Airport lounges have become victims of their own success. Years of credit card perks, day passes, and discounted memberships have packed them to the point where finding a seat feels like a competitive sport — and airlines are now responding with a concept that strips the lounge down to its most useful feature: free food and drinks, no seat required.
The grab-and-go lounge model is gaining traction across the three largest U.S. carriers. American Airlines opened Provisions by Admirals Club at Charlotte Douglas in 2025, a streamlined space designed for speed with grab-and-go food, beverages, and customer support — accessible under standard Admirals Club policies or a $79 day pass. Delta has piloted quick-serve areas inside Sky Club lobbies in Atlanta and New York. United’s Houston grab-and-go location offers fresh-squeezed juice, barista coffee, and a full food counter for members on the move.
The economics make sense for airlines too. Smaller footprint, less staffing, no hot kitchens — the model costs significantly less to operate than a full-service lounge while still delivering the perk travelers actually use most.
The sharper benefit may be what it does for flagship lounges. Routing rushed travelers to grab-and-go locations frees up the premium spaces to actually feel premium again — something that’s been quietly eroding as lounge access has become nearly ubiquitous among frequent flyers and credit card holders.
Why It Matters: If you hold lounge access through a credit card or airline status, grab-and-go locations are worth knowing about for tight connections — and the traditional lounges may actually start feeling less like a cattle call as a result.**
Source: Crowded Lounges Force Airlines to Rethink Travel Perks for Flyers




