American Airlines has (4) levels of lounge at New York JFK, and it gets confusing for passengers. Part of it is that the lounge names don’t describe who has access, part of it is that the lounges are brand new, with three of them shared with British Airways now that BA has moved into the terminal.
There is no more Flagship Lounge or Flagship First Dining. Those have been replaced, and expanded. And there’s only one Admirals Club, all the way on the midfield concourse. The old Admirals Club near the TSA checkpoint, where long haul flights depart from, will eventually become part of the joint American Airlines – British Airways business class lounge.
Here are the (3) joint American Airlines – BA lounges, all an elevator ride upstairs just after the security checkpoint, all named for neighborhoods found both in New York and London:
There’s a gorgeous bar, sit down dining, and premium wine and champagne. It’s not as good as the old Flagship First Dining, but accessible to many more passengers. There are no outside views.
The buffet here is the same as the business class lounge, but there’s sit down dining (order by QR code), a staffed bar, and unlike the Chelsea lounge there are windows out over airport opreations.
It is the old Flagship lounge, which will expand into the old Admirals Club space behind it and old Flagship First Dining space as well. The buffet here is the same as the buffet in the Soho lounge. While large it will get busy around peak transatlantic departures.
The business class (Greenwich) lounge is the old Flagship lounge space, with the old Admirals Club not yet open as part of it, and Flagship Dining being used as employee space though eventually the plan is to make it part of the lounge. Buffet catering is the same as in Soho lounge.
First class (oneworld emerald) Soho lounge adds sit down dining to the buffet that is in Greenwich, but service is more miss than hit, it took several attempts when I was there before they accepted my food order and there were only four choices on the menu.
Greenwich has self-serve bar, while Soho is a staffed bar. Soho has a quiet room that nobody seems to realize is there and is basically empty. There was no dessert in Soho while I was there at 7 p.m. on
a Thursday evening.
The Chelsea (true First Class, a la Concorde Room) lounge is very nice but no windows, food a step down from Flagship Dining but still enjoyable. There are supply chain problems. Menu is limited but they didn’t have everything on it still when I was there and champagne that started out high end and extensive has been cut back to one premium champagne rotated out weekly.