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Airport lounges are great places to relax before your flight, grab a bite to eat, or catch up on work – all in a relaxing environment with comfortable seating areas, complimentary food and drinks, shower rooms, dedicated and elevated service, and much more. These days, there are plenty of ways you can access an airport lounge – every type of traveler can select a method that works for them, whether it is a yearly membership, a First Class ticket, or a day pass, most people can now somehow access a lounge prior to their flight.

Fly in First or Business Class

If you are flying in First or Business Class, you can generally access the lounge prior to your flight, if there is a lounge. This is the case in most places around the world with one notable exception – in the U.S., you do not generally get access if flying in First or Business Class either domestically or short-haul internationally (Mexico, Caribbean, etc.).

Depending on what cabin you are flying in, you may have access to different lounges. Airlines have various lounges ranging from First Class Lounges to Business Class Lounges to Frequent Flyer Lounges – the more expensive your ticket is and the higher your elite status, the better the lounge will be for you.

Hold Airline Elite Status

If you have mid-to-top tier airline elite status, you can generally access the airline’s lounge prior to a flight, even if flying in Economy Class – this is the case in most places around the world. However, again, there is one notable exception – in the U.S., you can only access the lounge if flying internationally if you hold elite status with a U.S. airline. Every airline has different policies, but in the U.S., it is taken to a whole new level with a bunch of rules, exceptions, and restrictions.

Every airline determines at what elite tier they will grant you lounge access, so for some airlines, requirements for tiers could vary as well as the benefits that come with those tiers.

Premium Travel Credit Card

If you hold a premium travel credit card that has an annual fee of $450+, then that card should generally come with lounge access in some form – the card issuer might have their own lounges and/or provide you with an airport lounge access membership. The biggest perk of these expensive, premium travel credit cards is lounge access and the types of lounges you can access does vary based on what card you have.

Membership for Airline Lounges

Many airlines sell lounge memberships – like American, United, etc. – you can then access the airline’s lounges and sometimes their partner lounges prior to your flight, even if you are not flying in Business Class or have elite status. These lounge memberships usually start at $500+ and are valid for a year, if you want to add guesting privileges to your membership you can expect to pay $200+ on top of your membership fee.

I generally think these memberships aren’t worth it unless you only fly with that specific airline and have no premium travel credit cards and only fly domestically, and a lot of business travelers are in this situation which is why they buy these airline lounge memberships, but for the average leisure traveler it might not be worth it.

Airport Lounges Membership (Priority Pass)

There are a few airport lounge access membership programs, but the largest one is Priority Pass – it essentially allows you to access 1,000+ airport lounges around the world and most of these lounges are third-party contract lounges instead of outright airline lounges (however some airline lounges do belong to Priority Pass).

You can buy Priority Pass directly from them (with different membership levels), or if you have a premium travel credit card that has lounge access, a Priority Pass membership is usually included as part of your credit card lounge access benefits (the guesting policy and lounge access policy would depend on your card issuer).

Buy a Day Pass

Many airline and third-party lounges also sell day passes to access that lounge – some of these passes are either one-time access passes or day passes (in which case you can enter those lounges throughout your travel journey that day). These passes usually start at $50+ per person and may have some rules attached to them (like a max stay of 3 hours, etc.).

Buying a day pass could be worth it if you plan to spend several hours in the lounge and have no other way to access lounges, and you don’t really fly that much to justify paying for a premium credit card or a lounge membership. Buying a day pass is usually the last method to access a lounge and could be a great way for those who only fly a few times per year.

Travel Miles 101 has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. Travel Miles 101 and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers.