dammam from November 2025, it now flies from Heathrow to three cities (the other two are Riyadh and Jeddah)
  • other UK routes include Gatwick to Neom, Gatwick to Jeddah, Birmingham to Jeddah and Manchester to Jeddah

Inside the new Heathrow Terminal 4 lounge

Let’s cover a key point first. This is NOT a SkyTeam lounge. You cannot get in if you are flying from Terminal 4 on Air France, KLM, Vietnam Airlines or China Eastern.

I asked why this is the case and did not receive a satisfactory answer. It is not uncommon for flagship lounges at home airports to get a carve out (eg Virgin Atlantic’s Clubhouse in Terminal 3) but this is just a – primarily – business class lounge at an outstation.

Saudia opens new (SkyTeam) airline lounge at Heathrow Terminal 4

That said, it is a very good lounge. Of course, the lack of SkyTeam passengers – meaning that it was never busy when we were there – is part of its appeal.

The lounge is 850 square metres, with capacity for 174 guests. You can enter if you are flying Saudia in First or Business Class, or are in Economy with Alfursan Gold or Silver frequent flyer status. The list posted on the front desk does NOT say that SkyTeam elites with other airlines, flying Saudia, can use it.

The two images above are PR shots, but are accurate. The one immediately above is just after you enter and is the tea bar, where you can enjoy ‘a bespoke London Tea Exchange experience’.

This is, of course, a dry lounge. However, I was impressed by what Saudia has done to offset this.

The ‘tea experience’ is novel. You have different options laid out:

Review Saudia lounge Heathrow Terminal 4

There appeared to be a dedicated member of staff overseeing this and able to advise. There are also 10 premium teas available in hand stitched bags by the buffet.

If you usually have champagne, you can have a glass of dealcoholized sparkling chardonnay instead:

Saudia lounge Heathrow Terminal 4 drinks

There is also Kronenbourg 1664, Lyre’s Italian Spritz, Warner’s Pink Berry gin, Tanqueray gin, Lyre’s coffee liqueur, white wine and rose wine – all 0%.

There is also a wide range of smoothies, wellness shots, milkshakes, fresh juices and mocktails on the drinks menu. There was some really good stuff there, especially at the tea bar, and unless you are a hardened alcoholic I think you’ll enjoy working through it as I did.

At the back of the lounge is a large buffet:

Saudia Heathrow Terminal 4 lounge buffet

Anyone who has had a Middle Eastern hotel buffet will recognise the mix on offer.

You’ve got scrambled egg with chive, roasted tomatoes, chicken sausage, lots of fresh fruit, breakfast cereals, pastries, cheese etc, but also shakhouka egg tahini dressing, olive, zucchini and sundried tomato frittata, foul jarrah goulabah etc. Even the butter selection gives you a choice of parsley butter, sun-dried tomato butter or truffle butter.

To the side of the buffet is a (possibly pop-up) stall with ice cream and Lindt chocolates:

Saudia lounge Heathrow Terminal 4 review

First Class and VIP passengers

First Class passengers have a dedicated seating area to the left of the entrance – everyone else will turn to the right:

Saudia lounge Heathrow Terminal 4

Apart from getting a yellow chair, it wasn’t clear what else may be special about this corner!

In the same area is a VIP room – this is a PR photo as it was being set up for the presentation we received when I went in:

Saudia Lounge Heathrow Terminal 4 lounge

Whilst I didn’t see them, the lounge also has showers (Urban Apothecary amenities) and prayer rooms.

Conclusion

I was pleasantly surprised by the new Saudia lounge in Heathrow Terminal 4.

The quality of everything – from the design to the fit-out to the food to the expansive range of non-alcoholic drink options – was better than I anticipated.

If you are flying Saudia in the near future, you are in for a treat. It’s just a shame that the space isn’t open to passengers on other SkyTeam carriers.

Saudia’s Heathrow lounge is open from 7:00am to 10:00pm, covering Saudia’s first and last flights of the day.

Comments (49)

  • Manya says:

    Sometimes my kids throw a strop when I say they can’t have ice cream for breakfast but nothing like the adults on here complaining about being ‘dictated’ to about when they can have alcohol.

  • Phillip says:

    Saudia is probably the airline that impressed me the most during my SAS challenge.

    As for the people who feel so strongly about their freedom of choice taken away by the fact that it’s a dry airline, I could argue that there are many other food and drink items that I would like to see offered but just because they are not, I don’t go shouting that they’re trying to impose things on me or taking my freedom away! We make choices for various reasons, so if alcohol is important to you, fair enough, choose differently!

