Key Points

  • Only the premium American Express cards open lounge doors: the Platinum, Business Platinum, and Delta SkyMiles Reserve. Every other Amex earns you a polite "no" at the desk.
  • Centurion Lounges are still the best food and drink in U.S. airports, but the $50-per-guest fee and the $895 Platinum annual fee have shifted who actually breaks even on this benefit.
  • The math now hinges on three numbers: how many of the Platinum's credits you use, how often you visit a Centurion Lounge, and whether your home airport is even on the network.

TL;DR

Amex lounge access lives on three cards: the Platinum, Business Platinum, and Delta Reserve. Centurion Lounges are the headline; Priority Pass and Delta Sky Club fill the gaps. Worth the $895 fee only if you use the credits.

Introduction

There is a way to use Amex lounge access well, and a way to pay $895 a year for a benefit you never touch. Most readers asking about this are trying to figure out which one they will be.

Lounge access is the marquee feature on the Amex Platinum, but the access is messier than the marketing suggests. There are four overlapping networks, each with its own rules, hours, and guest policies. The $50-per-guest fee at Centurion Lounges (introduced in 2023 and still in force in April 2026) changed the math for anyone traveling with a partner. The $895 annual fee on the Platinum, post-2025 refresh, raised the bar on whether the benefit pencils out at all. This guide lays out which Amex cards include lounge access, what each network actually delivers, and the spending profile where the access pays for itself.

Quick Answer

Lounge access on Amex comes from three cards: the Platinum ($895), the Business Platinum ($895), and the Delta SkyMiles Reserve ($650). All three open the Centurion Lounge network, the Global Lounge Collection (Priority Pass, Escape, Plaza Premium, partner lounges), and Delta Sky Club under specific rules. Every other Amex card, including the Gold and the Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant, gets you nothing or only Priority Pass.

Which Amex Cards Actually Include Lounge Access

Five Amex cards are commonly cited as "lounge cards." Only three of them open the full network. Here is the honest breakdown.

The Platinum Card from American Express

The Platinum is the flagship. It opens every lounge network Amex has access to: Centurion Lounges (worldwide), the full Global Lounge Collection (Priority Pass Select, Escape, Plaza Premium, Airspace), Delta Sky Club when you are flying Delta on a same-day ticket, and Lufthansa lounges when you are flying Lufthansa.

Annual fee: $895 after the 2025 refresh, up from $695. The fee jump is real, and it changes the value math we will get to later in this guide.

The Business Platinum Card from American Express

Lounge access on the Business Platinum is functionally identical to the personal Platinum. Same Centurion Lounge entry, same Global Lounge Collection, same Delta Sky Club rules, same partner-airline access. The differences live in the welcome bonus structure, the spending bonus categories, and the credits, not in the lounge benefit. Annual fee: $895, also post-2025 refresh.

If you run a business and already pay yourself a Platinum every year, the Business Platinum is the cleaner card to hold for that spend. The lounge access is the same.

Delta SkyMiles Reserve American Express Card

The Delta Reserve is the co-brand option. It opens Delta Sky Club when you are flying Delta on a same-day ticket, and it opens U.S. and select international Centurion Lounges (currently the Hong Kong and London Heathrow locations) when you are flying Delta. Annual fee: $650.

The headline change here for 2026: Delta Sky Club access on the Delta Reserve and on the personal Platinum (when flying Delta) is now capped at 10 visits per year, with unlimited visits available only after $75,000 in annual spend on the card. Most cardholders will not hit the spend threshold, so plan around the 10-visit cap.

The Cards That Do Not Include Lounge Access

The Amex Gold ($325 annual fee) does not include lounge access. The Marriott Bonvoy Brilliant ($650) used to be cited for Priority Pass; verify the current benefit structure before relying on it. Every Blue Cash card, Everyday card, and Hilton co-brand below the Aspire tier is not a lounge card. If you are flashing one at the Centurion desk, you will be turned around.

How the Networks Actually Work

The four networks Amex links to behave very differently inside. Knowing which is which prevents disappointment at 6 a.m. when you are looking for breakfast.

Centurion Lounges

These are Amex's owned-and-operated lounges, and they are the reason most people apply for the Platinum in the first place. The food is genuinely good (chef-led menus that vary by city), the bar is full, the WiFi works, and most locations have shower suites. The Phoenix barbecue and the Miami seafood spreads are the standouts; the Las Vegas and JFK locations are heavily trafficked and the experience reflects that.

