Lounge directory · BKK · Last reviewed 9 May 2026
Bangkok Suvarnabhumi Lounges (BKK): Every Lounge and How to Get In
Suvarnabhumi runs around 30 lounges across seven concourses, the domestic piers and the satellite terminal, and the contract lounges that anyone can buy into almost never close. Here is the full map after the big 2025 access shake up.
- Lounge verdict
- Deep and unusually open. Around 30 lounges spread across the building and the satellite terminal, and the Coral and Miracle doors that take programs or cash run around the clock, which matters at an airport whose busiest departure bank starts near midnight.
- Best access play
- Priority Pass or DragonPass opens roughly 13 Coral and Miracle doors, including two out in the satellite terminal. Since 1 April 2025 those are the only program lounges here, because every airline lounge left the networks on that date.
- The one thing to know
- Distance. Concourse A to Concourse G is a 15 to 20 minute walk and satellite gates add a shuttle train ride, so pick the lounge nearest your gate and stay put rather than touring the building.
Orientation
How the Suvarnabhumi lounge map works
Suvarnabhumi is one enormous main terminal with seven concourse legs, A through G, plus the satellite terminal out on the apron, reached by a free shuttle train from the basement in under 4 minutes. Domestic flights board mostly from Concourses A and B. International flights spread across the rest of the building and the satellite. Geography matters more here than at most hubs: the lounges cluster on level 3 of each concourse, the walk between the far legs runs 15 to 20 minutes, and nothing about a Bangkok midnight departure bank rewards a detour.
The other thing to understand is the April 2025 shake up. Airports of Thailand pulled every airline lounge out of Priority Pass and DragonPass on 1 April 2025, reportedly so that airline lounges serve only their own eligible passengers. Seven airline doors left the programs at a stroke, including the Turkish Airlines and Oman Air lounges that members loved. What remains for program holders is the Coral and Miracle contract network, and it is everywhere: about 13 locations from the domestic piers to the satellite terminal, most listed around the clock. Hours below were checked on 9 May 2026; anything we could not pin down is marked to be confirmed.
Concourses A to D
Concourses A to D lounges
| Lounge | Location | Hours | Access | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miracle First Class Lounge | Concourse A, level 3 | 24 hours | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | The handiest program door for the west side gates; several foreign carriers send their own premium passengers here too |
| Miracle First Class Lounge | Concourse C, level 3 | Around the clock listing, to be confirmed | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Usually quieter than the A and D rooms; a sound fallback |
| The Coral Finest Business Class Lounge | Concourse C, level 3 | 24 hours | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Coral's upmarket product; better than the brand name suggests |
| The Coral Finest Business Class Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | 24 hours | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | The pick of the contract doors in the central spine; arrive before the midnight bank fills it |
| Miracle First Class Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | Around the clock listing, to be confirmed | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Fine for a short sit; food is functional rather than memorable |
| Miracle Business Class Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | 24 hours | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Big and busy; the overflow room when the door next to it queues |
| Thai Airways Royal Orchid Prestige | Concourse D, level 3, near gate D4 | 05:00 to 02:00 | Thai and Star Alliance business class, Star Alliance Gold | Thai's flagship and the best Star Alliance address in the main building |
| Thai Airways Royal First Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | To be confirmed | Historically Thai first class and invitation tiers; current operation to be confirmed | Famous for private rooms and spa treatments; do not plan around it, Thai sells no first class cabin today |
| Singapore Airlines SilverKris | Level 3, opposite gate D7 | 06:30 to 23:00 | Singapore Airlines premium cabins, Star Alliance Gold on Singapore Airlines flights | The strongest food of the Star doors near D; note it closes before the late bank |
| JAL Sakura Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | From 05:35; evening close varies, to be confirmed | JAL premium cabins, oneworld Emerald and Sapphire | A dependable oneworld stop on the D side |
| Qatar Airways Premium Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | Opens around the Doha departures | Qatar Airways business and first; access for other oneworld travelers is restricted, to be confirmed | Plush and strict on the door; arrive with the right boarding pass or not at all |
| Turkish Airlines Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | To be confirmed since the April 2025 program exit | Turkish premium cabins and eligible Star Alliance elites on Turkish flights | Complimentary 15 minute massages and a proper boardroom; the door Priority Pass members miss most |
| Blue Ribbon Club Lounge | Concourse D, level 3 | To be confirmed | Bangkok Airways premium passengers and eligible elites | Small and pleasant; left the lounge programs in April 2025 |
Concourse D is the spine of lounge life at Suvarnabhumi, with most of the airline rooms and three contract doors within a few minutes of each other. The trap is assuming the airline lounges are still open to programs. They are not. Without the right cabin or status, your realistic options on this side are the Coral Finest and the Miracle rooms, and the Coral Finest in D is the one to aim for first.
