Terminal 5: British Airways Galleries
British Airways operates multiple Galleries lounges in Terminal 5 — Club for business class and Sapphire elites, First for first class and Emerald elites, and the Concorde Room for first on qualifying fares. The Club lounge at T5B and T5C satellite terminals requires a train ride after security; allow 20+ minutes if connecting between T5A and satellite gates.
British Airways operates multiple Galleries lounges in Terminal 5 — Club for business class and Sapphire elites, First for first class and Emerald elites, and the Concorde Room for first on qualifying fares. The Club lounge at T5B and T5C satellite terminals requires a train ride after security; allow 20+ minutes if connecting between T5A and satellite gates.
BA Galleries quality is solid but crowded at peak bank holiday mornings. The First lounge offers spa treatments by appointment. Oneworld Emerald members flying BA or partners can use First lounges when departing on eligible long-haul flights — check fare class rules before assuming access.
Terminal 3: Virgin Clubhouse and Centurion
Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse in Terminal 3 is the headline independent-of-alliance premium lounge at Heathrow — bar service, table service dining, and a relaxed atmosphere that rivals first class lounges globally. Access requires Upper Class, Gold Flying Club, or eligible Virgin credit card perks on departure days.
Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse in Terminal 3 is the headline independent-of-alliance premium lounge at Heathrow — bar service, table service dining, and a relaxed atmosphere that rivals first class lounges globally. Access requires Upper Class, Gold Flying Club, or eligible Virgin credit card perks on departure days.
The American Express Centurion Lounge in T3 accepts Platinum cardholders regardless of airline, with hot food and a cocktail bar. Priority Pass members can use Plaza Premium and other independent lounges in T2, T3, and T4 depending on capacity — see /guides/priority-pass-complete-guide-2026 for access rules.
Terminals 2 and 4: Star Alliance and connections
Terminal 2 (The Queen's Terminal) hosts Star Alliance lounges including United Polaris and Air Canada Maple Leaf for eligible passengers. Terminal 4 serves SkyTeam and some Oneworld flights with respective partner lounges. If connecting between terminals, you generally cannot re-enter a lounge in another terminal without meeting that lounge's access rules on your connecting boarding pass.
Terminal 2 (The Queen's Terminal) hosts Star Alliance lounges including United Polaris and Air Canada Maple Leaf for eligible passengers. Terminal 4 serves SkyTeam and some Oneworld flights with respective partner lounges. If connecting between terminals, you generally cannot re-enter a lounge in another terminal without meeting that lounge's access rules on your connecting boarding pass.
No1 Lounge and Aspire lounges accept Priority Pass and paid walk-in across several terminals. Quality is adequate for a meal and Wi-Fi but below Virgin Clubhouse or BA Galleries First — useful when your airline offers no dedicated space.
Planning lounge time at Heathrow
Heathrow security queues vary wildly by terminal and time of day. Fast Track helps but does not guarantee short waits during summer peaks. Arrive early enough to use a lounge without cutting it close — many lounges close boarding 30 minutes before departure for long-haul.
Heathrow security queues vary wildly by terminal and time of day. Fast Track helps but does not guarantee short waits during summer peaks. Arrive early enough to use a lounge without cutting it close — many lounges close boarding 30 minutes before departure for long-haul.
UK travelers pooling Avios for reward flights often depart from T5; Virgin loyalists from T3. If choosing flights partly for lounge access, factor terminal and alliance before booking. Pair with /guides/avios-points-guide-uk for redemption planning on BA departures.