It’s a trap that’s easy to fall into: once you’ve experienced what it’s like to have an koru membership it’s very hard to opt out again.
After several years of free passes and a gifted membership, last year I found myself without access to Air New Zealand’s Koru Lounge and associated member benefits. Sitting at the gate to wait for your flightwithout the glam feel andperks a lounge brings suddenly feelsa lot less glam.
There are generally four ways you can gain access to the Koru lounge:
- Pay for a business-class (or better) ticket
- Improve your airline status to Gold or higher. This means frequently flying with the same airline rather than purchasing the best fare available
- Travel with someone who is a member
- Pay for a membership
My Westpac credit card meant no joining fee and a $125 discount on the annual fee for Air New Zealand’s Koru membership. I purchased my current membership last November paying the (then) $450 membership fee using credit card points accumulated through using this credit card and flying, calling it a birthday present to myself.
![Can a koru membership save you money? - Sarah Sees The World (1) Can a koru membership save you money? - Sarah Sees The World (1)](https://i0.wp.com/sarahseestheworld.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/nz-akl-domestic-koru-lounge-bar-980x300.jpg)
How can an airport lounge membership save you money?
Saved meal costs
There’s the obvious saving which comes by not purchasing food at the airport of before you go there.
Additionally, byeating in the lounges you may be able to avoid payingfor fare upgradeson international flights in order include meals – particularly relevant when you’re flying for fewer than four hours or on an overnight flight where you intend to sleep through meals.
Where possible I tend to grab a can of co*ke, and a piece of fruit as I board the plane to snack on during the flight.
Additional baggage allowances
If you’re travelling domestically and checking in a bag, Koru members are entitled to one additional checked bag (usually $10).
Complementary seat selection
If you want the extra leg room an exit row offers, to be first off the plane, or just a window seat, the ability to choose your seat and the chance to sit in reserved seatingon the plane at no additional cost is a great wee perk.
Lounge memberships also make travelling that much more pleasant
The VIP Feel
I love being fast tracked through queues, priority boarding,that I’m entitled to extra checked bags, and that my luggage is among the first batch to hit the carousel (when it doesn’t go missing).
The cheaper long-haul flight routes tend to have more frequent and longer layovers and I love hitting Auckland and having enough time to shower, eat something and enjoy the feeling of not being crammed in a plane before I get on my last flight bound for Wellington.
Customer Service Assistance
I’ve had a couple of travel hiccups in the past year where I’ve needed to change a flexi-flight after I’ve arrived in the lounge, and the friendly lounge staff have been able to solve them for me on the spot without me having to queue downstairs.
Peace and quiet, wifi, food, drinks, newspapers and magazines
I still race around at top speed loading up on wine or coffee, cheese and snacks despite usually having at least an hour to spare. Even as a member, in the back of my mind I still feel like a kid in a candy shop being there and am afraid someone will evict me.
Sitting on plush furniture with a glass of wine, snacks. decent wifi and a view of planes coming and going when your plane is delayed really improves your perspective on things, unlike sitting on a hard chair (or the floor due to overcrowding) in a windowless gate lounge as I have done many a time.
Is it worth it?
Obviously this depends on how much you travel. Afriend who works in banking suggested my break-even point would be 7 visits, valuing each visit at around $65. I’ve also seen the break-even formembership costs calculated on Twitter in $10 glasses of wine.
Over the 13 monthmembership term I visited 21 times (less than NZ $21.50 per visit), consumed a decent number of barista-made coffees,a not-insignificant numberof glasses of wine, 15 main meals and tookseveral friends inwith me.
I feel as though I received the value I spent on the airport lounge membership back over the period in services, comfortand saved sanity. However had I not had it I may have flown with other, cheaper carrierson a couple of occasions which certainly would have saved me some money.
I’m not going to subscribe again immediately – I’ll wait until I have some confirmed travel plans for the next year. But I certainly will sometime in the future.
Who else loves airport lounges? Do you pay for them yourself? If you’re interested in my actual usage over the period keep reading below!
My Koru membership use
Month | Travel | Times visited | Costs avoided |
November 2016 |
| 3 |
|
December 2016 |
| 3 |
|
January 2017 |
| 3 |
|
March 2017 |
| 2 |
|
April 2017 |
| 2 |
|
May 2017 |
| 2 |
|
June 2017 | |||
July 2017 |
| 1 |
|
August 2017 | |||
September 2017 |
| 1 |
|
October 2017 |
| 2 |
|
November 2017 |
| 2 |
|
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