Air France Private La Premiere Suites Paris Airport (CDG): Next-Level Luxury

Air France Private La Premiere Suites Paris Airport (CDG): Next-Level Luxury

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Air France recently launched its new La Premiere first class, and I was lucky enough to be on the inaugural flight (again, full disclosure — I traveled as a guest of Air France on this flight). This is an incredible product, which should be installed on at least 20 Boeing 777-300ERs by the end of 2026.

While the Air France La Premiere inflight experience is great, the single thing that most differentiates Air France from the competition is its ground service, which I rank as the best in the world. It’s truly more in line with what you’d expect in private aviation than commercial aviation, where you’re escorted every step of the way.

Anyway, in 2024, Air France added a new element to its La Premiere ground experience at Paris Charles de Gaulle (CDG), in the form of private suites in the La Premiere Lounge, which are available at an extra cost. During my trip, I had the chance to tour this facility, so I want to cover the details in the post.

What are Air France’s private La Premiere suites Paris?

Air France’s private La Premiere suites at Paris Charles de Gaulle are intended to take the ground experience to the next level. This service is for those who value privacy above all else, who might otherwise fly private, and where money is no object.

Think of this as basically being Air France’s equivalent to PS, the private airport facility in Los Angeles (LAX) and Atlanta (ATL). I’d consider the standard La Premiere ground experience to be like PS’ “The Salon” service, while I’d consider the upgraded La Premiere ground experience to be like PS’ “Private Suite” service.

The idea is that for an extra fee, La Premiere passengers can pay for an even more exclusive check-in facility, including a private check-in room, and then a private three-room suite and terrace within the La Premiere Lounge, with dedicated butler service.

The price for this additional service starts at €800 for a visit of up to three hours, and that’s on top of Air France already having the world’s highest first class fares.

What’s the Air France La Premiere private suite experience like?

During my recent flight on Air France, they showed me the private suite facilities, since I hadn’t seen them before. Let’s take a look at what the experience is like.

If you’re originating in Paris, all Air France first class passengers can use the La Premiere check-in area, which is located in Terminal 2E, at gate 17.

Air France La Premiere entrance Paris

Normally, first class passengers are checked in at a gorgeous facility with plenty of seating, and they’re even offered a drink while they wait.

Air France La Premiere check-in area Paris

For those who reserve one of the private suites, the check-in process is even more exclusive. There are two private rooms, so you can stay in one of those while check-in formalities are taking place, including having a personal attendant who takes care of you during that time.

Air France La Premiere private suite check-in Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite check-in Paris

Once check-in is completed, all passengers have the same departure experience. They’re escorted down a hall, then brought down a level in an elevator, and that’s where security formalities take place, at a private checkpoint.

Air France La Premiere check-in area Paris

Once check-in is complete, you’re driven to the La Premiere Lounge.

Air France La Premiere ground transfer Paris

Standard first class passengers can then hang out in the beautiful lounge, which features a restaurant with catering from Alain Ducasse, a Sisley spa, and more.

Air France La Premiere Lounge dining area Paris
Air France La Premiere Lounge seating Paris
Air France La Premiere Lounge spa Paris

However, if you reserve the private suite experience, you’ll immediately be escorted to a different area. There are three individual suites, and they’re located in a massive area that’s to the side of the lounge, accessible from a door next to the bar.

Air France La Premiere private suite location Paris

This area is huge. This space used to be offices for Air France, and then it was converted into this new space.

Air France La Premiere private suite entrance Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite hallway Paris

There are three private suites, each spanning roughly 500 square feet (45 square meters) of interior space, including a private living room, bedroom, and bathroom, plus an outdoor terrace. The suites are all named after areas of Paris — Champs-Élysées, Montmartre, and Vendôme.

Air France La Premiere private suite naming Paris

I’ve gotta say, these suites are mighty snazzy, and I love the design. I took a look at the Vendôme private suite, which is also the accessible suite (so the shower setup is different than in the other two).

The living area has a loveseat (hi, winged seahorse!), a chair, and a dining table that can accommodate three people.

Air France La Premiere private suite living room Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite living room Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite living room Paris

There’s also a TV, with doors to both the bedroom and bathroom on each side of it.

Air France La Premiere private suite living room Paris

The room boasts a minibar, coffee machine, and tea kettle, though again, the lounge features butler service, so they’ll bring you whatever you want.

Air France La Premiere private suite minibar Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite coffee & tea Paris

When guests arrive, there’s also a bottle of champagne on ice, plus some sweet treats, and a huge tea selection from Palais des Thés.

Air France La Premiere private suite champagne Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite treats Paris

The bedroom then has a bed, plus a wall-mounted TV. I love the historical Air France art.

