Bangkok Airport Priority Pass Shakeup: Not Good!

Bangkok Airport Priority Pass Shakeup: Not Good!

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Currently, Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport (BKK) is one of the best in the world when it comes to Priority Pass lounges. The airport has one of the largest selections of Priority Pass lounges you’ll find at any airport, and they’re all relatively high quality. Well, unfortunately this will be changing shortly, for a pretty questionable reason, as flagged by The MileLion.

Bangkok Airport losing all airline Priority Pass lounges

As of April 1, 2025, we’re going to see the list of eligible Priority Pass lounges in Bangkok reduced significantly. Specifically, the following seven lounges will no longer be part of the Priority Pass network:

  • The Air France-KLM Lounge (International Concourse F)
  • The Bangkok Airways Boutique Lounge (Domestic Concourse A)
  • The Blue Ribbon Club Lounge (Domestic Concourse A)
  • The Blue Ribbon Club Lounge (International Concourse D)
  • Oman Air Lounge (International Concourse E)
  • Thai Royal Silk Lounge (Domestic Concourse A)
  • Turkish Airlines Lounge (International Concourse E)

When all is said and done, this means the only remaining Priority Pass lounges at the airport will be those with Coral and Miracle branding. which are contract lounges that are open to Priority Pass, and available to passengers on select airlines.

Turkish Airlines Lounge Bangkok (BKK)

Why are Bangkok lounges leaving Priority Pass?

It goes without saying that the circumstances surrounding this are unusual. Every once in a while you may see a lounge decide to leave Priority Pass, due to a strategy shift. However, to see so many lounges leave at once is something I’ve never see before.

Furthermore, it’s important to emphasize that many of these lounges probably rely on Priority Pass in order for the economics to work. Honestly, one wonders how lounges from carriers like Air France-KLM, Oman Air, and Turkish Airlines, will be sustainable with these changes.

So, what’s the logic for this? Rumor has it that the airport authority, Airports of Thailand (AOT), has a new rule that stipules that airline lounges can no longer participate in Priority Pass, and instead, can only accept passengers through their own programs (so elite status, class of service, alliance membership, etc.).

Let me emphasize that this is only a rumor, though logically, some kind of a rule stipulating that airlines can no longer participate in Priority Pass is the only logical explanation.

Why would the airport authority have such a rule? Does the airport have more of a stake in Coral or Miracle lounge locations? Does the airport get a cut on revenue for those lounges? Was the airport able to increase rent in exchange for that policy? I imagine it’s something along those lines.

Now I’m curious to see which of the other lounges end up closing in the coming months and years, because the economics just don’t make sense. I don’t know what the airport authority’s motive is here, but no matter how you slice it, this is a very customer unfriendly move.

Coral Finest Business Class Lounge Bangkok (BKK)

Bottom line

As of April 2025, we’re going to see seven lounges at Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Airport leave Priority Pass, including all those lounges run by airlines. It would appear that the airport authority has a new policy preventing airline lounges from participating in these programs, instead giving exclusivity to Coral and Miracle locations.

This is a shame, and I imagine we’re going to see at least one or two lounge closures as a result of this policy shift.

What do you make of this Bangkok Priority Pass situation?

Conversations (62)
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  1. Alex Guest

    I use air france lounge as I have found this the best of them all..I am so disappointed with this decision from a dubious point...why..and how come we are not told why...it does smack of dirty deeds somewhere...

  2. RW Guest

    Who to email to complain about this? They need to hear we are not happy!

  3. Dario Castellanos Guest

    It happened also back towards the end of 2019 to all lounges with access though Priority Pass at LAX (Los Angeles International Airport), we used to access Alaska Airlines Lounge, Korean Airlines Lounge and Virgin Airlines Lounge (at the time, the worst of the three), and all if a sudden, the three mentioned lounges stopped accepting Priority Pass, this way, Priority Pass cardholders were left without this privilege. Myself and others, kept talks with Priority...

    It happened also back towards the end of 2019 to all lounges with access though Priority Pass at LAX (Los Angeles International Airport), we used to access Alaska Airlines Lounge, Korean Airlines Lounge and Virgin Airlines Lounge (at the time, the worst of the three), and all if a sudden, the three mentioned lounges stopped accepting Priority Pass, this way, Priority Pass cardholders were left without this privilege. Myself and others, kept talks with Priority Pass for an explanation but it never came a convincing one. They always said they were negotiating new contracts, but it has taken them so long to conclude those negotiations.