    • Novice says:

      I agree.

      Some of us don’t want to be around people who are in lounges just to get drunk. Do we complain that our choice for a peaceful place to chill out is taken away from us when we have to access buffet with people swaying over the food? No. Because we understand that the world doesn’t revolve around us.

      This is like those stupid idiots not wanting to use masks during Covid because apparently they didn’t want anyone to dictate anything to them. They are fine getting dictated to by all the people who are actually dictating their lives eg. Parents, family, partners, kids, teachers, media, politicians, employers etc. It just has to be people who benefit them, who dictate to them. But logically, then they don’t have any right to complain about just one thing.

      • camille55 says:

        Disagree. Not everyone is in a lounge “just to get drunk”, in fact the vast majority drink within reason.

        Perhaps the issue is not that the lounge is dry…..rather WHY it is dry? On one angle, its curtailment of freedom of choice. On another, its the imposition or ‘creep’ of (a) religous ideology that we may not agree with.

        Come to my dinner party – you’re offered meat or an alternative if you are a veggie….because I am being considerate about your beliefs. Most lounges do this.

        Go to dinner party at veggie’s house – meat never offered, because of their beliefs. No cosideration, just dictat. Arguabally, this is Saudia.

        • memesweeper says:

          > Go to dinner party at veggie’s house – meat never offered

          That is not universally true. I do not eat meat but cheerfully cook and serve it.

    • Throwawayname says:

      I do detest the imposition of philosophical viewpoints, but I also agree that SV is fully entitled to arrange its affairs in the way it likes and that it’s a really good airline nowadays.

  • Lawrence says:

    I am LOVING a decent non-alcoholic range. I don’t drink pre-flight (and, seldom on a flight) and really appreciate a lounge giving me more choice than a glass of orange juice, a cup of machine coffee or a can of diet coke

    The tea bar looks amazing, and those zero alcohol spirits are a really nice touch

  • Duck Ling says:

    I am not much of a drinker either so rate highly any airline that offers a widened range of non-alcoholic beverages. Put it this way, an airline that serves good espresso based coffee drinks is more important to me than one that serves good champagne.

    Having flown some of the ‘dry’ airlines before this is often my bugbear – if you are not going to serve booze at least put some effort into your non-alcoholic offerings especially in biz. When I flew Saudia last (albeit about ten years ago) there was nothing apart from the usual juice/pepsi/usual soft drink range. Seeing some more recent reviews it seems they have really expanded this.

  • Novice says:

    This is the exact type of lounge that was missing in the airports. A peaceful atmosphere where people are drinking tea in a calm manner or drinking all the other drinks that are having no negative effects on their health or behaviour that can affect their fellow passengers as they would all end up in the same metal tube. No people looking like they belong in a pub or a brewery. No people swaying around over the food, stinking like they had a booze shower. No idiotic behaviour in the flight causing flight disruption and/or flight diversions.

    It actually sounds great in terms of safety as well. Imagine being in a plane emergency situation where most passengers have been drinking. The responses would be slow, aggressive and they may cause you injury because these people didn’t want to be dictated to that they needed to leave their belongings and get a life jacket on and make their way through exit. And, you might be behind them so despite not drinking and knowing that you need to get out asap, you might be stuck just like those passengers stuck in all the news reports of flights that got diverted due to some passengers not wanting to be dictated to when they decided they needed a cigarette pronto or alcohol related fights mid-air.

    So, yeah it is good having a choice.

    • Dawn says:

      I agree. One flight to South Africa a guy was offloaded at LHR as he was so drunk he could hardly stand up. He got off the plane and had to come back as he’s taken most of the belongings from another passenger with him.
      Then on our return flight from Perth to Doha recently, I was kept awake most of the night by 2 very loud and very drunk British people in the lounge on the A380. They were so drunk they struggled to walk down the aisle and kept bumping into people.
      Another flight I had an American guy burping and stinking of booze the whole flight.
      I’m fed up with flying with people who just can’t control their drinking.

      • Rhys says:

        You appear to be attracting all the drunks Dawn! Don’t think I’ve ever been disturbed by visibly drunk passengers on a long haul flight before…

  • Throwawayname says:

    The Skyteam access question is an issue that needs to be addressed.

    It would be really helpful if the HfP team could reach out to the alliance itself saying something like ‘our readers have raised concerns about the lounge not admitting STE+ passengers and this creating a precedent’ etc and see wat they respond with.