Air France La Premiere private suite bedroom Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite bedroom Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite bedroom Paris

The bathroom is accessible from either the bedroom or living room. The bathroom has a sink, toilet, and shower (since this suite is accessible, the shower is a little more open, while the other two suites have walk-in showers). Toiletries are from Sisley, so it doesn’t get more luxurious than that.

Air France La Premiere private suite bathroom Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite bathroom Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite bathroom Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite toiletries Paris

Last but not least, each suite has a private terrace with plenty of furniture, though admittedly this is a bit of a seasonal amenity, since Paris doesn’t have great outdoor weather for much of the year.

Air France La Premiere private suite terrace Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite terrace Paris

Those in the private suite get access to exactly the same menu as those in the main part of the lounge. Airport dining honestly doesn’t get much better than that.

Air France La Premiere private suite menus Paris

You can find the La Premiere Lounge menu below (the focus is on quality rather than quantity).

Air France La Premiere private suite breakfast menu Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite breakfast menu Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite all-day menu Paris
Air France La Premiere private suite all-day menu Paris

The butler service in the private suites is as hands on or hands off as you want. For most people, the idea is that they want to be left alone, so if you want anything, you just pick up the phone, and they’ll take care of whatever you need.

Air France La Premiere private suite phone Paris

Khan is one of the people in charge of providing service in this new facility. He has been at the La Premiere Lounge since the first time I flew La Premiere (which was on an A380, over a decade ago), and he’s incredibly professional, as I’ve been served by him in the lounge a couple of times in the past. So if you book one of these suites, odds are decent that you’ll be taken care of by him.

Then when it’s actually time for the flight to depart, the departures experience is the same for everyone. You’ll be driven to your aircraft by car, and can board directly via an elevator and jet bridge.

Air France La Premiere ground service Paris

This is a niche offering akin to private aviation

To understand the intent of these suites, you have to consider how Air France is trying to position its La Premiere product overall. Air France is pricing its first class in a different league than almost any other airline — on average, it’s the most expensive first class product in the world, by a long shot.

To be clear, I don’t think La Premiere offers “value,” in the sense that the average premium traveler should pay twice as much to fly Air France as Emirates, for example (okay, admittedly they only compete in one market). Instead, I think Air France is going after the super rich, where money is no object, and where the thing they value most is a seamless and convenient experience:

  • Air France has just four first class seats per plane, and only a limited number of planes have first class, flying to high yield destinations
  • Paris is obviously a very popular destination for well-off people (among others), and there’s an incredible amount of wealth flying to Paris from Los Angeles, New York, Singapore, Tokyo, etc.
  • Air France’s fundamental value proposition is similar to private aviation — the idea is to offer as seamless and customized of a journey as possible, and that’s more evident with the ground experience than anything

That brings us to these private suites in the La Premiere Lounge. When they were first announced, I was a bit confused. After all, most people flying in La Premiere are traveling point-to-point, with Paris as their origin or destination.

Given the pricing and value people place on nonstop flights, it’s not like a bedroom is that useful for most people. For that matter, most people connecting have short connections, since people spending $10K+ on tickets don’t typically want to spend unnecessary time in transit.

That really gets at the intent of this product, which is to offer an elevated level of privacy for people who value that, regardless of the cost, whether they’re celebrities, business executives, etc. Maybe they don’t want to be seen in public. Maybe they need a good place to conduct a virtual business meeting. That’s the kind of people this is targeted at.

If you’re just splurging on La Premiere as a special experience, the lounge is already incredible, and I’d argue there’s not much need for this. You can still enjoy the amazing Alain Ducasse dining, the Sisley spa, etc.

Now, I suppose if you’re pretty well off and you’re celebrating something special, maybe this is worth a splurge. But the market here is clearly for people who don’t really care how much extra the experience costs, because it’s still cheaper than flying private on a long haul flight.

Bottom line

Air France’s La Premiere Lounge already offers the best first class ground experience that you’ll find anywhere in the world, with a seamless experience, great dining, excellent spa treatments, and more.

Now the airline offers an even more exclusive level of service, with its private suites. For an extra fee, first class passengers can be checked in at a private facility, and can then get a private suite in the lounge, with a living room, bedroom, bathroom, and terrace. Then there’s attentive butler service, so that you can enjoy everything from a cocktail to a full meal in your suite.

What do you make of the Air France La Premiere private suites Paris?

Conversations (36)
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  1. Jack Guest

    In related news, just visited the Air France lounge at LAX based on the new access rules afforded to domestic flights. It's a typical AF lounge in appearance and vibe. The food is on the nicer side of okay. Biggest plus is that it is quiet. In the end, I checked it out but will stick with the Delta lounge going forward.

  2. PeterCS New Member

    Did you have the chance to ask about the occupancy rate? How often are they booked?

