British Airways Galleries Club — Heathrow T5
The BA Galleries Club lounges at Heathrow T5 are among the most visited business class lounges in the world — and among the most debated. Three separate Club spaces serve the terminal: North and South in the main T5A building, and a third in the T5B satellite. They share the same access rules and broadly the same format, but differ significantly in atmosphere. North is the busiest and most functional. South is larger and slightly more polished. T5B is the one frequent flyers quietly recommend to anyone who’ll listen.
The lounges were partially refreshed in late 2023, with new seating and updated bar areas. The improvements are genuine but they haven’t resolved the core tension: these are high-volume lounges operating at a hub that handles tens of millions of passengers annually, and the experience reflects that. Crowding is a persistent issue at North and South during peak hours. If your flight departs from the B or C gates, the T5B lounge is worth the short walk or train connection — it consistently offers a quieter, calmer experience than either of its main terminal counterparts.
British Airways Galleries Club Lounges
British Airways · T5A (North & South) and T5B · London Heathrow
Three business class lounges across T5. Buffet dining, self-serve bar, showers at all locations. T5B is the quietest — worth the walk if your gate allows it.
At a Glance
| Terminals | T5A — Galleries Club North (440 seats) and South (830 seats), upper level after security. T5B — Galleries Club B Gates (370 seats), mezzanine level between Gates B35 and B36. |
| Opening Hours | 05:00–22:00 daily (all three locations) |
| Capacity | North: 440 seats. South: 830 seats. T5B: 370 seats. |
| Dining Style | Buffet self-service throughout the day. Afternoon tea 15:00–18:00. No à la carte, no made-to-order meals. |
| Showers | Yes — available at all three locations. Book via the BA app or at reception. Queue advisable at peak times. |
| Wi-Fi | Complimentary. Speed variable — adequate for browsing, inconsistent for large transfers. |
| Quiet Zone | Partial. T5B consistently quieter. South has a cinema room and calmer rear section. North: limited. |
| Children | Welcome. Dedicated kids’ playroom at North and South. |
Access Routes
BA Galleries Club lounges operate a closed-access policy. They do not accept Priority Pass, Amex Platinum, Dragon Pass, LoungeKey, or any third-party card scheme. There is no walk-up day pass and no Avios redemption option. Access is strictly by ticket class or Executive Club / oneworld status.
| Route | Detail | Guest Policy | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Club World / Club Europe ticket | Any BA-operated business class flight departing same day | Guests may be purchased at check-in — subject to availability | Included in fare |
| Oneworld business class ticket | Business class on Iberia, Qatar Airways, American Airlines, or other oneworld carrier departing T5 same day | As per operating carrier policy | Included in fare |
| BA Executive Club Silver | Access to Galleries Club (not First). Must be travelling on a BA or oneworld flight same day, any cabin. | One guest permitted | Free with status |
| Oneworld Sapphire | Equivalent to BA Silver — access to Galleries Club. Must be travelling on a oneworld flight. | One guest permitted | Free with status |
| Priority Pass | Not accepted at any BA Galleries lounge | — | N/A |
| Amex Platinum | Not accepted at BA Galleries lounges. Amex Platinum Priority Pass does not grant entry. | — | N/A |
| Dragon Pass / LoungeKey | Not accepted | — | N/A |
| Day pass (walk-up) | Not available. BA does not sell lounge access to non-qualifying passengers. | — | N/A |
| Avios redemption | Not available. Avios cannot be used to purchase lounge access. | — | N/A |
If you hold Amex Platinum or a Priority Pass and are flying economy from T5, the nearest alternatives are the Aspire Lounge (near Gate A18, accepts Priority Pass) and Plaza Premium T5 (accepts Priority Pass and Amex Platinum). See our separate reviews.
The Lounge
The three Galleries Club spaces share a design language: hardwood floors, British upholstery in navy and grey, high ceilings and large window walls that bring in natural light and aircraft views. South is the most spacious, with 830 seats spread across multiple zones including a kids’ area, a 20-seat cinema room, and a quieter rear section. North is narrower and more linear — seating flows around a central buffet corridor, with an indoor terrace overlooking the concourse and a counter of window seats facing the runway. T5B is a single main room with armchair seating updated in 2023; it’s smaller than either T5A lounge but significantly less frenetic.
