Changi Airport Lounges Compared: Which One Is Actually Worth Your Money

A decision-first guide to every pay-per-use lounge at Changi, what each one really gives you, and who should skip the fee entirely

2026-07-15
Quick facts: Changi AirportMap lounges
Walk-in lounge priceAbout S$45–70 for roughly 3 hours, varying by lounge, terminal and time of day
Number of pay-per-use lounges7 distinct lounges/lounge groups across Terminals 1, 2, 3 and 4
Plaza Premium LoungeT1 departure Level 3, about 7,000 sqm, 3 private rest suites, 6 shower rooms, open 24 hours
Ambassador Transit Lounge accessTransit/departing passengers only, with a valid boarding pass or e-ticket within 24 hours of travel
Marhaba Lounge bookingNo online booking; cash (about S$47) or Priority Pass at the door only
BLOSSOM Lounge passes3-hour, 6-hour or 12-hour options at T4, walk-in accepted, no reservation required
Priority Pass/DragonPass coverage at Changi10 lounges plus 23 restaurants/bars and 3 spas, officially listed for 2026
Free rest optionSnooze lounges with reclining chairs in every terminal, no charge, no booking needed

Changi Airport has seven distinct pay-per-use and membership lounges spread across four terminals, and they are not interchangeable: one is transit-passengers-only, one has no online booking at all, and prices for a three-hour walk-in visit run roughly S$45 to S$70. This guide sorts out which lounge fits your ticket, your schedule and your budget, section by section, so you book the right one once instead of guessing at the check-in counter. For the wider layover picture, see our Changi layover guide.

A pay-per-use business lounge at Singapore Changi Airport with lounge seating and a buffet counter
Pay-per-use lounges like this one at Changi combine open seating with a self-serve buffet, a common layout across the airport’s independent lounges.

1. Is a Changi Airport lounge actually worth paying for?

A pay-per-use lounge at Changi is worth the S$45 to S$70 fee if you have at least two hours free and want a shower, a proper meal or quiet workspace; if you just need somewhere to sit or sleep, the airport’s free snooze lounges do that job for nothing.

OptionTypical costBest forWhat you don’t get
Free snooze loungeS$0A quiet seat or recliner to nap or waitNo shower, no food, no privacy
Hub & Spoke landside seatingS$0 (20% food discount within 8 hours of flight)Open-air seating before security with food nearbyNo shower, no lounge-style buffet
Paid lounge, walk-inAbout S$45–70 / 3 hoursShower, buffet meal, workstation, short restUsually no private sleeping room for walk-ins
Priority Pass / DragonPass entryIncluded with membershipFrequent flyers with an existing passEntry can be limited when a lounge is full

The decision comes down to three questions: how much time do you actually have before boarding, do you need to shower or eat a real meal rather than a snack, and is your ticket eligible for the lounge you have in mind. A short two-hour connection with no shower need rarely justifies the fee when a free snooze chair covers the same ground. A five-hour overnight gap with an early flight, on the other hand, is exactly when the shower and buffet start paying for themselves.

It also matters which lounge you are eligible for. The Ambassador Transit Lounge, covered in section 5, is restricted to transiting and departing passengers only, which rules it out for anyone who has already cleared immigration into Singapore. Working through the terminal-by-terminal table in the next section before you commit to a specific lounge avoids paying for something you cannot actually use.

2. All of Changi’s lounges at a glance

Changi has seven pay-per-use or membership-based lounge options spread across Terminals 1 through 4, each with its own location, eligibility rule and rough price point.

LoungeTerminal & locationWho can use itApprox. price
Plaza Premium LoungeT1, departure area, Level 3Any airline, any class, with reservation or eligible pass~S$45–70 / 3 hrs
SATS Premier LoungeT1, T2, T3, departure/transit area, Level 3Any airline, any class, with reservation or eligible pass~S$45–70 / 3 hrs
Ambassador Transit LoungeT2, T3, departure transit hall, Level 3Transit/departing passengers only, boarding pass within 24 hrs~S$45–70 / 3 hrs
BLOSSOM LoungeT4, departure transit hall, Level 2M near 7-ElevenWalk-in or reservation, run jointly by SATS and Plaza PremiumTiered by 3/6/12-hour pass
Marhaba LoungeT1, T3Cash payment or Priority Pass only, no online booking~S$47 cash
Hub & SpokeLandside near T2, before securityWalk-in or reservation, open to all travelersSeating free, food priced separately
Changi Lounge (Jewel)Landside at Jewel, closest to T1, before securityPriority Pass / DragonPass eligible holdersIncluded with membership