Concourses E to G
Concourses E to G lounges
| Lounge | Location | Hours | Access | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thai Airways Royal Silk Lounge | Concourse E East, level 3 | To be confirmed | Thai and Star Alliance business class, Star Alliance Gold | Thai closed its other C and E rooms; this is the survivor on the east side |
| Oman Air First and Business Class Lounge | Junction of Concourses E and G, level 3 | Listed 24 hours; confirm since the April 2025 program exit | Oman Air premium cabins; program access ended April 2025 | One of the few lounges here pouring champagne; a real loss for Priority Pass members |
| Air France KLM Sky Lounge | Concourse F, level 3 | Around the Paris and Amsterdam departures, to be confirmed | Air France and KLM premium cabins, SkyTeam Elite Plus | The SkyTeam anchor at BKK, and pretty much the only one |
| EVA Air Lounge | Concourse F, level 3 | 05:30 to 02:30 | Star Alliance business and first, Star Alliance Gold | Open deep into the night and arguably the best Star Alliance lounge in the building |
| Miracle Business Class Lounge | Concourse F, level 3 | 24 hours | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | The program door for the F gates; plain but it never closes |
| Miracle Business Class Lounge | Concourse G, level 3 | 24 hours | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Saves the 20 minute backtrack from the far east gates |
| Miracle First Class Lounge | Concourse G, level 3 | 24 hours | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Marginally calmer than the Business Class room nearby |
| Cathay Pacific Lounge | Concourse G, level 3 | 05:10 to 18:30 | Cathay premium cabins, oneworld Emerald and Sapphire | The Noodle Bar travels well; useless for evening departures because it closes at 18:30 |
The east legs serve the long haul heavies, and the strategy out here is simple: do not backtrack. EVA in Concourse F is the prize if your ticket or status opens it, with hours that actually match Bangkok's late departure pattern. Cathay's lounge is lovely and closes absurdly early for this airport, so oneworld flyers on night flights should plan on a Miracle door in G instead.
Satellite terminal
Satellite terminal lounges
| Lounge | Location | Hours | Access | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emirates Lounge | Level 4, about five minutes from the S gates | Around the Emirates departure banks, to be confirmed | Emirates premium cabins, Skywards Platinum and Gold | Opened 31 January 2025; 1,454 square meters and 250 seats, the airline's largest lounge outside Dubai |
| Miracle First Class Lounge | Satellite terminal | Around the clock listing, to be confirmed | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | The program door nearest the S gates; do not ride back to the main building for a sofa |
| Miracle Business Class Lounge | Satellite terminal | Around the clock listing, to be confirmed | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | The second program door out here; useful when the other fills |
| Qatar Airways Lounge | Upper floor, exact location to be confirmed | Not yet open | Under construction as of 2025; opening date to be confirmed | Qatar uses the satellite gates, so this one will matter when it opens |
The satellite terminal opened in September 2023 and its lounge inventory is still catching up to its gate count. Emirates committed first with a genuinely large room, Miracle covers the program crowd, and Qatar is building. If your boarding pass shows an S gate, ride the shuttle train early and lounge on that side; the three minute train sounds trivial until you add escalators, walking and a boarding cutoff.