Current U.S. locations as of April 2026 include Atlanta, Charlotte, Dallas-Fort Worth, Denver, Houston, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Miami, New York JFK, New York LaGuardia, Newark, Philadelphia, Phoenix, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington Reagan. International Centurion Lounges include Hong Kong, London Heathrow, Melbourne, and Sydney, with additional Centurion Studios and Suites at smaller-format locations. Verify your specific airport on the Amex app before traveling; the network has been expanding.

Entry rules are strict and worth memorizing. You need your eligible Amex card, a government-issued ID, and a same-day boarding pass with a confirmed seat. You can enter within three hours of your scheduled departure (sometimes longer for international connections, but do not count on it). Guest policy as of April 2026: $50 per guest for cardholders, with children under 2 free. International departures historically allowed two complimentary guests; this carve-out has shifted recently, so confirm at the desk before counting on it. Authorized users with their own card enter as cardholders, not guests.

Priority Pass via Amex

The Platinum and Business Platinum include Priority Pass Select with unlimited lounge visits after a one-time enrollment through your Amex account. The enrollment matters: you must enroll, wait for the membership card to ship (a few weeks), and add it to the Priority Pass app. Cardholders who skip this step are the most common "I thought I had Priority Pass" stories I see.

What Priority Pass through Amex includes today: more than 1,400 lounges worldwide, some of them excellent (Plaza Premium in Asia and Canada, the Air Canada Maple Leaf lounges that Priority Pass partners with on certain routes, several Lufthansa-aligned lounges in Europe), many of them mediocre, and a few that should not be on the list at all. What it does not include: airport restaurants. Amex removed restaurant access from Priority Pass in 2019, and that has not come back. If a guide tells you to expect a $28 restaurant credit through Priority Pass on Amex in 2026, the guide is out of date.

Quality is wildly variable. Use the Priority Pass app, check the recent reviews and the live capacity indicator, and have a backup plan for the lounges that turn members away during peak.

Delta Sky Club via Amex

Delta Sky Club access on the Platinum (when flying Delta) and on the Delta Reserve is now visit-capped: 10 visits per calendar year, with unlimited access available at $75,000 in annual card spend. This is the biggest practical change for the 2026 cardholder. If you are a regular Delta flyer who used to use Sky Clubs ten or twelve times a year, you will hit the cap and need to either pay per visit or push card spend to break the threshold.

The Centurion Lounge access bundled with the Delta Reserve (when flying Delta) is independent of the Sky Club visit cap. It is a useful workaround in cities where both lounges exist, like Atlanta or LaGuardia.

Escape, Plaza Premium, Airspace, and the Global Lounge Collection

The Global Lounge Collection on the Platinum bundles Priority Pass with several smaller networks: Escape Lounges (around eight U.S. locations including Oakland, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Phoenix, Sacramento, Hartford, and Fort Lauderdale), Plaza Premium (strong international footprint, particularly in Asia and Canada), Airspace at San Diego, and partner-airline lounges like Lufthansa when you are flying that carrier.

Escape and Plaza Premium are the underrated piece of this benefit. The food is often as good as the better Priority Pass lounges, the crowding is materially less than at Centurion Lounges, and they are in airports where Centurion either does not exist (Oakland, Sacramento) or is overrun (Phoenix has both Centurion and an Escape Lounge, and the Escape is the better experience on a busy day). When you are planning a trip out of a non-hub airport, check the Global Lounge Collection map before you assume you have nothing.

What You Need at the Door

Lounge entry is more than swiping a card. Here is what to have ready.

For Centurion Lounges: your Amex card, a government-issued ID, and a same-day boarding pass on any airline. You can enter within three hours of departure. Guest fee is $50, and authorized users with their own card enter on their own. Bring the physical Amex card, not just the app, for the international locations.

For Priority Pass through Amex: enrollment is required (do this the day your card arrives), and your physical or digital Priority Pass card plus boarding pass. Some lounges still ask for the physical card, so do not assume the digital version covers you everywhere.

For Delta Sky Club: a same-day Delta boarding pass, your Platinum or Delta Reserve, and the visit count or spend threshold hit. The Sky Club app tracks your visits in real time.