Crowding is the single most common complaint at North and South during peak hours — the comparison to a busy railway station appears regularly in recent guest reviews, and it isn’t unfair during morning banking or school holiday peaks. Power outlets are sparser than modern lounges of equivalent size, which becomes frustrating on longer dwell times. T5B avoids most of these issues simply through lower footfall. If you have 90 minutes or more and a B or C gate departure, the satellite lounge is the right choice.
Food & Drink
Food is buffet throughout the day, with no made-to-order option and no staffed à la carte service. Breakfast runs until mid-morning with a full hot selection — eggs, bacon, sausage — alongside pastries, fruit and yoghurt. Through the day, the buffet transitions to sandwiches, hot savouries, salads and lighter snacks. Afternoon tea replaces hot food between 15:00 and 18:00 with sandwiches and cakes, including gluten-free options on request. Quality is functional rather than memorable — adequate for skipping the onboard meal on a short-haul, unremarkable against the better independent lounges. Portions are replenished regularly and the food arrives hot at breakfast; the consensus from recent reviews is that quality has improved modestly since the 2023 refresh, though it remains below expectations for one of the world’s busiest hub airports.
Drinks are entirely self-serve. The bar selection is solid: a range of spirits, wine, beer — including a draught Heineken tap tucked away at the rear of South — and a full soft drinks selection. T5B has one genuine distinguishing feature on the drinks side: the Whispering Angel bar, a self-serve rosé station pouring the well-regarded Château d’Esclans rosé, which is absent from the North and South lounges. Coffee comes from automatic machines only at all three locations; there is no barista service. The wine selection has attracted some criticism for declining quality in recent reviews, though spirits and beer remain well stocked. The champagne and wine bar is a self-serve station available throughout the day.
Showers
Shower suites are available at all three locations, designed as individual fully private pods with Elemis toiletries, towels provided, and a wall-mounted hairdryer. The facilities are functional and maintained to an acceptable standard, though the aesthetic is dated — one reviewer’s description of “hospital-style” is unkind but not entirely inaccurate. At peak times, waits can be significant: 20–30 minutes is not unusual at North and South on busy mornings. Showers can be reserved via the BA app in advance or at the lounge reception desk — using the app to check availability before leaving your seat is strongly advisable. T5B tends to have shorter waits due to lower overall footfall.
Getting In
Access is straightforward in structure but narrow in practice. You need either a same-day business or first class ticket on BA or a oneworld partner, or BA Silver / oneworld Sapphire status (or above) travelling on any oneworld flight. There is no third-party card access, no day pass, no walk-up option and no Avios redemption path. This makes the BA Galleries Club one of the most restricted business class lounges in Europe for anyone without qualifying status or a premium ticket.
For Silver members, one guest is permitted. Note that guests must be travelling on a flight both operated and marketed by a oneworld member airline — a companion on a non-oneworld or codeshare-only flight cannot be brought in. If you hold Amex Platinum and are flying economy from T5, Priority Pass does not grant access here: use Aspire (Gate A18) or Plaza Premium T5 instead.
One practical note for T5B visitors: if your flight departs from the A gates, return via the Level -4 underground walkway — not the transit train. Taking the train from T5B drops you into the arrivals stream, requiring you to clear immigration and security again. The walkway takes around seven minutes at a normal pace and puts you back into departures. Signs from the lifts near Boots in the B gates concourse point the way.
Functional, occasionally frustrating, and better than its reputation if you choose the right location. The T5B satellite lounge is the standout — quieter, calmer, and meaningfully more pleasant than North or South without any difference in facilities or access rules. Food and showers are adequate rather than impressive, and crowding at peak times remains a genuine problem in the main terminal lounges. As a status perk it represents reasonable value; as a benchmark for what a flagship hub lounge should deliver, it falls short. If your gate allows it, go to T5B.