Heathrow Terminal 3 has one of the strongest lounge line-ups at any European airport — and since mid-2025 it also has a viable option for Priority Pass holders for the first time. The terminal is home to Virgin Atlantic, most oneworld carriers, the only Amex-operated Centurion Lounge in the UK, and three independently operated lounges from the No1 group. Eleven lounges in total. If you hold BA Gold or oneworld Emerald status, your options are genuinely excellent. If you hold Amex Platinum, you have the best card-access lounge in any UK terminal. If you hold Priority Pass, there are now three lounges that will accept you — a meaningful change from the zero options that existed before April 2025.
At a Glance
Pass
Plat
world
Team
ers
Saph+ = oneworld Sapphire and above | Emrld = oneworld Emerald only | Elite+* = SkyTeam Elite Plus on VS-operated flights only — verify before travel | Amex Plat column = Priority Pass card from Amex Platinum accepted at No1/My Lounge; Centurion Lounge requires the Platinum card itself | ✗ = not accepted
Best for BA Gold / oneworld Emerald
BA Gold members transiting T3 have access to three first class lounges via oneworld Emerald status — the Cathay Pacific First Class Lounge, the Qantas Lounge, and the American Airlines First Class Lounge. The Cathay First Lounge is the right default: compact, quiet, and consistently the best-maintained lounge in the terminal. The noodle bar is a genuine differentiator — made-to-order hot dishes that nothing else at T3 matches for a pre-departure meal. For a longer pre-departure window, combining the Qantas Lounge for the gin bar and à la carte restaurant with the Cathay First Lounge for quiet before the gate is a legitimate strategy and perfectly achievable if time allows.
The AA First Class Lounge is the third option — meaningfully better than the Admirals Club next door, with à la carte dining and a champagne station at the entrance, but below the Qantas and Cathay First lounges on every measure except opening time. Its value is at 5am, when it may be the only first class option with food service running. The BA Galleries First lounge is also available to Emerald holders but is the weakest first class lounge at the terminal — use it only as a fallback or for the early departure it opens at 05:00.
BA Gold members departing T3 often assume the Centurion Lounge or the BA Galleries lounge is their best option. Neither is. oneworld Emerald status opens the Cathay Pacific First Class Lounge and Qantas Lounge on any oneworld flight from T3, regardless of your cabin on the day. These are significantly better rooms. Make sure your Emerald credential is accessible at the desk — it is worth the two-minute walk.
Best for BA Silver / oneworld Sapphire
The Cathay Pacific Business Class Lounge is the clear first choice for oneworld Sapphire holders at T3 — and a meaningfully better room than anything BA Silver unlocks at T5. Complimentary showers with Bamford toiletries, a noodle bar, hot and cold buffet, and a calm, well-maintained environment that consistently draws strong reviews. Many BA Silver members are unaware the access applies to partner carrier lounges and default to the BA Galleries Club or Centurion Lounge instead. For anyone with Sapphire status on a oneworld flight from T3, the Cathay Business Lounge should be the first stop.
The Qantas Lounge is the alternative for Sapphire holders — a two-floor room with a staffed gin bar, cocktail bar, barista coffee, and à la carte dining at specific windows. It is a strong second option and, for some visits, preferable to the Cathay Business Lounge on food and bar quality. One caveat: at peak periods before the QF2 evening departure, Qantas has been known to prioritise its own passengers and turn away third-party oneworld guests — midweek visits are less likely to encounter this. The BA Galleries Club and Admirals Club are the fallbacks for early morning departures before the Cathay and Qantas lounges open.
Best for Virgin Atlantic Upper Class / Flying Club Gold
The Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse is the lounge to use — one of the best business class lounges at Heathrow and consistently among the best in Europe. À la carte table service, a serious cocktail bar, complimentary showers, and a large windowed room with apron views make it the most enjoyable pre-departure experience at T3. Verify current facilities at virgin-atlantic.com before travel, particularly for the spa, as the lounge has been undergoing phased renovation. Laurent Perrier Brut is served as house champagne. SkyTeam Elite Plus members accessing via Virgin Atlantic terms should confirm current eligibility, as access terms have tightened and vary by carrier.