Notice the split between landside and airside options. Hub & Spoke and the Changi Lounge at Jewel sit before security, which makes them useful if you are meeting someone or killing time before check-in even opens. Everything else, from Plaza Premium to Ambassador Transit, sits past security in the departure or transit zone, so you need to have already checked in and cleared the relevant checkpoints to reach them.

The terminal column matters more than it looks. If your flight departs from T4, Plaza Premium and SATS Premier are not an option since neither has a T4 presence, and BLOSSOM Lounge becomes your only pay-per-use pick. If you are flying from T1, you have the widest choice of any terminal, with Plaza Premium, SATS Premier and Marhaba all available. The next several sections break down each lounge individually, in the same order they appear in this table.

3. Plaza Premium Lounge, in full

Plaza Premium Lounge in T1 is Changi’s largest and most amenity-heavy pay-per-use lounge, with about 7,000 square metres of space, three private rest suites, six shower rooms and food service around the clock.

FeatureDetail
LocationTerminal 1, departure area, Level 3
SizeApproximately 7,000 sqm
Private suites3 private rest suites
Showers6 shower rooms, including 1 accessible shower
DiningAll-day meal service
HoursOpen 24 hours
EligibilityOpen to any airline or ticket class, with a reservation or an eligible lounge pass

The scale of Plaza Premium is what sets it apart from the other independent lounges at Changi. Six shower rooms, including one designed to be accessible, means queueing for a shower is rarely the bottleneck it can be at smaller lounges, and the three private rest suites give a genuine option for travelers who want to lie down rather than recline in a shared seating area. Being open around the clock also makes it a solid choice for red-eye departures or long overnight layovers when other services on the concourse are winding down.

None of this is cheap, and the private suites in particular can be fully booked during peak evening banks of flights, so reserving ahead rather than showing up and hoping for a walk-in slot is the safer approach if a suite or a specific shower time matters to you.

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4. SATS Premier Lounge, in full

SATS Premier Lounge is Changi’s most widely spread option, with a presence in T1, T2 and T3, and it leans on massage chairs, private workstations and a buffet that includes alcohol rather than a single standout feature.

FeatureDetail
LocationsT1, T2 and T3, departure/transit area, Level 3
SeatingMassage chairs and private workstations
ShowersShower facilities available
DiningBuffet dining, including alcoholic drinks
EligibilityAny airline or ticket class, with reservation or eligible lounge pass
PriceRoughly in line with the S$45–70 / 3-hour walk-in range

Being present in three terminals rather than one is the real advantage of SATS Premier Lounge. If your itinerary involves a connection that changes terminals, or if you are simply not sure yet which terminal your outbound flight will use, SATS Premier is the one name that is likely to show up wherever you land. The combination of massage chairs, private workstations and a buffet that runs to alcoholic drinks also makes it a reasonable middle ground between a bare-bones rest stop and the larger scale of Plaza Premium.

The trade-off is that because it is popular and appears in high-traffic terminals, the free-flow buffet and massage chairs draw a crowd during busy departure banks, so walk-in access is not guaranteed at every hour, particularly in T2 and T3. Booking ahead where you can is the simplest way around that risk.

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A transit lounge at Changi Airport with workstations and seating for business travellers
Transit lounges at Changi set aside dedicated workstations alongside general seating for travellers connecting between flights.

5. Ambassador Transit Lounge, in full

Ambassador Transit Lounge in T2 and T3 packs in printing services, workstations, a gym area, showers and private sleep suites, but it is restricted to transit and departing passengers only, with a valid boarding pass or e-ticket within 24 hours of travel.

