(INCHEON) Korean Air will open four newly renovated lounges at Incheon International Airport on August 18, 2025, launching the first phase of a multi-year program tied to its planned integration with Asiana Airlines. The airline’s footprint at Terminal 2 will more than double, with total lounge space growing from 5,105 to 12,270 square meters and seating nearly doubling to 1,566 seats. Executives say the aim is simple: serve a larger, more premium-focused passenger base with spaces that feel closer to luxury hotels than airport waiting rooms.
Two refreshed spaces—the redesigned Miler Club Lounge and the Prestige East (Right) Lounge—will open alongside two brand-new Prestige Garden Lounges, East and West. These launches mark the most visible step in Korean Air’s push to handle more premium travelers as Asiana’s operations shift to Terminal 2 and Asiana’s lounges close in phases later this year.

The carrier plans to complete the project in 2026, when the remaining Prestige lounges and a new First Class Lounge debut. By then, Korean Air will operate six lounges at Terminal 2, creating a consistent experience across the airport for customers flying on the combined carrier.
Opening timeline, design and capacity
Korean Air set August 18, 2025 for the first openings, with the second phase following in April 2026. The design blends traditional Korean architecture (hanok) with modern materials and a color palette aligned with the airline’s premium cabins.
Spaces are organized into clear zones for:
– Dining
– Rest
– Quiet work
– Meetings
– Wellness (including massage chairs)
The expanded food and beverage program will be a focal point. Live chef stations, staffed by Grand Hyatt Incheon culinary teams, will serve:
– Hand-tossed pizzas
– Croissants
– Chef-carved beef steak
– Korean favorites such as freshly rolled gimbap, tteokguk, and janchi guksu
Menus will rotate quarterly to reflect the seasons. Dedicated bartenders will prepare cocktails, and in the Miler Club Lounge in-house baristas will pour premium coffee.
Two new Prestige Garden Lounges add a sense of calm for connecting passengers:
– One garden follows a traditional Korean style
– The other uses a contemporary Western look
Placed at opposite ends of Terminal 2, these gardens are designed to give travelers a quiet break from gate areas.
Access rules and traveler impact
Lounge access remains focused on premium tickets and top-tier status. Rules for the August opening include:
- Eligibility: Korean Air First and Prestige Class passengers, SkyTeam Elite Plus members, and eligible frequent flyers with Morning Calm Premium or Million Miler status.
- Locations: Multiple lounges across Terminal 2; the Korean Air app provides directions and real-time crowd information.
- Services: Dining, relaxation, wellness, work, and meeting zones. Live-cooked meals, cocktails, and barista coffee are available across the network.
By the end of the rollout, six lounges will serve passengers at Incheon International Airport. The airline also flagged upcoming renovations at:
– Los Angeles (LAX) — January 2026
– New York JFK Terminal 1 — June 2026
These projects position the Incheon overhaul as the core of a broader premium push.
The lounge is designed not to be a simple waiting space, but to be a place where you feel the excitement and dignity of travel before departure. We will establish ourselves as a hub lounge for integrated Korean Air in the future.
— Korean Air (official statement)
David Pacey, the airline’s executive vice president for inflight service and lounges, said the goal was to move beyond “sterile” rooms into “five-star hotel” environments focused on luxury, comfort, and a strong food program.
Practical benefits for travelers
Analysts and industry coverage note several practical effects for passengers:
– More seats and shorter waits for showers and quiet areas
– Better food at peak times due to live cooking and chef-carved offerings
– Improved dispersal with garden lounges at terminal ends
– App-based live crowd views to help passengers choose a calmer space without walking the full length of Terminal 2
According to industry commentary, the overhaul aligns with a global shift toward premium hospitality in airline lounges and addresses long-standing gaps at Incheon. AirlineRatings named Korean Air the “World’s Best Airline for 2025,” noting the lounge renewal as part of the service upgrade.
Phases and rollout details
The first phase (opening August 18, 2025) includes:
1. The refreshed Miler Club Lounge
2. The refreshed Prestige East (Right) Lounge
3. Two new Prestige Garden Lounges (East & West)
The second phase (due April 2026) will add:
– More Prestige capacity
– A new First Class Lounge
Asiana’s lounges at Incheon will close in phases as the merged operation takes shape, consolidating premium services in Terminal 2.
Design, amenities and passenger experience
The design language is inspired by hanok, bringing local character into a modern setting:
– Warm tones, natural textures, and quiet lighting to slow the pace after security
– Families may prefer garden lounges for open space and calm seating
– Solo travelers can use work zones with charging points and privacy screens
– Wellness areas (massage chairs) are separated from dining rooms to keep noise down
Korean Air ties the menu plan to the seasons with quarterly updates, aiming to keep offerings fresh for frequent visitors. The combination of live cooking, wellness zones, and barista/bartender service is intended to create a hotel-like lounge experience—especially in the Miler Club Lounge, where coffee service is emphasized.
Strategic rationale and broader implications
Korean Air links the larger lounge plan to the Asiana integration planned for late 2025. As Asiana shifts into Terminal 2, the carrier expects:
– Increased connecting traffic
– More elites seeking pre-departure services
To help manage crowd flow, the Korean Air app will guide travelers to the nearest lounge based on departure gate and real-time crowd levels, while still allowing passengers to choose any lounge they prefer.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the project signals how carriers are preparing for heavier premium demand on Asia–North America and regional routes, where lounge quality can influence buying decisions for both corporate and leisure travelers.
Practical information and contact details
- For airport maps and passenger guidance, see the official Incheon airport website: https://www.airport.kr
- Korean Air customer service in Korea: 1588-2001
- The Korean Air website provides updates on opening dates and features.
While access rules remain centered on cabin and status, the expanded network should reduce pressure during busy departures and give long-haul flyers more choice in where to rest, work, or eat.
With four lounges opening now and more due in 2026, Korean Air is betting that better ground service will support its larger strategy as Asiana’s flights and customers fold into Terminal 2. For many passengers, the change will be felt first on the ground—over a hot bowl of janchi guksu, a fresh espresso, and a seat that doesn’t feel like a gate hold room.
This Article in a Nutshell
Korean Air unveils four luxury lounges at Incheon on August 18, 2025, expanding Terminal 2 to 12,270 square meters. Design blends hanok tradition and modern comfort. Seasonal menus, live chef stations, wellness zones, and app-based crowd info aim to transform lounges into hotel-like premium experiences for elite travelers.