Gatwick South Terminal is BA’s home at Gatwick, and its lounge line-up divides accordingly: two BA lounges for status holders and business class passengers, and four independent lounges for everyone else. The BA First Lounge is the best room in the terminal for those who qualify — quieter, better-managed, and a straightforward default for BA Gold and oneworld Emerald holders. For Priority Pass cardholders, the picture is more complicated. No1 is the largest and best-equipped independent lounge but has a well-documented capacity problem at peak periods; Club Aspire and My Lounge are the quieter alternatives, with the morning-hours constraint of Club Aspire being the critical variable. Clubrooms is the premium PP upgrade — the best room in the independent cluster if the £15 supplement is acceptable. Six lounges in total, all accessible from the same corridor past security.
At a Glance
Pass
Plat
world
Pass
ers
Emrld = oneworld Emerald (including BA Gold) | Saph+ = oneworld Sapphire and above (including BA Silver) on any oneworld carrier, any cabin | Amex Plat column = Priority Pass card issued with Amex Platinum accepted at No1, Club Aspire, My Lounge; Clubrooms requires the PP card plus the £15 supplement | Club Aspire closes approximately 1pm — morning departures only | Clubrooms opens 7am — not suitable for early departures | No showers in any independent lounge | ✗ = not accepted
Best for BA Gold / oneworld Emerald
The BA First Lounge is the clear first choice for Gold and Emerald holders at Gatwick South — and despite the naming, there are no First Class flights operating here. This is a status-only lounge, quieter and smaller than the adjacent Club Lounge, with the same airline-standard buffet but better calm and marginally better management of numbers. BA Gold, BA Gold Guest List, and all oneworld Emerald equivalents (including Qatar Airways Platinum, Cathay Pacific Diamond, Qantas Platinum One, Finnair Platinum and others) are admitted on any oneworld flight from the terminal, in any cabin. Showers are shared with the Club Lounge.
BA Gold members departing Gatwick South sometimes default to the Club Lounge out of habit. The First Lounge is next door, is quieter, and is the correct room for Emerald holders. If you hold Gold Guest List you can bring a guest into the First Lounge; standard Gold guests go to the Club Lounge. Verify your exact entitlement at ba.com before travel if unsure — the rules on guests at Gatwick differ slightly from Heathrow.
Best for BA Silver / oneworld Sapphire
The BA Club Lounge is the access point for Sapphire holders at Gatwick South — and relative to what Silver unlocks at Heathrow T5, this is a genuinely good room. More natural light than most of the equivalent spaces at Heathrow, generally fewer guests, a Kids Zone, and showers shared with the First Lounge next door. Any oneworld Sapphire or Emerald equivalent can use this lounge on any oneworld carrier from Gatwick, in any cabin. Business class ticket holders on BA or any oneworld carrier are also admitted regardless of status. The lounge opens early and tracks the BA departure schedule; for an evening departure it may close earlier than expected, so check before you travel.
Best for Amex Platinum
Gatwick South has no Centurion Lounge — the nearest is at Heathrow T3. Amex Platinum cardholders access the independent lounges via the Priority Pass card issued with the account, which works at No1, Club Aspire (until ~1pm), and My Lounge. The same PP card with a £15 supplement accesses Clubrooms. There is no direct physical Amex Platinum card access route at Gatwick South equivalent to Plaza Premium at Gatwick North. For a morning departure, the recommended order of preference is Clubrooms if quiet matters (PP card plus supplement, fast-track included on direct booking), No1 if capacity allows, or Club Aspire if No1 is full. For afternoon and evening departures, Club Aspire drops out and the choice is between No1 and Clubrooms.
Best for Priority Pass
No1 is the main PP lounge at Gatwick South and the largest independent space in the terminal — good natural light, a solid bar, a staffed island and hot buffet, and enough seating on a quiet morning to feel spacious. The problem is well-documented: a significant block of capacity is sold in bulk to airlines without their own Gatwick South lounge, meaning walk-in PP cardholders are turned away regularly at peak periods. The £6 pre-booking fee via the PP system is effectively mandatory on summer weekends and busy morning slots. Fast-track security can be added as a paid extra at the time of booking but is not bundled as it is at Gatwick North.