    • Throwawayname says:

      *what

    • JDB says:

      If you value lounge quality and serenity it sets a very good precedent to maintain an exclusivity of access. It’s the excessive widening of access that has led to lounge quality deterioration in terms of fittings/furniture, ambiance and F&B offering. Limiting entry is a good way to stop it becoming yet another LCD lounge.

      It’s good for Saudia passengers and the airline is right to preserve its investment.

      • Throwawayname says:

        Saudia isn’t right to undermine the investment of Skyteam flyers in obtaining status with the alliance on the basis of having explicitly being promised lounge access to every lounge (other than F ones) of every member airline anytime they take an international flight with any Skyteam member.

        I can’t believe that I am having to make this point on a frequent flyer website.

        • JDB says:

          It’s when you use the word “promise” that it all goes wrong because there is no such promise. The problem is that airlines are giving away status too easily including with fake and temporary status matches essentially without the passenger investment to which you refer.

          This sense of entitlement seems to overwhelm any sense of actually having some better quality lounges. What Saudia has created here looks excellent but for some vital principle/precedent/entitlement you would rather have this lounge massively downgraded by having an endless procession of cheapo ticket short haul. How ridiculous to endorse a race to the bottom.

          Qatar also protects its lounges from the masses which is perhaps why people like them more than most lounges.

          As you point out, this lounge could also just be recast as an F lounge to which they exceptionally allow business passengers on that flight access. This seems to be what you are encouraging.

          • Throwawayname says:

            They’re not giving status away too easily,m. They have full control of the requirements and it works for them in a global basis. They’re free to set the terms of membership too. What they aren’t free to do is advertise a product that’s different from what’s actually provided.

          • JDB says:

            @Throwawayname – Saudia isn’t advertising any product to you and nor is any SkyTeam airline. Lounge carveouts are everywhere. It’s all very much on a best efforts basis rather than anything contractual. All you are effectively saying is that Saudia should rebrand its lounge as the Saudia Tea House and limit access officially. Does that change anything.

            As for status matches, they are either free or cheap and rife and from comments taken up by many who have no intention of actually earning status in Y2.

            It would appear you are too young to remember the days when lounges were civilised places rather than the zoos many have no become.

            It’s a real shame if, when an airline creates a high quality space, all you want to do is to ensure it is overcrowded, degraded and downgraded. All very entitled Britain.

          • Throwawayname says:

            @JDB, there IS an explicit carveout for the clubhouse and for access on domestic itineraries, there ISN’T one for the Saudia lounge.

            It’s like the VS voucher, they make you spend £10k on the credit card for the bloody voucher and they decide that you can’t use it if you’ve got a connection on an award. They were at liberty to publish the terms before the money got spent, the fact that they didn’t means that they’re not compliant with their s.49 CRA obligation to provide a service with reasonable care and skill.

      • BlairWaldorfSalad says:

        LCD lounge lol. Quite a few LED lounges out there too. E meaning English 🤭 #BritsAbroad

        • JDB says:

          Yes, as an Englishman I can safely say that my compatriots are by far the worst at lowering the tone of lounges, hotels and restaurants and allowing their children to run riot.

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    “It’s just a shame that the space isn’t open to passengers on other SkyTeam carriers.”

    It’s not like there aren’t other ST lounges people can use.

    I assume – because I don’t see it mentioned – that there is no issue with people flying on Saudia who want a drink being able to access the other ST lounges?

    This maybe one way to head off any problems with people expecting booze to be available and then finding out there isn’t and kicking up a fuss.

    • Throwawayname says:

      I’m pretty certain there are NO Skyteam airline lounges at LHR other than this one and the VS clubhouse which also has weird sui generis rules (which at least are spelled out in that case). You might get access to an Aspire or something if you’re lucky.

      • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

        But there are lounges that offer ST access even if it is an aspire / plaza or whatnot and that is what matters.

        An airline lounge does not have to be operated by a specific airline for it to offer access to alliance members.

    • Doommonger says:

      I saw what you did there, bone dry humour.

  • BlairWaldorfSalad says:

    I have had a look at the SkyTeam website for consumers and lounge access is indeed a benefit for STE+ (we all knew this) but they very much tie it to being lounge access as set out in the lounge finder. There are quite some oddities in there so I don’t think Saudia are out of line entirely here. Whether allowing such carve outs is net positive for SkyTeam is another matter. Some will want blanket access; some will appreciate a more sedate Saudia lounge.

    • Throwawayname says:

      The lounge finder is far from accurate, e.g. it suggests that Saudia passengers don’t get any access to a contract lounge at BHX, no matter their status or cabin.

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