The Concorde Room sits within British Airways' Terminal 5 South building at Heathrow, adjacent to but separate from the Galleries First lounge. It is named after the supersonic aircraft that once defined BA's premium ambitions, and the lounge still carries that sense of occasion — this is not a holding pen with better chairs, but a genuine pre-flight dining and relaxation experience designed for passengers about to turn left onto a long-haul flight.
Access is tightly controlled. You qualify if you are flying BA First on a same-day long-haul departure, if you hold oneworld Emerald status and are departing on a oneworld long-haul flight, or if you are a BA Executive Club Gold or Gold Guest List member departing on a same-day long-haul Club World or First flight. One guest is permitted for First passengers and Emerald members. Notably, Gold members connecting from a short-haul Euro Traveller flight onto long-haul Club World do not qualify unless the long-haul sector is the same day — a restriction worth knowing before you plan a connection strategy around Concorde Room access.
Dining is the centrepiece. Unlike the buffet-driven Galleries First lounge nearby, the Concorde Room serves a full à la carte menu with table service — eggs any style and a full English at breakfast, followed by a seasonal lunch and dinner menu with proper starters, mains, and desserts. The cocktail bar pours premium spirits and Champagne, and the wine list reflects BA's Master of Wine curation. On FlightLogic's visit ahead of a Club Suite crossing to JFK, the pre-flight meal was genuinely restaurant-quality — the kind of experience that makes arriving at the airport early feel like a choice rather than a chore.
Beyond dining, the lounge offers Elemis spa treatments (bookable on arrival, complimentary for qualifying passengers), shower suites with full-size toiletries, and a quiet work area with power at every seat. The space is smaller and more intimate than the Galleries lounges — rarely crowded because of the restricted access — which is itself a luxury at Heathrow. The First Wing check-in and security lane adjacent to the Concorde Room can get qualifying passengers airside in under ten minutes.
For most UK travellers, the Concorde Room represents the ceiling of what is achievable at Heathrow without holding first-class tickets on Gulf or Asian carriers. It is meaningfully better than the Galleries First lounge (which downgraded to buffet-only dining in recent years), and it pairs naturally with Club Suite or First on the flight itself. If you are chasing Gold status or considering a BA First redemption specifically to experience the ground product, the Concorde Room alone can justify the effort.