FeatureDetail
LocationsT2 and T3, departure transit hall, Level 3
Business servicesPrinting service and private workstations
FitnessGym facilities
RestPrivate sleeping suites
ShowersShower facilities available
EligibilityTransit or departing passengers only, valid boarding pass/e-ticket within 24 hours of travel
Eligibility warning: Ambassador Transit Lounge is only open to passengers who are transiting through or departing Changi with a valid boarding pass or e-ticket for a flight within 24 hours. Travelers who have already cleared immigration and entered Singapore cannot use this lounge, even if they hold a departing ticket for a later date.

Among the three main independent lounges, Ambassador Transit is the one built specifically around the needs of someone mid-journey rather than someone starting or ending a trip in Singapore. The gym area and printing service are genuinely useful for a business traveler on a long-haul connection who needs to stay presentable or finish a document before the next leg, and the private sleep suites suit an overnight transit better than open lounge seating does.

This one is strictly off-limits unless you are transiting or departing within the 24-hour window, so travelers who have entered Singapore and plan to explore before flying out again should look at Plaza Premium or SATS Premier instead, since both accept any eligible ticket.

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6. BLOSSOM Lounge and Marhaba Lounge, briefly

BLOSSOM Lounge in T4 offers tiered 3, 6 or 12-hour passes with walk-in access, while Marhaba Lounge in T1 and T3 is a halal-friendly option that cannot be booked online at all.

BLOSSOM LoungeMarhaba Lounge
LocationT4, departure transit hall, Level 2M, near 7-ElevenT1, T3
OperatorJointly run by SATS and Plaza PremiumIndependent operator
BookingWalk-in accepted, no reservation requiredNo online booking; cash or Priority Pass only
Price structure3-hour, 6-hour or 12-hour tiered passesRoughly S$47 cash
Notable amenitiesCharging stations, TV, flight info displays, free Wi-Fi, food and drink, neck/shoulder massage, hot showers, open 24 hoursHalal-friendly food and prayer-conscious environment

BLOSSOM is the only pay-per-use lounge at T4, which makes it the default choice for anyone flying from that terminal. The tiered pass structure is worth paying attention to: a 3-hour pass suits a standard connection, while the 6-hour or 12-hour options make more sense for a long overnight gap, since you are effectively buying a longer block of the same amenities, including hot showers and free Wi-Fi, rather than paying for a fresh short visit twice.

Marhaba Lounge fills a different need entirely. Its halal-friendly food and atmosphere make it an important option for Muslim travelers, but the lack of any online booking product means you either pay in cash at the door, at roughly S$47, or present a valid Priority Pass membership. Because there is no verified online booking product for Marhaba, this guide describes it factually without an affiliate link, so treat the cash price above as the number to budget for if you plan on visiting.

7. How to rest for free at Changi

Every terminal at Changi has free snooze lounges with reclining chairs that require no payment and no booking, and the landside Hub & Spoke area near T2 adds free seating plus a food discount for passengers close to departure.

Free optionLocationWhat you getCost
Snooze loungeAvailable in every terminal; T3’s is a well-known exampleReclining chairs for rest or sleepFree
Hub & SpokePublic landside area near T2, before securityAlfresco open-air seating, 20% off food/drink (excl. alcohol) with boarding pass within 8 hrsFree seating; food priced separately

The snooze lounges are Changi’s answer to travelers who need a place to close their eyes without paying a lounge fee. They are unassuming by design: a bank of reclining chairs, generally tucked into a quieter corner of the terminal, with no buffet or shower attached. The T3 snooze lounge is the one most frequently mentioned by regular Changi travelers, but equivalent free rest zones exist across the airport, so it is worth checking your specific terminal’s directory or an airport map on arrival rather than assuming only T3 has one.

Hub & Spoke works differently, since it sits in the public landside zone before security near T2, giving it an open, alfresco feel rather than the enclosed layout typical of airside lounges. Seating itself is free, and travelers with a boarding pass for a flight within 8 hours get 20% off food and drink there, alcohol excluded. It is a reasonable option if you are early for check-in or waiting to meet someone, though it does not include the shower or workstation facilities that the paid airside lounges offer.

8. Priority Pass, DragonPass and credit-card free entry

Most of Changi’s independent lounges, including Plaza Premium, SATS Premier and Ambassador Transit, accept Priority Pass, LoungeKey and DragonPass, and some Singapore-issued credit cards include free Priority Pass membership as a card benefit.

MembershipAccepted atNotes
Priority PassPlaza Premium, SATS Premier, Ambassador Transit, Marhaba, Changi Lounge (Jewel)Entry may be limited during full-capacity periods
LoungeKeyMost independent lounges listed aboveCoverage depends on the specific membership tier
DragonPassMost independent lounges, plus Changi Lounge (Jewel)Entry may be limited during full-capacity periods
Credit-card perkVaries by issuerSome Singapore-issued cards bundle free Priority Pass membership

For 2026, the official count of Priority Pass and DragonPass-eligible facilities at Changi runs to 10 lounges, along with 23 restaurants and bars and 3 spas, which makes Changi one of the more generously covered airports for members of these programs. That range matters because it means a Priority Pass is not limited to a single lounge brand, it can realistically be redeemed at a sit-down restaurant or a spa treatment instead, depending on what a traveler feels like on a given day.

The one caveat worth remembering is capacity. Membership access at Plaza Premium, SATS Premier and Ambassador Transit can be turned away or capped when a lounge is genuinely full, particularly during evening departure banks, so pass holders should not assume guaranteed entry at every hour. If a free membership route through your credit card already exists, it is generally the better value choice over paying walk-in prices, but arriving with a backup plan for a busy evening is still sensible.

Buffet dining at the SATS Premier Lounge at Singapore Changi Airport
The buffet spread at SATS Premier Lounge includes hot dishes and drinks, part of what separates it from a simple snack counter.

9. Full price comparison: walk-in vs Klook vs membership

Walk-in prices for most Changi lounges sit around S$45 to S$70 for three hours, pre-booking through Klook is often cheaper than paying at the door, and membership through Priority Pass or a linked credit card removes the per-visit fee entirely.

Access methodTypical priceBest for
Walk-in at the counter~S$45–70 / 3 hrsLast-minute decisions, off-peak hours
Pre-booked online (e.g. Klook)Often below walk-in ratePlanned itineraries, peak-hour visits
Priority Pass / DragonPass / LoungeKeyIncluded in membershipFrequent flyers, existing cardholders
Marhaba (cash only)~S$47Halal-friendly dining, no online option needed
BLOSSOM tiered passScales with 3/6/12-hour tierLong overnight transits at T4

The headline number to keep in mind is the S$45 to S$70 range for a standard three-hour walk-in visit, which applies broadly across Plaza Premium, SATS Premier and Ambassador Transit. Within that range, the exact price shifts based on which lounge, which terminal and what time of day you show up, so it is worth treating it as a planning estimate rather than a fixed rate.

Pre-booking through a platform like Klook frequently comes in under the walk-in price for the same lounge and time window, which is the simplest reason to book ahead even if you are fairly confident a walk-in slot will be available. Membership routes remove the per-visit cost altogether, which makes them the best value for anyone who already holds Priority Pass, DragonPass or a card that bundles it, provided the lounge is not at capacity when you arrive.

10. Which Changi lounge actually fits you

Business travelers who need to work should pick SATS Premier or Ambassador Transit for the workstations, families and halal travelers are better served by Marhaba or a general lounge with a buffet, and anyone on a long overnight transit should look at BLOSSOM’s longer-hour passes or Ambassador Transit’s private sleep suites.

Traveler typeRecommended loungeWhy
Business traveler needing to workSATS Premier or Ambassador TransitPrivate workstations, printing service (Ambassador Transit)
Family wanting a meal and restPlaza Premium or SATS PremierAll-day dining, open seating, no strict eligibility limits
Halal-conscious travelerMarhaba LoungeHalal-friendly food and atmosphere
Tight budget, short layoverFree snooze lounge or Hub & SpokeNo fee, adequate for a short rest
Long overnight transitBLOSSOM (12-hour pass) or Ambassador Transit sleep suitesBuilt for extended stays rather than a 3-hour visit
Already in Singapore, flying out laterPlaza Premium or SATS PremierAmbassador Transit is not eligible for this traveler

This matrix is built to be read against your own itinerary rather than a general ranking of which lounge is best, since there is no single best lounge for every traveler. A solo business traveler with a four-hour connection has different priorities from a family of four with a long overnight layover, and the right lounge changes accordingly.

