Best Credit Cards With Priority Pass Membership in 2026

Key Points

  • Priority Pass through a credit card is still cheaper than the $469 standalone Select membership, but the access tiers vary widely across cards.
  • The 2024 restaurant credit removal and the 2024-2025 visit caps changed which cards actually pay for themselves at moderate lounge use.
  • The right card depends on your lounges-per-year count and whether you travel with guests; the math breaks differently at three visits a year than at twenty.

TL;DR

As of April 2026, the Capital One Venture X ($395) is the best Priority Pass card for most travelers. Pick the Amex Platinum ($895) if you want Centurion access too. Sapphire Reserve and Strata Elite now have visit caps.

Why Priority Pass Through a Credit Card Still Wins (Mostly)

A standalone Priority Pass Select membership runs $469 a year, and it does not include any guest visits. A credit card with Priority Pass embedded almost always costs less per lounge visit once you account for the card's other credits, even at the new $895 Amex Platinum fee. The wrinkle is that "Priority Pass" no longer means one consistent thing across cards. The 2024 restaurant credit removal pulled airport dining credits off most issuer-provided Priority Pass memberships, and the 2024-2025 visit caps mean some cards now meter your access. If you carry a card you bought in 2022 expecting unlimited lounge visits, the version of that benefit you have today may be very different.

This guide walks through the seven cards that currently include Priority Pass, what each one actually gets you in 2026, and the per-visit math that tells you whether the annual fee is worth it for your travel pattern.

Quick Answer: The Top Picks for 2026

For most travelers who want Priority Pass without overspending on annual fees, the Capital One Venture X is the strongest pick at $395. Unlimited Priority Pass visits, two free guests, and access to Capital One's growing lounge network. The $300 annual travel credit drops the effective fee to $95 for anyone who books any travel through Capital One.

For frequent flyers who want the broadest lounge footprint, the Amex Platinum at $895 is still the deepest card on this list. Centurion Lounges, Delta Sky Clubs (when flying Delta), Priority Pass, and Plaza Premium all live on one card. The fee is brutal; the credits, if you actually use them, can offset most of it.

If you want lounge access tied to a hotel program you already use, the Hilton Aspire ($550) and Marriott Brilliant ($650) both include Priority Pass on top of their hotel benefits. The lounge piece is not why you carry these cards, but it is a real perk if you have one in your wallet already.

What Changed in 2024 and 2025

Two structural shifts make the 2026 Priority Pass landscape different from what most existing guides describe.

The 2024 restaurant credit removal. Priority Pass used to include partner restaurant credits, typically $28 per visit, at airports where lounges were full or unavailable. In 2024, Amex, Chase, and Capital One all removed restaurant access from their cardholder versions of Priority Pass. Standalone paid Priority Pass memberships kept restaurant access, which is part of why the value gap between paid and card-included memberships narrowed. If a guide tells you to "use your Priority Pass for airport dining when lounges are full," it is out of date.

The 2024-2025 visit caps. The Chase Sapphire Reserve, which used to offer unlimited visits, now caps Priority Pass at fifteen visits per year unless you spend $75,000 on the card. Citi Strata Elite has its own visit limits. Amex Platinum and Capital One Venture X remain unlimited at the time of writing, but the trend is clear: issuers are tightening lounge access as Priority Pass lounges stay overcrowded. Verify your card's current cap on the issuer's benefits page before you plan a heavy travel year around it.

The 2026 Priority Pass Card Lineup

Here is each card that currently includes Priority Pass, with what you actually get and what it costs.

Amex Platinum

Annual fee: $895 Priority Pass: Unlimited visits, plus access to Centurion, Delta Sky Clubs (when flying Delta), Plaza Premium, Escape Lounges, and Airspace Guests: Up to two free guests at Centurion only at most lounges; Priority Pass guests typically charged $35 each Restaurant credit: No

The Platinum is the broadest lounge card on the market, and it is also the most expensive. The $895 fee is offset by a stack of credits: $200 hotel credit on Fine Hotels & Resorts and The Hotel Collection bookings, $200 airline incidental credit, $200 Uber credit broken into monthly chunks, $189 CLEAR credit, $240 digital entertainment credit, and a $100 Saks credit. If you live near these merchants and actually book through Amex Travel for hotels, the credits can wipe out most of the fee. If you do not, the Platinum's net cost stays high. For more on the offsetting math, see the benefits of Amex Platinum.

The Platinum's Priority Pass membership stands out because it is layered on top of Centurion and Delta Sky Club access. At an airport like JFK, ATL, or LAX where multiple lounge networks operate, you have options. That redundancy matters more than the raw visit count for most travelers.

Best for: Travelers who fly enough to use Centurion access and at least three of the credits monthly. If you want a side-by-side breakdown against the Reserve and the Venture X, the Amex Platinum vs. Chase Sapphire Reserve vs. Venture X vs. Strata Elite comparison goes deeper.

