Club Aspire at Gatwick South occupies part of what was formerly the Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse — a large and well-designed space that Virgin vacated when it pulled out of Gatwick. The other half became My Lounge; Club Aspire took the remainder. The result is a smaller, calmer Priority Pass lounge that is often a more reliable option than No1 during peak periods, accepts Priority Pass without a mandatory pre-booking fee, and has views of the BA aircraft apron from the main seating area. Its critical limitation is hours: it closes around 1pm, which makes it irrelevant for afternoon and evening departures. For morning flights, it is frequently the best PP option in the terminal.
At a Glance
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Terminal | South Terminal — same level as security; go left from security exit; Club Aspire entrance is among the first you reach on the right |
| Priority Pass | Accepted — pre-booking available but not always mandatory |
| Amex Platinum | Accepted via Priority Pass |
| Cash Rate | Variable — check Lounge Pass website (loungepass.com) for current pricing |
| Opening Hours | Early morning; closes approximately 1pm — morning departures only |
| Food | Hot and cold buffet; food quality broadly above average for format |
| Bar | Staffed bar; standard drinks included |
| Showers | No |
| Children | Permitted |
| Natural light | Yes — windows with views towards the BA aircraft apron |
| Wi-Fi | Complimentary |
Location & Getting There
Club Aspire is on the same level as security at Gatwick South — do not take the escalators down to the main concourse. From the security exit, take the corridor to your left. Club Aspire’s entrance is one of the first you encounter on your right as you enter the mezzanine area — it sits before the No1 and Clubrooms reception desk, which is further along the corridor. My Lounge is immediately adjacent. The layout means Club Aspire is a natural first stop if No1 is showing as full when you arrive — no need to double back.
Access Routes
Club Aspire does not carry the same bulk airline booking load that pushes No1 to capacity — which means it is often enterable at the door when No1 is not, even without a pre-booking. If your departure is before 1pm and No1 is showing full, come here first before accepting that you have no lounge option. Note that Club Aspire Gatwick South is considerably smaller than its Heathrow Terminal 5 counterpart; do not arrive expecting the same scale.
| Route | Detail | Guest Policy | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Priority Pass | All variants accepted including Amex Platinum-issued cards. Pre-booking available and recommended during busy morning periods; not always mandatory. | Guests per card terms | Free with card |
| LoungeKey | Accepted | Per card terms | Free with card |
| DragonPass | Accepted | Per card terms | Free with card |
| Lounge Pass / cash walk-in | Available subject to capacity. Pre-book via loungepass.com for best rate. | N/A | Variable — check loungepass.com |
| My Lounge comparison | My Lounge (adjacent, same cluster) also accepts Priority Pass with a £6 pre-booking fee that includes fast-track security. Club Aspire does not include fast-track in its pre-booking. | — | See My Lounge review |
| Airline status / ticket | Not accepted — independent lounge; no airline partnerships | — | N/A |
The Lounge
Club Aspire at Gatwick South is operated by Swissport’s Aspire lounge brand — separate from No1 Lounges, though the two brands share common ownership through the Collinson-Swissport partnership that controls much of the UK independent lounge market. The lounge occupies part of the former Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse space, which gave it a design inheritance — quality materials, thoughtful layout — that is better than most new independent lounges at this size and tier would typically achieve from scratch. My Lounge occupies the other former Clubhouse half through an adjoining wall; the two share a building but operate completely independently.
The space is clean and comfortably arranged: a staffed bar runs along one side, the buffet station is centrally placed, and seating combines armchairs around coffee tables with small dining-height tables near the windows. One wall faces the BA aircraft apron, giving the lounge genuine views of parked aircraft — a rarer amenity than it sounds in an era of heavily internally-facing terminal designs. The original lounge, when it opened in 2019, featured eight unusual semi-enclosed cubicle-style seats at the top end of the room — somewhere between a pod and an open booth — that attracted considerable comment for being unusual without being particularly practical. These remain.
The lounge is notably smaller than No1 down the corridor, which is both its principal weakness (it fills quickly at busy periods) and its main practical advantage (it tends not to carry the bulk airline booking volumes that push No1 to breaking point at peak times). For walk-in Priority Pass cardholders who have found No1 at capacity, Club Aspire is the natural and most immediate alternative.
Food & Drink
The hot and cold buffet runs from early morning to close — approximately 1pm — rotating between breakfast and all-day formats. Food quality has attracted consistently positive relative feedback: reviewers who have visited both No1 South and Club Aspire on the same trip typically describe Club Aspire’s food as comparable or slightly better in presentation, though neither is an exceptional buffet by any absolute standard. The bar is staffed rather than self-service, which lifts the tone of service beyond the self-pour model at some competitors. Standard wines, beer, and spirits are included. Sparkling wine and champagne attract a supplement — at the time of the most recent HFP review, a bottle of prosecco was priced at around £13 and champagne from £28.
How It Compares
Within the Gatwick South independent lounge cluster, Club Aspire sits below No1 in size and scope but is often more accessible and, during morning peak periods, more reliably enterable. Its 1pm closure is the defining limitation — for afternoon and evening departures it simply does not exist as an option, and No1 becomes the only mainstream PP choice. For morning flights, it is a meaningful alternative to No1 and often a preferable one: quieter, better-presented food, and a staffed rather than self-service bar. My Lounge next door is the third PP option — simpler facilities, a small outdoor terrace, and a children’s gaming area; also available with a £6 PP pre-booking fee that includes fast-track, which Club Aspire’s pre-booking does not.
A solid Priority Pass option that punches above its weight on food quality and calm relative to its size — and above its profile, given how often it goes unnoticed next to No1. The aircraft apron views are a genuine bonus, the staffed bar is a notch above the self-pour standard, and the absence of bulk airline bookings keeps occupancy more manageable than at No1. The 1pm closure is the hard limit: relevant only for morning departures. For those flying before noon from Gatwick South, Club Aspire is worth choosing deliberately rather than treating as a fallback.