The one row worth double-checking before you book is the last one. If you have already entered Singapore through immigration and hold a later departing flight, Ambassador Transit Lounge is not available to you regardless of how convenient its location is, so default to Plaza Premium or SATS Premier instead.

11. How to book a Changi lounge on Klook, step by step

Booking a Changi lounge through Klook takes a few minutes: search for the lounge by name, pick your flight terminal and time window, pay online, and present the e-voucher at the lounge counter along with your boarding pass.

  1. Step 1: Confirm your terminal. Check which terminal your flight departs from, since Plaza Premium is T1-only, SATS Premier covers T1/T2/T3, and Ambassador Transit covers T2/T3 only.
  2. Step 2: Search and select the lounge. Look up the specific lounge listing that matches your terminal and confirm the amenities included before paying.
  3. Step 3: Choose your time window. Select a slot that comfortably fits your layover, allowing buffer time to walk to your gate afterward.
  4. Step 4: Pay and receive your e-voucher. Complete payment online, which is generally priced below the walk-in rate for the same lounge and slot.
  5. Step 5: Present your voucher and boarding pass. At the lounge counter, show the e-voucher along with a valid boarding pass or e-ticket to be checked in.
ConsiderationWhat to check
Terminal matchConfirm the listing covers your actual departure terminal before paying
Eligibility rulesAmbassador Transit requires a valid boarding pass/e-ticket within 24 hours; verify you qualify
Cancellation windowTerms vary by listing, so check the specific policy before booking
Time bufferLeave enough margin between your lounge slot end time and boarding to avoid rushing

Booking ahead is mainly a hedge against capacity rather than a requirement, since these lounges do accept walk-ins outside peak hours. The real advantage of pre-booking is price and certainty: you lock in a rate that is often cheaper than the walk-in fee, and you avoid the possibility of being turned away because a lounge is full during a busy evening departure bank.

Cancellation terms are not uniform across every listing, so treat the specific cancellation window shown at checkout as the rule that applies to your booking, rather than assuming a blanket policy across all Changi lounges.

12. What you actually get: amenities compared

Showers, alcohol-inclusive buffets and private sleep suites are not offered equally across every lounge, with Plaza Premium leading on showers and private suites, SATS Premier strongest on its buffet, and Ambassador Transit unique for its gym and printing service.

AmenityPlaza PremiumSATS PremierAmbassador Transit
Showers6 rooms, 1 accessibleYesYes
Private sleep suite3 suitesNot specifiedYes
Buffet with alcoholAll-day diningYesNot specified as alcohol-inclusive
WorkstationsAvailablePrivate workstationsPrivate workstations
Printing serviceNot specifiedNot specifiedYes
Gym/fitness areaNot specifiedNot specifiedYes
Massage chairsNot specifiedYesNot specified

Reading this table against your own priorities is more useful than picking whichever lounge sounds biggest. If a shower and a nap in an actual private suite matter most, Plaza Premium’s six shower rooms and three suites are hard to match. If the buffet and a comfortable massage chair are the point of the visit, SATS Premier is built around exactly that.

Ambassador Transit stands apart because of its gym facilities and printing service, amenities the other two do not list, which makes it genuinely useful for a business traveler on a long connection who needs to stay active or finish paperwork, provided they meet its transit-only eligibility rule from section 5.

Changi Airport's free snooze lounge at Terminal 3 with reclining loungers and massage chairs
Changi’s free snooze lounges, like this one in Terminal 3, give travelers a no-cost place to recline between flights.

13. Practical tips and common mistakes

The most common mistakes are booking a lounge in the wrong terminal, assuming Ambassador Transit is open to anyone with a ticket, and showing up during a peak evening bank without a reservation and expecting an immediate walk-in slot.

