That moment when you’ve got an hour till boarding…and then you see this line.
The Problem With Lounge Wait Times
Lounge access has exploded—premium credit cards, elite perks, day passes, even some paid entries. But lounge space didn’t grow at the same pace. That’s why 30–40 minutes in line is now common at busy airports and peaks. And it’s not just airline or bank-branded spaces; even Priority Pass lounges like The Club are posting waitlists and turning people away during rush periods.
The 3-Hour Rule Changes The Math
Many lounges now limit entry to 3 hours before your scheduled departure. That makes it tougher to stretch a long layover and means you can’t “camp” in a lounge all afternoon. Timing your visit—especially if you’re connecting—matters more than ever.
How Much Time Do You Really Need
- < 30 minutes to boarding: Skip it. By the time you wait, scan, find a seat, and grab a drink, you’ll be leaving.
- 30–60 minutes: Only if the lounge is near your gate and the line looks short. Otherwise, you’ll have a rushed, not-relaxing experience.
- ~90 minutes: The sweet spot. Enough time to enter, snag a seat with power, have food/drink, and decompress.
- 2+ hours: Worth it if the lounge is genuinely good (showers, solid dining, quiet zones). If it’s overcrowded with a waitlist, the marginal benefit drops fast.
When Lounges Are Actually Worth Extra Time
Most lounges aren’t worth padding your schedule for—unless they’ve got standout amenities. A good example: the Chase Sapphire Lounge at PHL with spa services (facials). That’s “destination lounge” territory and can justify a deliberate stop if lines aren’t insane. Read our full PHL review.
Other Factors To Weigh
- Distance to your gate: Some lounges are a hike—factor in the there-and-back walk time.
- Peak times: Early morning bank, late-afternoon business rush, and Sunday evenings are crowd magnets.
- Access type: Priority Pass vs. airline elite vs. premium card lounges can see very different queue patterns.
- Mobile waitlists: A few lounges (e.g., some bank-branded) let you join a list from your phone—huge if available.
- Your goal: Need a shower or a quiet call? Lounge. Just need calories and Wi-Fi? A terminal café might be faster.
Our Take
We’ll still stop by a lounge when we can. Even a crowded lounge is usually better than an overcrowded gate, and because we often travel at less busy times, we still find lounges enjoyable. But we’re realistic: if boarding is soon, the line is long, or the lounge is a long walk, we don’t force it.
Bottom Line
If you don’t have about 90 minutes to play with (accounting for waitlists and the 3-hour entry window), the lounge stop often becomes a stress stop. Save it for when you’ve got time—and for lounges that actually deliver more than chips and soup.
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This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary