Gate F67 is where 60° Lounge hides at the far end of T5
This is the small contract lounge by gate F67 in Terminal 5’s non‑Schengen F‑gates, the one ANA, Air China and some other Star Alliance carriers quietly print on the boarding pass. It opens with the first F‑gate departure and shuts when the last long‑haul flight pushes, so think in terms of the day’s flight schedule, not fixed clock times.
Access is Priority Pass or paid walk‑up day pass at the door, which matters if you’re flying ANA, Air China, or post‑September‑2024 Turkish and your status doesn’t cover lounge entry. Several FlyerTalk reports mention passengers in long‑haul business class still paying extra here because their airline no longer includes access.
The space is tiny by long‑haul standards, basically one compact room near F66–F67, and reviews repeatedly call it “very small” with “limited food and drinks.” Expect basic snacks and light cold items only, not a full hot buffet you might see at larger T5 lounges closer to gates 1–10.
On drinks, you typically get a modest complimentary self‑serve offering, with a larger selection of alcohol available only for payment, as one reviewer on LoungeReview points out. If you were planning on a couple of premium spirits or more than one beer or wine before an ANA or Air China overnight, factor in that extra cost against just sitting at an F‑pier bar.
Seating runs out fast during the classic long‑haul bank (think late afternoon through evening departures), and when the room fills, noise rises quickly because ceilings are low and the footprint is small. If your F‑gate flight leaves around the same time as a widebody to Asia, don’t expect a quiet space to nap.
Value is the big question. For a Priority Pass swipe before an ANA or Air China non‑Schengen flight, it can beat standing in the gate pen at F67, but paid walk‑up starts to feel steep when food is so limited. FlyerTalk regulars often call it a last‑resort option rather than a destination in its own right.
Practical tip: before paying at the door, check your printed boarding pass carefully near the lounge or *service* line; some non‑Schengen Star Alliance flights quietly list “60° Lounge” access even when the airline’s website never mentions a lounge at Stockholm Arlanda T5 F‑gates.
How to get in
- 01 Priority Pass
- 02 Day pass