Common mistakeWhy it happensHow to avoid it
Booking the wrong terminal’s loungeAssuming every lounge exists in every terminalCheck section 2’s table against your actual departure terminal first
Trying to use Ambassador Transit after landing in SingaporeNot realizing the transit-only restriction appliesConfirm eligibility in section 5 before booking
Assuming Marhaba can be booked onlineExpecting all lounges to work the same wayBring cash (~S$47) or a Priority Pass instead
Arriving during a peak evening bank with no reservationUnderestimating demand at busy departure timesPre-book through Klook or arrive with a backup plan
Cutting the time window too close to boardingUnderestimating walk time from lounge to gateLeave a buffer beyond the lounge’s stated time slot

Most of these mistakes come down to treating Changi’s lounges as a single interchangeable product rather than seven distinct offerings with their own locations and rules. The eligibility mix-up around Ambassador Transit is the single most consequential error, since it can mean turning up with a paid booking and being refused entry at the door.

Timing mistakes are the second most common issue. A three-hour lounge slot needs to leave enough margin to walk to the gate, clear any final checks and board, so treat the three hours as time inside the lounge rather than the full remaining length of your layover.

14. Lounge vs transit hotel vs Jewel’s free time: a quick comparison

A lounge suits a few hours of rest, a shower and a meal, a transit hotel suits an actual overnight stay with a private bed, and Jewel’s free landside attractions suit travelers who want to spend layover time exploring rather than resting.

OptionTypical durationBest forCost profile
Pay-per-use lounge~3 hoursShower, meal, light rest or work before boarding~S$45–70
Transit hotelOvernight or several hoursGenuine sleep in a private roomPriced per room, generally higher than a lounge visit
Jewel (landside, free areas)Open-endedSightseeing, shopping, dining before securityFree to browse; individual attractions/food priced separately

The right choice depends entirely on what you plan to do with your layover hours. A lounge is the efficient option for a traveler who wants to shower, eat and possibly nap in reclining seating before a flight within the next few hours, and it is priced accordingly for that shorter window.

A transit hotel earns its higher price by giving you an actual bed and door that closes, which matters far more on an overnight layover than it does on a four-hour connection. Jewel, meanwhile, is the pick for travelers who would rather spend their free time walking around landside attractions and dining options than resting in a lounge chair, since access to the landside areas themselves costs nothing.

15. Kids, luggage and other practical logistics

Bring a boarding pass or e-ticket for every traveler including children, keep carry-on luggage with you since lounges do not typically offer separate baggage storage, and check each lounge’s specific eligibility rule before arriving as a group.

SituationWhat to know
Traveling with childrenEach child generally needs their own boarding pass/e-ticket presented at entry, same as adults
Carry-on luggageLounges are set up for hand luggage travelers rather than dedicated baggage storage
Group bookingsConfirm the lounge’s per-person pricing and eligibility rule applies to every member of the group
Ambassador Transit eligibility for groupsEvery member of the group must individually meet the transit/departing-within-24-hours rule
Marhaba entry for groupsCash payment or Priority Pass is required per person, since there is no group online booking

Traveling as a family or in a group adds a layer of coordination that solo travelers do not have to think about. Since eligibility for most lounges, and Ambassador Transit in particular, is checked against each individual’s boarding pass or e-ticket, it is worth confirming before you arrive that every member of your party genuinely qualifies, rather than assuming one valid ticket covers the whole group.

Luggage-wise, these lounges are designed around travelers who are already through check-in and carrying hand luggage rather than large checked bags, so there is no dedicated storage service to plan around. If your layover involves picking up checked luggage at some point, factor that into your timing separately from your lounge visit.

16. Wrap-up and checklist

Match your terminal to the right lounge, confirm you meet its eligibility rule especially for Ambassador Transit, decide between walk-in and pre-booking based on how busy your travel time is, and keep the free snooze lounges in mind as a genuine no-cost fallback.

Checklist itemWhy it matters
Confirm your departure terminalNot every lounge exists in every terminal
Check the specific eligibility ruleAmbassador Transit is transit/departing-only within 24 hours
Decide walk-in vs pre-bookingPre-booking is often cheaper and safer during peak hours
Budget roughly S$45–70 for 3 hoursSets realistic expectations for a standard lounge visit
Remember the free snooze loungesA legitimate no-cost option for a short rest

Changi’s lounge lineup rewards a little planning. Once you know your terminal, your available time and whether you actually need a shower or a full meal versus just a place to sit, the choice among Plaza Premium, SATS Premier, Ambassador Transit, BLOSSOM and Marhaba narrows quickly, and the free options cover everyone else.