If No1 is full or you want a less pressured experience, two alternatives are worth knowing. Club Aspire — in the former Virgin Clubhouse building, a short walk along the same corridor — accepts PP without a mandatory pre-booking fee, has aircraft apron views, above-average food presentation, and is generally much quieter than No1. Its hard constraint is hours: it closes at approximately 1pm, which means it does not exist as an option for afternoon or evening departures. My Lounge is adjacent to Club Aspire in the same building and accepts PP with a £6 pre-booking fee. It is smaller and more informal, but has the only outdoor terrace at Gatwick South and reliably lower occupancy than No1.
If you arrive at No1 and are turned away or face a long wait, do not leave the terminal area — Club Aspire and My Lounge are in the same lounge cluster. Club Aspire is the better room of the two if your flight is before 1pm. My Lounge is the right call if you have children or want the terrace on a good morning. Both are free on standard PP; neither requires the £6 walk-in supplement that No1 asks for pre-bookings. Clubrooms is always worth considering for the £15 supplement if calm matters more than the saving.
Best for Clubrooms — the PP Upgrade
Clubrooms at Gatwick South accepts Priority Pass, DragonPass and Amex Platinum (via PP) with a £15 per-person supplement, or approximately £42 for cash walk-in. In exchange you get à la carte food served to your table, a staffed cocktail bar, an adults-only (12+) environment, and the quietest accessible lounge in the terminal. Fast-track security is included on direct bookings via no1lounges.com. The lounge opens at 7am — later than No1 and Club Aspire — which makes it unsuitable for very early departures. There are no showers and no natural light in the rear section; book the front room when reserving to get partial runway views and the better of the two seating areas. For the right traveller — solo or couple, morning or midday departure, willing to pay the supplement — Clubrooms is the most enjoyable room on the independent side of the terminal.
Best for Families
The BA Club Lounge has a dedicated Kids Zone and is the most complete family lounge in the terminal for those who can access it — oneworld Sapphire and above, or a business class ticket on any oneworld carrier. Among the independent lounges, No1 is the most family-practical: largest space, gaming area, and accepts Priority Pass and DragonPass. My Lounge is the relaxed alternative with a games area and outdoor terrace, and costs less. Clubrooms does not admit under-12s. Club Aspire accepts children but note the morning-only hours.
Best for a Shower
Showers are available only in the BA lounges at Gatwick South — shared between the First and Club Lounge, complimentary for eligible passengers. None of the independent lounges (No1, Clubrooms, Club Aspire, My Lounge) offer showers. If a shower is a priority and you hold no qualifying BA or oneworld status, Gatwick South cannot help you — consider the Arrive & Refresh facility in the North Terminal (a short shuttle ride away) or plan accordingly.
Best if You Have No Card or Status
Without a lounge card or airline status, cash walk-in is available at No1 (around £34 pre-booked), My Lounge (from around £30), Clubrooms (around £42), and Club Aspire (variable via loungepass.com — morning departures only). My Lounge at around £30 is the most accessible entry point and a better room than the price suggests. No1 is worth the premium if capacity permits and the full bar and buffet are the priority. There is no cash walk-in to either BA lounge.
Gatwick South is a straightforward terminal for status holders — BA First for Gold and Emerald, BA Club for Silver and Sapphire, both well above the independent lounge tier and better rooms than their Heathrow equivalents on calm and light. For everyone else, the independent cluster is honest but imperfect. No1 is the headline PP lounge but its capacity problem is real and recurring; pre-book or accept the risk of being turned away. Clubrooms is the right call at the £15 supplement if quiet and table service matter. Club Aspire is the underrated morning option — calmer, better food presentation, and often enterable without a pre-booking when No1 is showing full. My Lounge has the terrace and the lowest cash price. None of the independent lounges have showers; if a shower is the requirement and you hold no status, the South Terminal cannot help you.