BA Club Lounge – Gatwick South

A bright, well-designed business lounge that outperforms its Heathrow equivalent on light and calm. Reliable buffet, full bar, Kids Zone. Sapphire and J class.
BA Club Lounge Gatwick South reviewed — access, food, drinks, facilities and everything UK travellers need to know.
British Airways Club Lounge London Gatwick · South Terminal · Business Class & oneworld Sapphire

The BA Club Lounge at Gatwick South is the entry point for business class ticket holders and oneworld Sapphire status holders flying from the terminal. It is a larger, busier, and slightly more varied space than the adjacent First Lounge — with a Kids Zone, more seating types, and a mezzanine level — but on any given morning it will have more people in it. Gold and Emerald holders should head directly to the First Lounge next door. For Silver and Sapphire holders, or those travelling in business class without top-tier status, this is your lounge — and on the Heathrow-to-Gatwick comparison, it holds up well: more natural light, generally fewer guests, and a calmer atmosphere.

At a Glance

DetailInfo
TerminalSouth Terminal — same level as security, go left, follow mezzanine corridor, take lift up one floor; turn right at shared reception
Access — TicketBA Business Class (Club World, Club Europe); any oneworld J class ticket on any oneworld carrier
Access — StatusBA Silver and above; oneworld Sapphire and above (any class, any oneworld carrier)
Amex PlatinumNot accepted
Priority PassNot accepted
Opening HoursVaries by schedule; broadly early morning to late afternoon/early evening — verify before travel
FoodHot and cold buffet; equivalent in standard to Heathrow Galleries Club
BarFull self-service bar; wines, beer, spirits included
ShowersYes — shared with adjacent First Lounge
ChildrenPermitted; Kids Zone available
Wi-FiComplimentary
MezzanineUpper level has a coffee machine but no food service — go to the main floor for the buffet

Location & Getting There

As with the First Lounge, the Club Lounge at Gatwick South requires a specific route that is not intuitive from the security exit. After clearing security, do not take the escalators down — stay on the same level and take the corridor to your left. Follow the mezzanine past No1 Lounge, Clubrooms, Club Aspire, and My Lounge — the corridor then narrows between two shops. Continue through, and at the far end take the lift up one floor. A shared reception desk serves both BA lounges: right for the Club, left for First. Give yourself more gate time than you think is necessary — the return journey from this lounge to departure gates at the far end of the terminal takes longer than most passengers expect.

Access Routes

★ Elite Tip

BA Silver cardholders and oneworld Sapphire holders flying in economy access this lounge — not the First Lounge. Check the sign above each entrance at the shared reception desk. If you hold Gold or Emerald, the First Lounge (turn left) will be quieter. If you hold Silver or Sapphire, you are entering this lounge regardless of what you see on the sign to the left.

Route Detail Guest Policy Cost
BA Business Class ticketClub World (long-haul) or Club Europe (short-haul) boarding pass on same-day BA flight from Gatwick.1 guestIncluded in fare
oneworld Business Class ticketAny J class ticket on any oneworld carrier departing Gatwick South on same day.1 guestIncluded in fare
BA Executive Club SilverAccess when flying any oneworld carrier from Gatwick South. No cabin restriction.1 guestFree with status
oneworld SapphireAll Sapphire equivalents: American AAdvantage Platinum, Qantas Gold, Iberia Plus Gold, Finnair Gold, Qatar Privilege Club Gold, and others. Flying any oneworld carrier.1 guestFree with status
BA Gold / oneworld EmeraldTechnically have access here, but the First Lounge (adjacent) is the recommended option — quieter and less crowded.1 guestFree with status
Priority PassNot acceptedN/A
Amex Platinum / card accessNot acceptedN/A
Cash / walk-inNot availableN/A

The Lounge

The BA Club Lounge at Gatwick opened in 2017 and has seen only minor cosmetic updates since. It is a substantially larger space than the First Lounge next door and incorporates a broader range of seating — armchairs in casual clusters, tables for dining, a bar counter running along one side, and an internal staircase leading to a mezzanine upper level. The mezzanine is worth knowing about: it has a coffee machine but no food service, which means guests who settle up there sometimes miss the buffet entirely. The main floor is where food is served.