Domestic concourses
Domestic lounges
| Lounge | Location | Hours | Access | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Coral Executive Lounge | Domestic Concourse A | To be confirmed | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Tom yum, made to order cocktails and a free 15 minute massage; the best reason to arrive early for a domestic hop |
| Miracle Lounge | Domestic Concourse D | 05:30 to 22:00 | Priority Pass, DragonPass, paid entry | Plain but perfectly fine for short domestic waits |
| Thai Airways Royal Silk Lounge | Domestic Concourse A | To be confirmed | Thai premium cabins and elites, Star Alliance Gold | Left the lounge programs in April 2025; airline passengers only now |
| Bangkok Airways Boutique Lounge | Domestic Concourse A | To be confirmed | All Bangkok Airways passengers, including economy | A free lounge for every passenger remains one of aviation's nicest quirks |
| Blue Ribbon Club Lounge | Domestic Concourse A | To be confirmed | Bangkok Airways premium passengers | The step up from the Boutique room next door |
Domestic lounge life at BKK is short and sweet, which fits flights that rarely run past 90 minutes. The Coral Executive is the standout, and if you are flying Bangkok Airways to Samui or Phuket you get a lounge for free, a perk almost no other airline on earth gives its economy passengers.
Access decoder
What actually opens these doors
Priority Pass covers the Coral and Miracle contract network only: roughly 13 doors spanning international Concourses A, C, D, F and G, two domestic locations and two rooms in the satellite terminal. Since 1 April 2025 no airline lounge at Suvarnabhumi accepts the program. The upside is coverage, because wherever your gate is, a program door sits within a few minutes of it.
DragonPass mirrors the same Coral and Miracle list, having lost the airline lounges at the same time. If your bank card carries DragonPass instead of Priority Pass, your map here is effectively identical.
Paying at the door works at every Coral and Miracle location regardless of airline, cabin or program. Both operators sell entry at the lounge and through their own sites; prices move often enough that we will not print one here, so check before you fly.
Class of travel and status opens the airline rooms, and the alliance geography is clean. Star Alliance dominates: Thai in Concourse D and E East, SilverKris near D7, EVA in F and Turkish in D. oneworld splits between D for JAL and Qatar and G for Cathay, with Qatar notoriously strict about who gets in. SkyTeam travels light here, with the Air France KLM room in F carrying the whole alliance.
One caution on the airline doors: the April 2025 rule change reportedly limits them to their own carriers' passengers, so reciprocal access on partner tickets is worth confirming before you rely on it. For the full program strategy, including which Coral and Miracle doors fill first, see the BKK Priority Pass guide.
Get lounge offers for BKK
Around 13 Coral and Miracle lounges across Suvarnabhumi sell entry or accept lounge programs regardless of airline or cabin, and most never close. Compare current access options, prices and hours before you fly.
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FAQ
Suvarnabhumi lounge questions
Which lounges at Suvarnabhumi take Priority Pass?
Only the Coral and Miracle contract lounges since 1 April 2025, when all seven airline lounges left the program. Between them they cover the domestic concourses, most international concourses and the satellite terminal, with around 13 doors in total.
Are there lounges in the satellite terminal at BKK?
Yes. Emirates opened a 250 seat lounge there on 31 January 2025, and Miracle runs a First Class and a Business Class lounge that both take Priority Pass and DragonPass. Qatar Airways has a lounge under construction on the upper floor, with no confirmed opening date.
Are Suvarnabhumi lounges open 24 hours?
The international Coral and Miracle lounges list around the clock hours, which suits the heavy bank of departures after midnight. Airline lounges keep shorter days: Cathay Pacific closes at 18:30 and the SilverKris lounge at 23:00, so check before a late connection.
Can I pay to enter a lounge at BKK without a business class ticket?
Yes. The Coral and Miracle lounges sell walk in entry at the door alongside Priority Pass and DragonPass access, and most international locations never close. The airline lounges no longer sell entry through third party programs, so without the right cabin or status those doors stay shut.
What is the best lounge at Bangkok Suvarnabhumi?
With Star Alliance status, the EVA Air lounge in Concourse F and the SilverKris lounge near gate D7 lead the field, and Thai's Royal Orchid Prestige in Concourse D is the flagship if you fly Thai. On a program or paid entry, the Coral Finest in Concourse D is the strongest contract door.
More BKK guides
The rest of the Suvarnabhumi cluster
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