No 1 Lounge, T2 Heathrow

Design-led independent lounge with boutique hotel aesthetics, signature cocktails and a fully tended bar. No windows or showers, but the best atmosphere of any PP option at T2.

No1 Lounge — Terminal 2, London Heathrow

The No1 Lounge at Terminal 2 opened in December 2024, the first new lounge to arrive at T2 in years and a much-needed addition to a terminal that had long depended on a single, ageing independent option. No1 has brought their latest design direction here — the same boutique-hotel aesthetic debuted at T3 and Gatwick — and the result is the most visually striking independent lounge at T2. Muted earthy tones, curved sofas, velvet seating, warm lighting and a chandelier at the far end give the space a genuine sense of occasion that no other contract lounge in the terminal can match.

The catch is the location. Heathrow found this site by converting back-office space in the lower levels of the terminal building, and the lounge sits entirely underground with no windows and no natural light. It is also compact — notably smaller than the Plaza Premium directly above — which means it can fill quickly during peak hours. Those who arrive early or pre-book will find a calm, well-appointed retreat. Those who arrive mid-morning on a busy weekday may find the seating limited and the atmosphere warmer than ideal. Despite these constraints, independent reviewers broadly rate it above Plaza Premium for atmosphere and design, making it the better PP option at T2 if you can get in.

No1 Lounge

No1 Lounges · Terminal 2 · London Heathrow

Compact, design-led independent lounge near gate A4, opened December 2024; complimentary buffet and cocktails, no windows, no showers — Priority Pass and LoungeKey free, cash from ~£40.

At a Glance

Feature
Detail
Terminal
T2 main terminal, Level 2 (accessed via lift near gate A18 / behind Louis Vuitton Café) — airside, post-security
Opening Hours
05:00–21:00 daily (verify at no1lounges.com)
Size
Compact single room with semi-private alcoves at the rear; smaller than Plaza Premium T2
Natural Light
✗ None — basement-level space with no windows
Dining Style
Self-serve buffet; light snacks, cold items and hot options (e.g. porridge at breakfast); cocktail bar included
Showers
✗ Not available
Toilets
Inside the lounge — individual lockable rooms (toilet and sink combined), praised in reviews
Wi-Fi
Complimentary — reported as fast
Charging
Charging points throughout — limited dedicated work setup
Capacity
90 seats — compact single room with alcoves; fills quickly at peak times
Children
Under-12s may be restricted to family seating areas and must be supervised by an adult
Dress Code
Smart casual recommended

Access Routes

Route
Detail
Guests
Cost
Priority Pass
All Priority Pass card variants accepted; PP from Amex Platinum qualifies
Guests charged at standard PP guest rate
Free (member); guest rate varies by PP plan
DragonPass
Accepted — pre-book online for £6 reservation fee via No1 website
Guests charged at lounge rate
Free (member)
LoungeKey
Accepted — check your card issuer for LoungeKey access
Guests charged at lounge rate
Free (member)
Cash / Walk-in
Book via no1lounges.com; walk-in subject to capacity
Each person pays individually
From ~£40 per adult (verify at no1lounges.com)
★ Elite Tip

The lounge is small and fills up. Pre-book online via no1lounges.com before you travel — PP and DragonPass members can reserve a slot for a £6 fee. Walk-ins on a busy morning risk being turned away. Arriving at or just after opening (05:00) virtually guarantees a seat.

Layout and Design

No1 has made the most of an unpromising brief. The lounge occupies a single room carved from former back-office space at Level 2 of the terminal, accessed by a lift tucked behind the Louis Vuitton café near gate A18. Signage within the terminal is limited, and first-time visitors frequently miss the correct lift; allow a few extra minutes to locate it. Once inside, the design makes an immediate impression. The aesthetic is boutique members club rather than airport contract lounge: muted green and earthy tones, curved sofas, warm artificial lighting, velvet armchairs, and a chandelier anchoring the rear of the room. A set of semi-private alcoves at the back provides the closest thing to a secluded seat. The overall effect is cohesive and polished by contract lounge standards.

The trade-off is footprint and light. This is a compact space — noticeably smaller than the Plaza Premium lounge one level above — and there are no windows at all. The warm artificial lighting does much to compensate, but those who specifically value daylight or runway views will not find them here. Seating options lean toward lounge chairs and sofas; dedicated desk-style work seating is limited. Power points are present throughout but not abundant.

Food and Drink

The food offer is intentionally light. No1 T2 focuses on quality over volume: the buffet at breakfast runs to pastries, fruit, prepared croissant-style sandwiches, cold items, and porridge as the one hot option. The range is narrower than Plaza Premium and considerably narrower than any of the Star Alliance airline lounges in the satellite. If you arrive hungry before a long flight, you may want to supplement from the terminal. Through the day the spread moves to light snacks, salads, and cold bites.

Where the lounge distinguishes itself is at the bar. No1 has built a cocktail programme into the T2 offering — a signature spritz is exclusive to this location and included in the entry price — and the overall drinks quality exceeds what you would expect from a contract lounge. Beer, wine, spirits and soft drinks are all complimentary. Champagne is not typically on the standard menu. The bar is staffed, and reviews consistently praise both the cocktails and the service behind the counter.

No Showers

ⓘ PTP Note

No1 Lounge T2 does not offer showers. The toilets inside the lounge are individual lockable rooms (toilet plus sink) and are notably well-finished, but shower facilities are not available. If a pre-flight shower is a priority, Plaza Premium T2 offers them at a £27.50 surcharge, or you have access to showers within the Star Alliance satellite lounges if your airline or status qualifies.

No1 T2 vs Plaza Premium T2

These are the two independent lounges at T2, both free on Priority Pass, and the comparison comes up constantly. No1 wins clearly on design, atmosphere, and cocktail quality. Plaza Premium wins on size (larger floor space, less risk of being turned away), food volume (a fuller buffet with more hot options), and shower access (available at extra charge). For a quick pre-flight drink and somewhere pleasant to sit, No1 is the better experience. For a longer stay, a proper meal, or a shower, Plaza Premium makes more sense despite its age and lack of windows.

No1 T2 vs No1 T3

The T3 No1 opened earlier and is considerably larger, spread across a more generous footprint in Lounge F. T3 also has a more developed food offer. T2 is the more intimate and arguably more stylish of the two, but T3 wins on capacity, natural light access from the broader lounge zone, and the depth of the dining offer. Both share the same design language and cocktail approach. If you are connecting through T2, there is no reason to change terminals just for the T3 lounge.

Getting In

The lounge is at Level 2 of the main terminal building, accessed by lift only. After clearing security, head towards gates A1–A5 and look for the lift signposted to the No1 Lounge, located just behind the Louis Vuitton café near gate A18. Take the lift down two levels from the main departures floor (Level 4) to Level 2. Signage within the terminal is minimal — Heathrow has not yet installed permanent directional signage — so follow the No1 branded lift indicators rather than general terminal signs. The lounge does not sit within the B-gates satellite (T2B); all passengers using the main A-gates area can reach it, but factor in the walk back to the satellite if your gate is in T2B.

❖ PTP LOUNGE RATING

The No1 Lounge T2 is the best-looking independent lounge at Terminal 2 and the top Priority Pass choice in the terminal on atmosphere and drinks alone. The cocktail programme and boutique design set it apart from every other contract lounge here. Its limitations are real: no windows, a compact footprint that fills fast, and a food offer too light for travellers wanting a proper pre-flight meal. Pre-book, arrive early, enjoy the signature cocktail, and treat the food as a supplement rather than a main event. For anyone with unlimited PP access and an early start, it is an easy recommendation over Plaza Premium.

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