The cards that get you into airport lounges in 2026 are Amex Platinum (Centurion Lounges plus Priority Pass), Chase Sapphire Reserve (unlimited Priority Pass for cardholder plus two guests), and Capital One Venture X (Capital One Lounges plus Priority Pass plus two guests). Each limits guests differently and most require activating the program before you fly. This guide shows how many visits each card gives, what a guest costs, and when the fee pays for itself on the lounge alone.
15 min read
Lounge access has become the headline benefit every issuer uses to sell four-figure annual fees. Amex, Chase, Capital One all put "airport lounge access" at the top of the pitch. What nobody explains clearly is that most cards use the same third-party network (Priority Pass), with visit limits that change card to card and guest rules that quietly destroy a chunk of the perceived value.
This guide does not sell cards. It shows how many visits each one actually gives in 2026, what it costs to bring whoever travels with you, and does the cold math on when the fee pays for itself on the lounge alone. Fly twice a year and no card pays off on the lounge alone. Fly fifteen times and choosing wrong costs hundreds of dollars in wasted value per year.
The core thesis: the right card is not the one with the prettiest program name, it is the one that gives enough visits for your flight volume and does not charge a fortune per guest. Let's get to the numbers.
The three networks that matter: Priority Pass, LoungeKey and Dragonpass
TL;DRPriority Pass has roughly 1,700 lounges in 145 countries and is the most used network. LoungeKey is run by the same group and works in nearly the same lounges. Dragonpass is the strong alternative in Asia. A premium card almost never builds its own lounge — it buys access to one of these networks.
Before comparing cards, understand that the card does not own the lounge. It subscribes to one of these three independent networks and gives you an access card (physical or digital):
- Priority Pass: founded in 1992, roughly 1,700 lounges in 145 countries. It is the market standard. Strong coverage at JFK, Heathrow, Frankfurt, Dubai, Singapore, Bangkok, São Paulo and most international hubs.
- LoungeKey: operated by Collinson, the same group behind Priority Pass. Runs in nearly the same lounges. Coverage is almost identical.
- Dragonpass: a China-origin alternative, strong across Asia (mainland China, Hong Kong, Southeast Asia) with growing global coverage. Some Asian banks and corporate cards use Dragonpass.
Lounge quality varies wildly within the same network. The Priority Pass lounge in Hong Kong is five-star. A regional Priority Pass lounge can be a corridor with Wi-Fi and a cookie. The network guarantees access, not the experience.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
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