  3. Throwawayname Guest

    How do AF compete with EK 'in one market'? It's not like you can jump on a flight from Düsseldorf to Singapore, let alone one offering super-premium amenities. Paris is a strong O&D market but it's only got a limited amount of passengers willing to drop €20k on a plane ticket.

  4. Jack Guest

    In the world of private jets, you have actual ownership and then "access" programs. The vast majority of people in both categories will fly private domestically (average mission being 1.5 hours or so) and fly commercial for long-haul. The typical one-way cost to fly private from CDG to JFK is $50k (starting). West Cost to Hawaii and transcon come in at about $30k. Only the wealthiest or the wealthy look to these longer missions.

    1. Throwawayname Guest

      Private jets are far less popular for personal travel in Europe than they are in the USA and other parts of the Americas. It's one thing being able to afford to fly on one and quite another being able to get a landing slot, parking space etc in PRG or whatever with minimal notice.

      My impression is that many/most wealthy Europeans may charter a plane with their mates to Chambery, Mykonos, or the Champions...

      Private jets are far less popular for personal travel in Europe than they are in the USA and other parts of the Americas. It's one thing being able to afford to fly on one and quite another being able to get a landing slot, parking space etc in PRG or whatever with minimal notice.

      My impression is that many/most wealthy Europeans may charter a plane with their mates to Chambery, Mykonos, or the Champions League final, but for more mundane missions they probably prefer flying via FRA and spending a couple of hours checking their emails in the FCL rather than bothering with the logistics of general aviation.

  5. Kevin LaFollette Guest

    Thanks for the review Ben,
    As a Francophone La Premier is on my bucket list and agree with you they currently have the best soft service in business. Little edit though change your "whether" in terrace description.

  6. NM1961 New Member

    Having a commercial offer that competes with private aviation is a niche that has demand for three reasons:
    1) The wealthy do often still look for value for money, so flying with AF LP long haul offers a similar experience at 20% of the cost
    2) Quite often, AF LP is more comfortable than a lot of private jets
    3) If you are just 1-2 PAX, flying commercial causes way less emissions than private. Some wealthy people indeed still care about that.

  7. jallan Diamond

    "Standard first class passengers" flying La Premiere.... hahaahahaha

  8. Luke Guest

    Can you smoke on the terrace?
    I would hope so.

    Please no replies about how bad it is, it's a private terrace....

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Luke -- Not on the individual terraces, but there's an extra shared terrace on which those with private suites can smoke.

  9. Jittery Eric Guest

    This would be a nice amenity for producers to offer A-List talent they make fly commercial.

    What are "Oven-baked tomatoesr"? Did La Premiere make a (gasp) typo on the menu? Heads will fly! If I'm paying 800 Euro for an omelette, the least they can do is spell the ingredients correctly (as in perfect English).

  10. Rand Guest

    Good review Ben the French do this better than anyone else. Despite the Debbie Downers :) I appreciate your work and my reply to folks who criticize just to do it can always stop reading and following. Keep up the good work!

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Rand -- Appreciate the kind words, thanks! :-)

  11. Motion to Dismiss Diamond

    I used the same private suite Ben toured during a long layover in February. I didn’t pre book it but as my PA was driving me to the lounge she asked if I wanted to tour one of the suites. At the end of the tour she asked if I wanted to book it—and even said the price is “for sure” going up soon. I said yes and had a lovely time. The butler service was very nice and I enjoyed being somewhere even more quiet and peaceful with a bed.

    1. SamB Diamond

      Not surprised the price is going up, it seemed low. 800 EUR is less than half the price of a starting-level room at a Palace hotel these days..

  12. Justin Dev Guest

    And yet, some people will ignore this perfectly good shower in the lounge, to take a shower on board an aircraft in a steamy humid cramped unclean cubicle.

    It boggles my mind.

    1. Santos Guest

      This seems to be an obsession of yours. You’ve mentioned it more than a few times. It’s clear that you haven’t actually flown EK F or you’d know the lavs with the showers are nothing like you describe. In fact they’re more spacious than the bathrooms in most NYC apartments and they have dedicated attendants who clean and refresh them after each use.

  13. DTWNYC Guest

    I'm going to be a contrarian, but I find the decor pretty bland. The furniture is kind of meh, the colors very bold, and it's seems very bright. Too bright. That outdoor area doesn't seem very comfortable.

    I guess that's a personal taste, but I prefer the cooler colors.

    Not an issue in any practical way as I will never have a chance to fly LP.