Strategy: When the Platinum Pays for Itself

The honest version of the math. The Platinum's $895 annual fee is offset by credits, not by lounge access alone. Here is the credit stack as of April 2026:

  • $200 airline incidental credit (selected airline, requires election)
  • $200 hotel credit (Fine Hotels and Resorts or The Hotel Collection prepaid bookings)
  • $200 Uber Cash (delivered monthly)
  • $189 CLEAR Plus credit
  • Saks Fifth Avenue credit, split semi-annually
  • Several smaller credits across digital entertainment, dining, and apparel partners that rotate year to year

Total stated value: north of $1,000 if you stack everything. Real-world net for most cardholders: somewhere between $400 and $700, depending on which credits you actually use. The Saks and CLEAR credits are the ones most often left on the table. Pull last year's spending and tally what you would have actually used in each bucket. If your real net is below $300, the lounge access has to carry the rest of the fee.

The lounge access pays for itself when three things are true: your home airport has a Centurion Lounge or a strong Global Lounge Collection option, you fly through it more than six to eight times a year, and you actually use the credits. Two out of three is borderline. One out of three is a downgrade signal.

The Platinum does not pay for itself for the cardholder who flies once or twice a year out of a non-hub airport. It does not pay for itself for the cardholder who lets the credits expire. It does not pay for itself for the cardholder who travels with a partner and a kid and pays $100 in guest fees per Centurion visit. The numbers are clean once you do the math, and the math is the whole point of carrying this card.

Alternatives When the Platinum Does Not Fit

The Capital One Venture X ($395 annual fee, $300 travel credit, 10,000-mile anniversary bonus) is the most common downgrade target. It includes Capital One Lounge access (a smaller network than Centurion, but the food and design are competitive at the locations that exist), Priority Pass Select with two complimentary guests, and Plaza Premium access in some markets. The math is much easier: the $300 travel credit and the anniversary miles roughly offset the fee, and lounge access becomes a near-free benefit. For lounge access alone, the Venture X is the cleaner buy for most readers.

The Chase Sapphire Reserve ($795 annual fee after the 2025 refresh) bundles Chase's Sapphire Lounge network plus Priority Pass. Sapphire Lounges are newer and currently exist in select cities (New York LaGuardia, Las Vegas, Boston, San Diego, Philadelphia, and a few others, with more announced); the food and design are competitive with Centurion. Worth a look if you spend meaningfully on Chase Travel.

If your only lounge need is "occasional access through Priority Pass," paying $895 for the Platinum is the wrong shape. Pay $395 for the Venture X (or its equivalent) and stop thinking about it.

Common Mistakes

The mistakes that consistently cost cardholders money on this benefit are predictable and avoidable.

  1. Not enrolling in Priority Pass. The Platinum does not auto-enroll you. You have to log into your Amex account, opt in, and wait for the card. Do this the day your Platinum arrives.
  2. Forgetting the three-hour rule. Showing up four hours before an international flight will get you turned away from a Centurion Lounge. Plan airport timing around lounge access, not around TSA paranoia.
  3. Forgetting the $50 guest fee. If you fly with a partner six times a year, that is $300 you did not budget for. Factor it in or lean on the Global Lounge Collection alternatives where guests are still complimentary.
  4. Treating Priority Pass as a Centurion Lounge. It is not. Some Priority Pass lounges are excellent. Many are not. Read the app reviews before you walk over.
  5. Not using the credits. The credits are how the math works. Letting $400 of them expire is the most expensive thing a Platinum cardholder can do.

Conclusion

Amex lounge access is a real benefit for the right cardholder and an expensive line item for the wrong one. The Platinum is the flagship, the Business Platinum is the same product on the business side, and the Delta Reserve is the co-brand path for Delta loyalists who can live with the 10-visit Sky Club cap. Run the math against your actual home airport and your actual credit usage before paying $895 a year for a lounge you visit twice. If the numbers do not work, the Venture X is the cleaner alternative.

This article contains affiliate links. If you apply through our links, we may earn a commission at no cost to you, which helps us continue sharing points and miles strategies with the community.

Some of the links in this article are affiliate links. We may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you if you apply through these links. This helps us keep the site running and continue creating free content.