Review of Plaza Premium First at DFW: Is This Upscale Airport Lounge Worth the Entrance Fee?

On March 9, 2026, Plaza Premium opened 2 new airport lounges at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW). Along with a traditional Plaza Premium Lounge, this date marked the U.S. debut of Plaza Premium First.

Plaza Premium First isn’t a typical airport lounge. Instead, it feels more like an elevated dining experience with à la carte menu orders and table service from waiters. Sure, it has much of the other stuff you want in a lounge, but it’s also free of the crowds, lines, and noise.

In exchange, there’s a fee to get in. And that’s on top of needing access to Plaza Premium Lounges to start with.

I paid $45 to visit Plaza Premium First in April 2026, a few weeks after it opened. Here’s what I got in exchange for the entrance fee.

How To Access Plaza Premium First

There are many ways to access Plaza Premium Lounges. Many of them participate in Priority Pass, for example, so you can visit a good number of these lounges if you have a membership from a credit card like the Chase Sapphire Reserve® or Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card.

Alternatively, those with The Business Platinum Card® from American Express or the Platinum Card® from American Express have direct access to Plaza Premium Lounges regardless of the on-again, off-again relationship between Plaza Premium Lounge and Priority Pass.

When I arrived at the reception desk, an agent told me the Plaza Premium Lounge had a 30-minute wait. Curious about the Plaza Premium First — as I’d never visited one — I asked about the fee. I accessed the Plaza Premium First by showing my Amex Platinum card and paying a $45 copay.

Plaza Premium First is open daily from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Plaza Premium First Location

Both the Plaza Premium Lounge and Plaza Premium First are in Terminal D at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport (DFW). Within the concourse, you’ll see Plaza Premium branding on the upper level. An escalator leads to the check-in desk for both lounges. Both of these opened on March 9, 2026.

Plaza Premium First DFW Lounge Exterior
Main entrance to the lounge.

Alternatively, if you’re in the connector hallway near the DFW Centurion Lounge, you’ll see a small sign for the lounges above a hallway, which leads to an elevator to access the lounges.

Plaza Premium First DFW Restaurant Entrance
The sign is easy to miss.

On the upper level, the same reception desk functions for both sides of the lounge.

Guest Experience

What’s it like inside? The Plaza Premium First feels less like a typical airport lounge and more like a chic restaurant. Sure, it has complimentary Wi-Fi, bathrooms, a prayer room, a nursing room, and showers, but the focus is definitely on dining.

A high-back banquette with deep greens ran through the center of the space, and it had tables on both sides. The layout put everyone on the booth side; there weren’t any chairs on the other side of the tables, keeping the walkway open.

Plaza Premium First DFW Dining Room Bar View
The center of the space.

There were 2 types of additional booth-style seats on either side of the bar. One was a small table on the side closest to the entry, ideal for anyone just having drinks. The other was a larger table on the farther side, better for dining. Seating along the windows offered views over the concourse.

Opposite the seating, away from the bar, was a buffet. This included a cold case with desserts, veggie sticks, dips, and salads. There was also a hot buffet in the center, offering a few dishes like rice, meats, and soup, and these were clearly labeled, including both names and allergens. There was also a bakery case with a few different pastries.

The bar occupied most of the lounge’s outer wall. High chairs lined the bar, along with dining-style seating facing the bar.

Other drinks were found closer to the lounge’s entrance, including coffee, tea, espresso-based beverages, water, sodas, and more.

The lounge’s main draw is the restaurant-style dining, including plated service, menus, and servers. Staff asked if I wanted a menu as soon as I arrived, and it contained a page of drinks and a page of food items. Appetizers like dumplings and fried green tomatoes were available, as were seafood, steak tips, cheesecake, and more.

I tried the à la cartecurry ramen. It was just average.

Plaza Premium First DFW Curry Ramen
The curry ramen.

Service was friendly and efficient. It definitely wasn’t fine dining and wouldn’t win any awards, though.

Is It Worth the Fee?

After visiting a Plaza Premium First lounge, something I’d never done before, would I go back? Probably not.

Do I think I got $45 more value out of this visit than I would get at another lounge? No.

For guests who order more expensive menu items or consume a lot of alcohol, there may be good value here. For me, there wasn’t. I mostly came out of curiosity — and because of the waiting lists at other lounges I tried to visit — and the experience didn’t match the cost for me.

First, the space bills itself as an elevated lounge-meets-dining experience. The seating and ambiance definitely felt elevated. The dining didn’t. Consider this clump of noodles in my ramen, where they’d bonded while cooking. If this were a standalone restaurant, I wouldn’t pay for this meal again, both because of the noodles glued together and the very average flavor.

Plaza Premium First DFW Clumpy Noodles
It shouldn’t look like that.

A space that is dining-focused should offer good food. To be blunt, I wasn’t impressed with the food I ordered.

Bottom Line:

Curiosity and waiting lists at other lounges made me willing to pay the $45 entry fee for a first-time experience, but I don’t think it was worth it.

Final Thoughts

A few weeks before my April 2026 visit, 2 new lounges opened at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport. After trying to visit 2 lounges and being told they had 30-minute waits, I was willing to trade $45 to satisfy my curiosity and see what the Plaza Premium First experience was all about.

It offered Wi-Fi, bathrooms, and some buffet items, but beyond that, it wasn’t like a traditional airport lounge. The space is dining-focused, which made me think I’d have a good meal. I thought it was very average, though, and I don’t think the fee was worth it.

Sure, the space felt refined, and there weren’t any crowds, but I didn’t feel like this was even a modest dining experience, let alone elevated. Next time, I’ll just wait 30 minutes for the other lounges to let me in.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is the Plaza Premium First lounge at DFW?

It’s on the second level of Terminal D, right across from gate 15, so it’s an easy walk if you’re flying internationally out of D.

When did Plaza Premium First open at DFW?

It opened on March 9, 2026, making DFW the very first airport in the United States to get a Plaza Premium First lounge (the only other one in North America is up in Vancouver (YVR), British Columbia).

How do you get into Plaza Premium First at DFW?

The easiest way in is flying business or first class on one of the partner carriers, which right now includes Air France, Emirates, EVA Air, Finnair, and Turkish Airlines. If you’re not flying in business or first class on one of those, you can still buy your way in by showing an eligible membership or credit card to access Plaza Premium, then paying $45 to gain access to Plaza Premium First.

How much does Plaza Premium First at DFW cost?

A walk-up 2-hour visit starts at $115. If you already have access to the regular Plazа Premium Lounge through Priority Pass or an eligible credit card, you can upgrade to the First lounge for a discounted rate of $45.

How is Plaza Premium First different from the regular Plaza Premium Lounge?

Plaza Premium First is the brand’s higher-end tier, built around privacy, premium seating, luxury showers, and a sit-down dining experience with a dedicated ambassador serving dishes from a menu — not just a buffet — while the standard Plaza Premium Lounge (with locations in Terminal D and Terminal E at DFW) is more of a traditional buffet-style lounge with bigger crowds in a larger space.