For the rest of your Changi layover beyond lounges, see our Changi layover guide and Changi Airport guide, plus our airport transit guide, Singapore eSIM guide, Singapore budget guide, best time to visit Singapore guide and our Singapore master guide for the bigger picture.

Frequently asked questions

Q. Is it worth paying for a lounge at Changi Airport?
It depends on how much time you have and what you need. If you want a shower, a real meal or quiet workspace and have at least two hours free, a paid lounge at roughly S$45 to S$70 for three hours is generally worth it. If you only need somewhere to sit or nap, Changi’s free snooze lounges do the same job at no cost.
Q. How much does a Changi Airport lounge cost?
Walk-in access to most pay-per-use lounges runs about S$45 to S$70 for approximately three hours, though the exact price depends on the specific lounge, the terminal and the time of day. Marhaba Lounge is priced separately at around S$47 in cash. Pre-booking online is often cheaper than paying at the door.
Q. Can I use the Ambassador Transit Lounge if I’ve already landed in Singapore?
No. The Ambassador Transit Lounge is restricted to transit and departing passengers with a valid boarding pass or e-ticket within 24 hours of travel. Travelers who have cleared immigration and entered Singapore are not eligible, even if they plan to fly out again later.
Q. Does Marhaba Lounge accept online bookings?
No. Marhaba Lounge has no online booking option. Entry is either by cash payment at the door, roughly S$47, or by presenting a valid Priority Pass membership.
Q. What is included in the SATS Premier Lounge?
SATS Premier Lounge typically includes massage chairs, private workstations, shower facilities and a buffet that includes alcoholic drinks. Exact offerings can vary slightly by terminal, since the lounge operates in T1, T2 and T3.
Q. Is Priority Pass accepted at Changi Airport lounges?
Yes. Most independent lounges at Changi, including Plaza Premium, SATS Premier and Ambassador Transit, accept Priority Pass, LoungeKey and DragonPass, though entry can be limited during busy periods. Some Singapore-issued credit cards also include free Priority Pass membership as a card perk.
Q. Which Changi lounge is best if I want a shower?
Plaza Premium Lounge in T1 has six shower rooms, including one accessible shower, and is open 24 hours. SATS Premier Lounge and Ambassador Transit Lounge also offer shower facilities, so any of the three independent lounges cover this need.
Q. Can families with kids use pay-per-use lounges at Changi?
The lounges described in this guide are general pay-per-use business lounges rather than dedicated family or children’s lounges, so they suit families who want a quiet place to rest, eat and use a shower before a flight. Bring boarding passes or e-tickets for every traveler, since access is checked per person.
Q. Is there a free lounge at Changi Airport?
Yes. Every terminal has free snooze lounges with reclining chairs where travelers can rest at no cost and without booking. The Hub & Spoke area near T2 is also a free-to-sit landside space with a food and drink discount for passengers within 8 hours of their flight.
Q. How early should I book a Changi Airport lounge?
Booking ahead, even a day or two before travel, is worth doing for the busier lounges like SATS Premier and Plaza Premium, since walk-in slots during peak evening banks can fill up. For quieter travel times, walk-in access is usually available without advance booking.
Q. What is the cancellation policy for lounge bookings made online?
Cancellation terms vary by listing and by lounge, so it is worth checking the specific booking’s cancellation window at the time of purchase rather than assuming a standard rule applies across every lounge.
Q. Which terminal has the most lounge choices at Changi?
Terminal 1 has the widest choice, with Plaza Premium Lounge, SATS Premier Lounge and Marhaba Lounge all located there. Terminals 2 and 3 each have SATS Premier and Ambassador Transit options, while Terminal 4 has the BLOSSOM Lounge.
Q. Is Plaza Premium Lounge open 24 hours?
Yes. Plaza Premium Lounge in T1 operates 24 hours a day and is open to travelers regardless of airline or ticket class, provided they have a reservation or an eligible lounge pass.
Q. What is the difference between a lounge and a transit hotel at Changi?
A pay-per-use lounge is designed for a few hours of rest, showers, food and light work before a flight, typically priced for around three hours. A transit hotel offers an actual private room with a bed for longer stays, which suits travelers with a long overnight layover rather than a short gap between flights.

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