Best for Amex Platinum
The Centurion Lounge is the direct Amex Platinum benefit at T3 — and the best card-access lounge at any UK airport. Complimentary food from a chef-curated programme, a full cocktail bar, and two complimentary shower suites (book at the desk on arrival) are the three reasons it stands clearly above any Priority Pass alternative. Present your Platinum card, boarding pass and photo ID at the entrance. The Priority Pass card that comes with the Amex Platinum is a separate product — it will not work at the Centurion Lounge. A three-hour pre-departure access window applies.
If you hold Amex Platinum and also have oneworld Sapphire or Emerald status, use your status where it applies. The Cathay Pacific First and Business lounges and the Qantas Lounge all deliver a stronger product than the Centurion Lounge on food and atmosphere for those who qualify. Treat the Centurion as the fallback for departures on non-oneworld carriers, or any cabin without status-based lounge access.
Note that the Priority Pass card from your Amex Platinum account is accepted without supplement at the No1 Lounge and My Lounge at T3, and with a £15 supplement at Clubrooms. These are weaker lounges than the Centurion and should only be used if the Centurion Lounge is at capacity or for a very short visit at the opposite end of the terminal.
Best for Priority Pass
Terminal 3 now has three lounges that accept Priority Pass — a significant change from the previous position where card holders had no options at all. The No1 Lounge (Lounge F, first floor, free on PP) and My Lounge (Lounge D, free on PP) are both included in the standard Priority Pass network. Clubrooms, on the same floor as No1, accepts Priority Pass with a £15 supplement per person — the most capable of the three, with à la carte table service, complimentary cocktails, and the Orangery space with apron views.
These are honest, functional lounges — but they are independent contract lounges, not airline lounges. They do not have showers. They are considerably weaker than the Centurion Lounge, let alone the airline lounges. For a short stop before a flight, No1 or My Lounge does the job. For a longer visit or a pre-departure meal, the £15 Clubrooms supplement is worth paying. If Priority Pass is your only access route, T3 is now usable rather than a dead end — but the gap between a Priority Pass visit here and an Amex Platinum visit to the Centurion Lounge two minutes away is the clearest demonstration of why card selection matters.
The Qantas Lounge accepts walk-in cash entry at approximately £55 for up to three hours — the only airline lounge in T3 with any public access route. If you have no status and want access to the airline lounge tier, this is the only option. Confirm availability and pricing at the door; the scheme is subject to change.
Best for Families
The Centurion Lounge is the most practical family option among the card-accessible lounges — children under two admitted free, a generous two-guest allowance, a buffet format that suits varied eating habits, and toilets inside. The BA Galleries Club has a dedicated children’s playroom — the only lounge in T3 with one — and is accessible on oneworld Sapphire status or a BA Club Europe/Club World ticket. For families travelling on Priority Pass without status, No1 Lounge or My Lounge are the accessible options; Clubrooms does not admit under-12s. The airline lounges (Virgin Clubhouse, Qantas, Cathay) offer more space but require status or a premium cabin.
Best if You Have No Card or Status
Without status, a premium ticket, an Amex Platinum card, or Priority Pass, the Qantas walk-in scheme at around £55 is the only lounge access route — or a cash walk-in at No1 or My Lounge from around £36–38. For a short visit before a medium-haul departure, the independent lounges at T3 are a reasonable choice at that price. For a longer layover, the Qantas Lounge remains the most compelling paid experience given its à la carte dining and bar quality, if the price is acceptable.
Terminal 3 rewards status holders generously and now offers something to Priority Pass holders too, after years of offering nothing. BA Gold and oneworld Emerald members have access to the Cathay First and Qantas lounges — two of the best at the airport, considerably better than what Gold unlocks at T5. BA Silver and Sapphire holders should head straight to Cathay Business rather than defaulting to BA or the Centurion. Amex Platinum cardholders have the best card-access lounge in the UK. Priority Pass holders have three options from April 2025 — No1, Clubrooms and My Lounge — functional but a different tier from the airline rooms. If you are a Priority Pass holder who uses T3 regularly, the Centurion Lounge two minutes away should make you think hard about Amex Platinum.