  4. James Guest

    Great news, those lounges should never have been available for priority pass anyway.

  5. Ste Guest

    I was confirmed by Oman air that the end of this month they are stopping. I've been using their lounge for 7+ years. I Only actually pay for PP because I can use this lounge. Going to change to dragon pass lounges I can get on revolut, which Oman did not accept previously.

  6. BZ Guest

    As a paying customer on these airlines, this is excellent news. Fewer Americans talking about “hop on hop off” buses or “ping pong” shows

  7. Amakung Guest

    Well your guess is right. The Coral and Miracle Lounges are affiliated with AOT. Also AOT has some problems with profitability recently. So you know….

  8. Ryan del Mundo Guest

    This is all so overblown. I've been to every lounge on the list.

    All those other lounges are inferior to the Coral/Miracle lounges anyway.

    The Oman lounge is tiny tiny tiny, the Blue Ribbon Bangkok (which you can't enter without flying BKK Airways anyway) and the Bangkok Airways lounges are as barebones as they get while the domestic Thai lounge doesn't even have any alcohol on top of being small and overcrowded.

    ...

    This is all so overblown. I've been to every lounge on the list.

    All those other lounges are inferior to the Coral/Miracle lounges anyway.

    The Oman lounge is tiny tiny tiny, the Blue Ribbon Bangkok (which you can't enter without flying BKK Airways anyway) and the Bangkok Airways lounges are as barebones as they get while the domestic Thai lounge doesn't even have any alcohol on top of being small and overcrowded.

    While less choice is never better, perhaps more people frequenting the Coral lounges will make them even better. The Domestic Coral is already quite crowded so this will not help there. The International ones are very spacious!

    Lucky never flies coach anyway so not sure why he cares so much :)

    1. Eskimo Guest

      We found the person who negotiated this terrible deal with AOT.

  9. Ronald Guest

    Typical idiocy from Thailand lol. Surely a government decision

  10. Albert Guest

    I read that initially as "shakedown".
    Then from the comments it seems I wasn't so far wrong!

  11. No bribes allowed Guest

    The Oman lounge staff told me earlier this week that it was 100% airports of Thailand’s decision. apparently they (aot) want to drive traffic to the (second rate) miracle lounges owned by a local company. So much for a quiet and peaceful lounge in Suvarnabhumi……

    1. Ryan del Mundo Guest

      The Miracle lounge is much better than the Oman lounge anyway.

      As for AOT strongarming, well, TIT right?

  12. Christian Guest

    Didn't Loyalty Lobby cover this a few weeks ago? I remember that it seemed suspicious that well connected Thai businesses got to stay as part of PP.

  13. Tim Dumdum Guest

    Also Visa Companion (Dragonpass) lists 16 BKK lounges, but they are all of Coral or Miracle variety

  14. SimpleTraveller Guest

    Probably AOT earns from concessionaires.

    #MallWithRunways

  15. Lieflat19 Gold

    Biden/HARRIS CORRUPTION to the core....

    4 more replies
  16. Endre Guest

    It has to do with licensing and concessions at AoT. There’s one major conglomerate who is putting a lot of pressure on AoT to change the current lease and concession rules/policies — or whatever you want to call that mess.

    1 more reply
  17. Fred Guest

    Everybody knows that AOT is the main reason and their (possible) shares in poorly performing coral but in particular miracle lounges. This was even informally confirmed to me during my recent visits in some of the affected lounges. The coral is particular often less populated and yes I must say the service is pretty average compared to those now affected. For me this is less of an annoyance as I have lounge access with Star...

    Everybody knows that AOT is the main reason and their (possible) shares in poorly performing coral but in particular miracle lounges. This was even informally confirmed to me during my recent visits in some of the affected lounges. The coral is particular often less populated and yes I must say the service is pretty average compared to those now affected. For me this is less of an annoyance as I have lounge access with Star Alliance and flying blue. Still I dont like this "behave" of AOT. They should rather improve the pretty average airport operation. Suwarbhumi ranking is embarrassingly for a great service culture like the Thailand.

  18. frrp Diamond

    Someone probably didnt get paid off enough

  19. Henry Young Guest

    What about DragonPass ? I have PP and DP.

