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LHR Centurion Lounge Review: A Tea Cart and Buffet for Travelers
This lounge pays tribute to British traditions with a tea cart serving teas and scones with jam and clotted cream.
Sally French is co-host of the Smart Travel podcast and a writer on NerdWallet's travel team. Before joining NerdWallet as a travel rewards expert in 2020, she wrote about travel and credit cards for The New York Times and its sibling site, Wirecutter.
Outside of work, she loves fitness, and she competes in both powerlifting and weightlifting (she can deadlift more than triple bodyweight). Naturally, her travels always involve a fitness component, including a week of cycling up the coastline of Vietnam and a camping trip to the Arctic Circle, where she biked over the sea ice. Other adventures have included hiking 25 miles in one day through Italy's Cinque Terre and climbing the 1,260 steps to Tiger Cave Temple in Krabi, Thailand.
Meghan Coyle is an editor on the Travel Rewards team and the co-host of the Smart Travel podcast. She covers travel credit cards, airline and hotel loyalty programs, and how to travel on points. Meghan is based in Los Angeles and has a love-hate relationship with LAX.
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With a tea cart serving British teas and treats like scones, clotted cream and finger sandwiches, the London Heathrow Airport (LHR) Centurion Lounge is a lovely send-off after a trip to London or a stopover between destinations.
It has classy seating areas, showers and a buffet designed by a Michelin-starred chef. Some of the British touches include toiletries from London-based soap company Soapsmith, custom furniture and lighting from UK designers, and an art gallery curated by Art Story, including work from British fashion photographer Norman Parkinson.
You can only enter before a departing flight. You can’t land at an airport with a lounge and head inside (unless it’s a layover or connecting flight).
There’s a time limit. You can only visit within three hours of the stated departure time on your boarding pass.
The guest policy for Centurion Lounges has tightened significantly in recent years to curb overcrowding. For most eligible cards, there's typically a minimum annual spending requirement to unlock complimentary guest access. You might also be able to add someone as an authorized user to your card to get them lounge access, but that comes with an additional yearly fee.
Otherwise, cardholders can pay for guest passes. Adult guest passes are $50; children ages 2 through 17 are $30. All guests must be accompanied by a cardholder.
London Heathrow Centurion Lounge location
The lounge is located in Terminal 3, Area A. To get there, you must clear security.
(Photo by Sally French)
Follow the signs for Flight Connection route Area A. After passing a few shops and restaurants, you’ll see a large Centurion Lounge sign on the right. That takes you through a dingy hallway to some elevators, which you’ll ride to the lounge on Level 2.
(Photo by Sally French)
Upon stepping off, you’ll pass through another dim hallway that looks more like you’re walking to a mall bathroom than a luxury lounge.
(Photo by Sally French)
The somewhat-dismal journey aside, the Centurion Lounge space is truly luxurious once you enter. The lounge is open daily from 5:30 a.m. until 9 p.m.
The lounge spans a single, windowless floor. Most visitors stay in the common areas, which have food, drinks and other amenities.
(Photo by Sally French)
There are also a few dedicated workspaces and private phone rooms that are available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Private phone rooms. (Photo by Sally French)
The design mirrors the classic style seen at most other AmEx lounges. There’s the iconic, deep blue color palette, as well as the luggage wall, which is a common element in many AmEx lounges worldwide.
(Photo by Sally French)
As is the case with most Centurion Lounge locations, there’s a variety of seating options, including tables, bar seating and cozier nooks.
Bathrooms
The bathrooms are stocked with locally made, scented bath and body products created by London-based brand Soapsmith. Because Soapsmith makes products based on scents inspired by various areas of London, AmEx rotates the scents periodically.
The lounge also offers showers, which can be especially welcome during a long layover. AmEx provides the bath products, including fresh towels. You’ll have to ask the front desk for a key to a private shower room which is available on a first-come, first-served basis.
Food and beverage options
The food and drinks are the star of the London AmEx Centurion Lounge.
The buffet
(Photo by Sally French)
Chef Assaf Granit, perhaps most famous in London for his Middle Eastern restaurant, Coal Office, is the lounge’s executive chef. Granit is also the head chef for Israel-based El Al Airlines, and he runs dozens of restaurants worldwide. He holds a Michelin star through Shabour, which is a Mediterranean restaurant in Paris.
(Photo by Sally French)
The LHR Centurion Lounge buffet is Mediterranean and Middle Eastern-inspired. Dishes vary depending on season and time of day, but can include homemade bread, fried pita chips with tahini, curry, polenta, plus proteins including beef and lamb. For dessert, don’t miss the “Oh 'My Baklava’" olive oil cake with pistachio anglaise (custard sauce) and rose water diplomat (whipped custard).
If you’re visiting during breakfast, menu items include eggs, yogurt and baked beans. Depending on the time of year, expect items like poached peaches or seasonal salads.
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The tea cart
(Photo by Sally French)
That’s not the only part of the lounge where you can nosh. On the opposite side sits a tea cart. Pour yourself a hot or cold tea, sourced from local tea companies and pair it with a pastry. You might also find other beverages on the tea cart like coconut water or immunity booster smoothie shots.
The bar
The lounge’s bar menu includes traditional and non-alcoholic cocktails. The booze-free versions use ingredients from Seedlip, which is a non-alcoholic spirit maker based in London.
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