Amex Business Platinum

Annual fee: $695 Priority Pass: Unlimited visits, plus Centurion, Delta Sky Clubs (when flying Delta), Plaza Premium, Escape Lounges Guests: Up to two free guests at Centurion only at most lounges; Priority Pass guests typically charged $35 each Restaurant credit: No

The Business Platinum has the same lounge access structure as the personal Platinum at $200 less in annual fee, but it swaps the personal credits for business-oriented ones: a 35% pay-with-points rebate on flights through Amex Travel (capped at 1 million points back per year), a Dell credit, an Indeed credit, and an Adobe credit. If you run a small business and these credits map onto things you would already buy, this card delivers the same lounge stack at a lower net cost than the personal version. If your business does not have qualifying spend, the personal Platinum is usually the right call. The Amex Business Platinum benefits guide walks through the offsetting math.

Best for: Small business owners who want Centurion access and have business spend that maps onto the credits.

Capital One Venture X

Annual fee: $395 Priority Pass: Unlimited visits Guests: Up to two guests free Restaurant credit: No Bonus access: Capital One Lounges (free for cardholders) and Plaza Premium

The Venture X is the value pick for 2026. At $395 it is less than half the Platinum's fee, and the $300 annual travel credit (usable through Capital One Travel for hotels, flights, or rental cars) drops the effective net fee to $95 once you book any travel at all through the portal. You also get 10,000 anniversary miles each year, which most travelers value at around $150 to $200 in transferable Capital One miles. Net out the credits and the anniversary bonus and the card is functionally free for any traveler who books at least $300 in travel a year.

The lounge piece is genuinely strong. Unlimited Priority Pass visits, two guests free, plus access to the Capital One Lounge network at DFW, DEN, IAD, and a growing list of cities. The Capital One Lounges are newer than Centurion in most cases and tend to be less crowded, which matters more than the brand on the door. If you are deciding between this and the Sapphire Reserve, is the Capital One Venture X worth it covers the side-by-side.

Best for: Most travelers. If you take three or more lounge-eligible trips a year and book any travel through the Capital One portal, this is the right card.

Chase Sapphire Reserve

Annual fee: $795 Priority Pass: Capped at fifteen visits per year (unlimited at $75,000 in annual spend) Guests: Limited; verify current policy Restaurant credit: Removed in 2024 Bonus access: Reserve-only Sapphire Lounges by The Club at IAD, BOS, LGA, PHL, and a growing list

The Reserve is the card that changed most in 2024 and 2025. The annual fee jumped to $795, the restaurant credit was pulled from Priority Pass, and the visit cap landed at fifteen per year unless your annual spend hits $75,000. For someone taking five domestic round-trips a year, fifteen visits is enough. For someone taking twelve round-trips with international layovers, fifteen runs out by August. The Reserve added value on the back end with the Sapphire Lounges, which are reserve-only and tend to be excellent at the cities where they exist. If the airports you fly through have a Sapphire Lounge, the Reserve is still defensible. If they do not, the math is harder than it used to be. The Chase Sapphire Reserve review for 2026 walks through the full credit stack and the break-even math at the new fee.

Best for: Travelers who fly through Sapphire Lounge cities and use the $300 travel credit, the dining credits, and the new $300 hotel credit on the Edit collection. The card is outclassed by the Venture X for occasional travelers who do not pass through Sapphire Lounge cities.

Citi Strata Elite

Annual fee: $595 Priority Pass: Included with visit limits; verify current cap on Citi's benefits page before counting on it Guests: Limited; verify current policy Restaurant credit: No

The Strata Elite is Citi's premium travel card and the newest entry in the lineup. It includes Priority Pass with caps similar to the Reserve's. The card carries a $200 hotel credit and a $200 airline credit, which combine to bring the effective fee under $200 for travelers who use both. The Strata Elite is positioned as a Reserve alternative at a lower price point. Whether that makes sense depends on which lounge network you actually use; the Reserve's Sapphire Lounges and the Strata Elite's Priority Pass-only access are not equivalent in cities where Sapphire Lounges exist.

Best for: Travelers who want a premium card under $600 and do not need Centurion or Sapphire Lounge access.

Hilton Aspire

Annual fee: $550 Priority Pass: Ten free visits per year; additional visits charged at standard guest rates Guests: Standard guest fees apply Restaurant credit: No

The Aspire is a Hilton hotel card first and a lounge card second. The ten Priority Pass visits per year cover most travelers' actual usage. The card's main value comes from automatic Hilton Diamond status, a $400 Hilton Resort credit, a $200 Hilton credit broken into quarterly chunks, a $200 flight credit, and a free annual night certificate. If you spend three nights a year at Hilton Resorts, the resort credit alone covers most of the fee. The Priority Pass piece is a meaningful add-on, not the reason to carry the card. See the Hilton Aspire details for the full credit stack.

Best for: Hilton loyalists. The lounge access is a nice second benefit if you are already carrying this card.