  20. Ben Guest

    Wow!
    That's a huge story for many.

    The AF lounge was my #1 monthly To go lounge l.

    I find it few levels better then any other( food & seating & cleanness & calmness & size)

    That is a huge blow.

    Thai .gov keeps coming up with missable decisions . I have no clue where this came up from. But it's disastrous and smell of corruption .

    1. Eskimo Guest

      Huge story indeed. But some content may have been swept under the rug.

      At least Aaron get what he deserves ;)
      Maybe credit cards next?

  21. Throwawayname Guest

    Not sure about TK as *A passengers will have access to the TG lounges, but there are a fair few Skyteam flights out of BKK and the CI lounge is tiny, so I would be surprised if there's any risk to the viability of the AF lounge.

    1. Eskimo Guest

      TK probably opened with PP in mind like the rest in their system. Due to its size and other better *A alternative, it might get smaller.

      AF suffers a similar issue, it's size. Ironically many ST actually send its passengers to Miracle. That should speak for the cost to airlines. So I'm not going to think they don't have risks.

      WY is joining OW but not sure will it bring enough traffic.

      I only see...

      TK probably opened with PP in mind like the rest in their system. Due to its size and other better *A alternative, it might get smaller.

      AF suffers a similar issue, it's size. Ironically many ST actually send its passengers to Miracle. That should speak for the cost to airlines. So I'm not going to think they don't have risks.

      WY is joining OW but not sure will it bring enough traffic.

      I only see PG international the one that would be at risk, having mostly leisure routes. They'll probably stay until their lease expires.

      That being said besides PG, I think BKK seems to have enough traffic to maintain all those lounges, just might not be profit center for TK or WY anymore.

  22. Snoop Guest

    This is so typical of Thailand. The government creates a policy with some purported goal in mind yet the policy always has the opposite real world effect. They won’t reverse it in a couple of weeks either because Thais are famously stubborn. A couple of months maybe.

    1. Eskimo Guest

      That's a very naive view.

      The policy has the exact effects they want.
      But like many other things, the product mistook itself as the customer.

      It's not because of stubbornness. It's all conflict of interests.

  23. Bobbert Guest

    Which of the listed lounges was considered the better ones? Which ones will we actually miss?

    3 more replies
  24. Alex Arauz Guest

    Wouldn’t have been so bad for me if ITA hadn’t left Sky Team as they gave me Skyteam Elite Plus. Now I only have Skyteam Elite when I go back and forth between Bangkok and Vietnam. Bad timing all around.

  25. Mike Guest

    I wonder if Thailand are looking to go to the India model where there is seemingly one contract lounge brand and then the state carrier's lounge. Encalm is the name of the lounge brand at least in DEL International)...This approach too would be quite consumer unfriendly...as competition does seem to generally influence quality.

    1 more reply
  26. Thailand Starts Here Guest

    Honestly, the central Miracle Lounge locations are great. The food and drink could improve a bit, but they're spacious and quiet and not crowded most of the day. By contrast, many airline lounges (especially Air France) tend to feel super cramped.

    2 more replies
  27. Mantis Gold

    Thailand leadership has a habit of making rash decisions without much thought, then reversing the decision once it inevitably doesn't work out as planned. I suspect this decision will be reversed in a few weeks once the carriers inform AoT that they will be reducing hours, service levels, and head count at their lounges in response to the changes.

    3 more replies
  28. Donna Memo Guest

    This will not adversely affect persons with airline status. This mainly affects all the freeloaders and poorly behaved Americans.

    8 more replies
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RW Guest

Who to email to complain about this? They need to hear we are not happy!

1
Dario Castellanos Guest

It happened also back towards the end of 2019 to all lounges with access though Priority Pass at LAX (Los Angeles International Airport), we used to access Alaska Airlines Lounge, Korean Airlines Lounge and Virgin Airlines Lounge (at the time, the worst of the three), and all if a sudden, the three mentioned lounges stopped accepting Priority Pass, this way, Priority Pass cardholders were left without this privilege. Myself and others, kept talks with Priority Pass for an explanation but it never came a convincing one. They always said they were negotiating new contracts, but it has taken them so long to conclude those negotiations.

1
BZ Guest

As a paying customer on these airlines, this is excellent news. Fewer Americans talking about “hop on hop off” buses or “ping pong” shows

1
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