Anonymous wrote:Priority pass is useless now. I just paid $79 for admirals club at dca and it was lovely. The venture x lounge is smaller but also nice. I would do Amex platinum or the City card for admirals. For IAD you want the United lounges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is lounge access so important to you? Especially just for one trip? Goal is to get to the airport in a timeframe where you won’t be sitting around that long before boarding.
I’d focus on a card that prioritizes other useful benefits and points earnings based on your typical spending habits.
I am jealous that you don’t experience layovers and travel delays.
I’ve never in my life used a lounge before a flight, but they are gold if your connecting flight gets cancelled/delayed.
Sometimes yes, but a couple times I have been delayed by weather, and the lounge filled up like crazy as other flights got delayed also and people waited it out. It got so uncomfortably crowded I just left and found a gate area without any flights for the next couple of hours.
I guess my larger point is that personally they have limited value, and paying hundreds of dollars in costs for a few visits/flights wouldn't be worth it to me. I do have lounge access as a perk on cards that I have, and use it sometimes, but its purely ancillary value. For instance, Chase for a long time had a nice additional thing on it's Priority Pass cards that gave you access to restaurants at a number of airports and you could get $50-80 worth of food there. We used that usually 3-4 times a year. Then they killed that perk 6 months ago. So I downgraded the Sapphire Reserve to the Preferred, because the remaining Priority Pass lounges in the US are so weak it wasn't worth it. This, for instance, is what it gets you at O'Hare.
https://onemileatatime.com/insights/swissport-lounge-chicago/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:check to make sure you can bring in that many people with your lounge access.
The priority pass from Ritz Chase includes unlimited guests. Unfortunately, no priority pass lounge in DCA. It has worked out especially well in Europe though.
My Amex platinum gives me centurion lounge access but just for me. Not worth $50/person for rest of family each time we travel.
Immediate family gets in the Centurion lounge for free if you charge more than $75k annually. It’s also not hard to get back the cost of the annual fee if you use their card benefits (Uber, airline fees, etc). The 5x points is a great benefit if you travel a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rather than approaching this from a purely transactional perspective, I would think hard about which card aligns most closely with your family’s aspirational values. Every time you take that card out to pay, you are making a statement about your dreams and goals.
Didn't realize ChatGPT was posting here now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is lounge access so important to you? Especially just for one trip? Goal is to get to the airport in a timeframe where you won’t be sitting around that long before boarding.
I’d focus on a card that prioritizes other useful benefits and points earnings based on your typical spending habits.
I am jealous that you don’t experience layovers and travel delays.
I’ve never in my life used a lounge before a flight, but they are gold if your connecting flight gets cancelled/delayed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is lounge access so important to you? Especially just for one trip? Goal is to get to the airport in a timeframe where you won’t be sitting around that long before boarding.
I’d focus on a card that prioritizes other useful benefits and points earnings based on your typical spending habits.
I am jealous that you don’t experience layovers and travel delays.
Anonymous wrote:check to make sure you can bring in that many people with your lounge access.
The priority pass from Ritz Chase includes unlimited guests. Unfortunately, no priority pass lounge in DCA. It has worked out especially well in Europe though.
My Amex platinum gives me centurion lounge access but just for me. Not worth $50/person for rest of family each time we travel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is lounge access so important to you? Especially just for one trip? Goal is to get to the airport in a timeframe where you won’t be sitting around that long before boarding.
I’d focus on a card that prioritizes other useful benefits and points earnings based on your typical spending habits.
Ha, okay. Not OP but I'd rather be early and futz around than cut it close like that. Clearly you've never been in a nice lounge. They're key, especially on layovers for long international flights. Many of them have showers.
Anonymous wrote:Rather than approaching this from a purely transactional perspective, I would think hard about which card aligns most closely with your family’s aspirational values. Every time you take that card out to pay, you are making a statement about your dreams and goals.