Marriott Brilliant

Annual fee: $650 Priority Pass: Verify current cap on Amex's benefits page; historically included Guests: Standard guest fees apply Restaurant credit: No

The Brilliant is the equivalent for Marriott loyalists: automatic Platinum Elite status with Marriott, a $300 Brilliant Dining credit, a $25 monthly Marriott credit, and a free 85,000-point night certificate annually. The Priority Pass piece is bundled in but verify the current cap on Amex's benefits page; like the other premium cards, it has been subject to recent policy adjustments. The Marriott Brilliant overview walks through the hotel-side math.

Best for: Marriott loyalists who stay enough nights to use the free night certificate at a high-tier property.

Per-Visit Math: At What Price Does the Card Pay for Itself?

The honest way to evaluate a Priority Pass card is to figure out the price per lounge visit at your usage rate. Here is the math for the three most common usage profiles, using the Venture X, Platinum, and Reserve as the test cards. The fees below are the net fees after applying each card's most reliable credits ($300 travel for the Reserve and Venture X, $200 hotel plus $200 airline for the Platinum, conservatively).

1 to 3 visits per year (occasional traveler):

  • Venture X net $95 ÷ 3 visits = $31.67 per visit
  • Platinum net $495 ÷ 3 visits = $165 per visit
  • Reserve net $495 ÷ 3 visits = $165 per visit

At this usage, the Venture X is the only card that beats the standalone Priority Pass cost-per-visit math. The Platinum and Reserve only make sense at this usage level if you value the credits independently of the lounge access.

5 to 8 visits per year (moderate traveler):

  • Venture X net $95 ÷ 7 visits = $13.57 per visit
  • Platinum net $495 ÷ 7 visits = $70.71 per visit
  • Reserve net $495 ÷ 7 visits = $70.71 per visit

The Venture X dominates at this usage too, but the Platinum and Reserve become defensible if you also use Centurion or Sapphire Lounges, which Venture X cardholders do not have access to.

10+ visits per year (frequent traveler):

  • Venture X net $95 ÷ 15 visits = $6.33 per visit
  • Platinum net $495 ÷ 15 visits = $33 per visit
  • Reserve net $495 ÷ 15 visits = $33 per visit, but capped at fifteen visits unless $75,000 in spend

At ten or more visits, the Reserve's cap becomes the binding constraint for many travelers. If you are flying enough to hit the cap, the Platinum's unlimited Priority Pass plus Centurion access is usually worth the extra fee.

For a wider comparison across all cards with lounge access, see the best credit cards with airport lounge access roundup and the dedicated Priority Pass credit cards comparison.

Decision Framework: Which Card Fits Your Travel Pattern?

The card that pays for itself depends on three variables: how many lounge visits you take a year, whether you travel with guests, and whether you live near the credits each card offers.

If you take one to three trips a year: Carry the Venture X. The $95 net fee is the only one that makes sense at this usage. You are not flying enough to justify a $700-plus card on lounge access alone.

If you take five to eight trips a year and travel solo: Venture X is still the value pick. Add the Platinum if you fly through Centurion airports often enough to use that access.

If you take ten-plus trips a year: Drop the Reserve unless your spend will clear $75,000 a year and you fly through Sapphire Lounge cities. The Platinum's unlimited Priority Pass plus Centurion access is the right setup at this travel volume.

If you travel with two guests regularly: Venture X is the strongest pick because it includes two guests free. The Platinum gives you two free guests at Centurion only; Priority Pass guests cost $35 each, which adds up fast at high usage.

If you are a hotel loyalist: The Aspire (Hilton) or Brilliant (Marriott) gives you Priority Pass as a side benefit on top of the hotel value. Do not carry these for the lounge access alone, but if you are carrying one already for the hotel benefits, the lounge access is a real bonus.

For a deeper walk-through of how Priority Pass works at the lounge level, including which lounges are worth visiting and which to skip, see the full Priority Pass guide.

What to Verify Before You Apply

Three things change often enough that you should check the issuer's benefits page before you apply or renew:

The current visit cap on your card's Priority Pass membership. The Reserve and Strata Elite both have caps; the Platinum and Venture X are unlimited at the time of writing but have not always been.

The current guest policy. Some cards include free guests; others charge per guest. If you fly with companions regularly, the difference between two free guests and $35 per guest at fifteen visits is $1,050 a year.

The current credit stack on the card you are considering. Premium cards adjust their credits annually, sometimes mid-year. The math in this guide uses 2026 credit values; if you are reading this later, verify before relying on the per-visit calculations.

The Bottom Line

The 2026 Priority Pass landscape rewards travelers who match the card to their actual travel volume. The Capital One Venture X is the right card for most readers because it is the only one where the per-visit math works at low usage and still works at high usage. The Amex Platinum is the right card if you value Centurion access on top of Priority Pass and your credits will offset most of the $895 fee. The Sapphire Reserve, after the 2024 restaurant credit removal and the visit cap, is now a card you carry for the Sapphire Lounges and the credit stack rather than for unlimited Priority Pass.

The standalone $469 Priority Pass Select membership is still worse than any of these credit cards once you account for the offsetting credits. The right move in 2026 is not whether to get Priority Pass through a credit card; it is which card matches your travel pattern.

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.