    1. E39 Diamond

      I agree on this, mainly for the main lounge. The dining room/area seems very grey and grey-lit, sterile in a way. I've never been there, but that's always what I've thought from looking at pictures. I like warmer tones, such as LH or SQ private room

  14. E39 Diamond

    This might be a hot take, but can first class experiences become too private sometimes? I guess it all depends, but I love the airport vibe, the people going places, and if everything it this separated I’d miss out on that.
    In my perfect world, I’d walk into the terminal, to a sectioned off first class check-in, private security, then walk through the terminal soaking in the atmosphere, head for a great lounge with runway/apron views, then driven to the plane

    1. Pete Guest

      For my money there's no such thing as "too private" when it comes to commerical air travel. Spending the whole time isolated from the rest of the pax suits me just fine.

    2. BenjaminKohl Diamond

      I absolutely agree but I think we're in the minority. I think it's also less likely an A-list celebrity would want to be seen people watching at the end of the rotunda lol

  15. Sean M. Diamond

    This is a huge transformation from the horrendous ground services that Air France used to offer to La Premiere passengers 20 years ago.

    I remember flying in F from CDG-BOM from I think it was 2C at the time and being told that due to renovation work, there was no lounge access at all available for Air France pax in that terminal. So zero, zip, nada while we sat at the gate waiting to board....

    This is a huge transformation from the horrendous ground services that Air France used to offer to La Premiere passengers 20 years ago.

    I remember flying in F from CDG-BOM from I think it was 2C at the time and being told that due to renovation work, there was no lounge access at all available for Air France pax in that terminal. So zero, zip, nada while we sat at the gate waiting to board.

    And then ironically, my seat electrics failed during the flight so it couldn't recline into the bed properly so overall a fairly miserable experience. I did get a bunch of miles in compensation for the seat failure though.

    1. Icarus Guest

      20 years is a long time. It’s been vastly improved for the past 15 plus. Hopefully you can experience it and send a review.
      However as far as I’m aware AF never offered La Première to India.

  16. yoloswag420 Guest

    I wish they would bring back the AF Arrivals lounge.

  17. AeroB13a Member

    Afterthought to my post below …. just a thought.
    Ben, is there any mileage in comparing the La Premiere lounge expedience in Paris to the Windsor Suite experience at LHR?

  18. AeroB13a Member

    Ben, again I thank you for your explanation and photographs of the La Premiere lounge experience.
    Treating my wife to this wonderful facility followed by a La Premiere flight to SIN, would earn me a shed load of brownie points.
    Reading your article has made it even harder for me to resist the temptation to book when the New La Premiere suite on that route becomes available.

  19. HappyFlier123 New Member

    Definitely smart of Air France to lean in on making first class more akin to private travel than business class plus like BA does.

  20. Alonzo Diamond

    If wealthy people value time, why would they spend any time here? I'm assuming most are trying to get to the airport at the last minute.

    1. brianyyz Member

      Many years ago I flew FRA-SIN on LH F, back when the seating was 2x2 upstairs in a 744. My seat mate was off to SGN to see his factories—he flew in his small private jet from Czechia to FRA then F onwards. I could totally imagine him using this facility if he was doing it via CDG.

    2. Barbarella Guest

      I would assume a lot of those who use it are connecting. Think Dubai-LAX, JFK-NCE and have no control on how long they spend at the airport.
      .that brings me to the biggest pet peeve I have with F in general is the short haul feeder flight experience.

  21. Icarus Guest

    For the rich, a further €800 on top of €21k is nothing. They probably don’t even check the price.

    1. Pete Guest

      Exactly. If the €800 surcharge is too much, then you're just not in their target demographic.

    2. Throwawayname Guest

      It's a mindset thing though, there are people who hate being taken advantage of. When I landed at APL, I was really pleased with myself when I bartered the taxi drivers down to a price that nobody would take, although my friend was less than impressed with my doggedness in saving 50 meticais (well under a dollar) which obviously wouldn't have made any difference to the overall cost of our trip.

  22. Blake-Pickering Member

    Additionally, there is a large amount of wealth coming from LHR/LGW and ZRH/FRA enjoying Paris.

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

Santos Guest

This seems to be an obsession of yours. You’ve mentioned it more than a few times. It’s clear that you haven’t actually flown EK F or you’d know the lavs with the showers are nothing like you describe. In fact they’re more spacious than the bathrooms in most NYC apartments and they have dedicated attendants who clean and refresh them after each use.

5
Motion to Dismiss Diamond

I used the same private suite Ben toured during a long layover in February. I didn’t pre book it but as my PA was driving me to the lounge she asked if I wanted to tour one of the suites. At the end of the tour she asked if I wanted to book it—and even said the price is “for sure” going up soon. I said yes and had a lovely time. The butler service was very nice and I enjoyed being somewhere even more quiet and peaceful with a bed.

4
Icarus Guest

For the rich, a further €800 on top of €21k is nothing. They probably don’t even check the price.

4
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