Natural light is a consistent strength. Large windows give the main floor level views down toward the terminal concourse below, making the space appreciably brighter and more open than the subterranean feel of several of the independent lounges in the same building. A dedicated Kids Zone with entertainment makes the Club Lounge more family-friendly than most airline lounges in the UK. The lounge can become noticeably busy during peak morning windows when multiple long-haul leisure departures — Caribbean, Maldives, East Africa — board in quick succession and the lounge is handling several full aircraft-loads of Club World passengers simultaneously. Early arrivals at off-peak times will find a calmer and more spacious experience.

Food & Drink

The buffet format mirrors what BA offers at Galleries Club Heathrow. Breakfast covers a cooked English offering alongside pastries, yoghurt, and fruit; the selection transitions to a hot and cold lunch format as the morning progresses, with mains, salads, soup, and sandwiches. Quality is consistent and reliably adequate — this is an airline catering operation run to a contract standard, not a restaurant — but it is a meaningful step above the independent contract lounges in the same terminal. The bar is fully self-service throughout the day and includes a reasonable wine list, standard beers, and a selection of spirits. Cocktails are not a feature; standard measures of most spirits are available. Premium spirits may attract a small charge.

Showers

Shower facilities are shared with the First Lounge next door. They are well-maintained, clean, and stocked to a standard level. No advance booking; first-come, first-served at reception on arrival. The number of suites is limited and a short wait is possible during busy morning peaks — flag your interest on arrival rather than waiting until your departure approaches.

How It Compares

The Club Lounge at Gatwick South is consistently rated more pleasant than its Heathrow Terminal 5 equivalent by regular users. More natural light, a calmer typical occupancy, and a more manageable queue for the buffet all contribute to that impression, even though the underlying food and bar product is the same. For oneworld Sapphire holders travelling on carriers without their own Gatwick lounge — Iberia, Finnair, Royal Jordanian, Malaysia Airlines, and others in the alliance — this lounge is the standard access point and it is a good one. Compared to the independent options in the same terminal, it is ahead on food quality, reliability, and overall polish. Compared to the First Lounge next door, it is behind on quiet.

✦ PTP LOUNGE RATING

A reliable, bright, well-maintained business class lounge that outperforms its Heathrow equivalent on light and calm. The 2017 design holds up well, the buffet is consistent, and the Kids Zone makes it more family-ready than most airline lounges in the network. Not exceptional — the decor lacks distinction and the mezzanine’s lack of food service is an odd omission — but comfortable and a clear step above every independent option in the terminal. Gold and Emerald holders should use the First Lounge next door; everyone else will find this a perfectly good place to spend the pre-flight hour.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

READ MORE

My Lounge – Gatwick South

A quieter, more accessible Priority Pass alternative to No1 at Gatwick South. The outdoor terrace is a genuine differentiator and the lounge is typically easier to walk into than its neighbour. Solid rather than spectacular.

Air Canada Maple Leaf Lounge T2, Heathrow

Star Alliance Gold on AC flights. Buffet, staffed bar, complimentary showers. Consistently outperforms expectations; Canadian whisky bar is a differentiator.

Club Aspire – Gatwick North

A smaller, quieter Priority Pass alternative to No1 North, open all day unlike its South Terminal equivalent. Functional rather than memorable — use it when No1 is full, or upgrade to Clubrooms if calm is the priority.

Best Lounge at Heathrow T2

Nine lounges split across two buildings, with the best rooms locked behind Star Alliance status. Here's where to go — and what your card actually unlocks at T2.

Best Lounge at Gatwick North

Seven lounges, no airline alliance products, and one rule: Emirates passengers aside, everything comes down to your card. Here's which room to book and why.

Plaza Premium Lounge — Terminal 5, Heathrow

Independent lounge near gate A7. Priority Pass and Amex Platinum accepted. Complimentary buffet and bar, showers extra. Consistently busy but a reliable card-access option.
Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated.