- Phone
- +34 971 809 200
- Address
- Planta 1, zona de embarque, Aeropuerto de Ibiza (IBZ), Ibiza, Spain
- Access
- Pre-book / membership ↗
€33.90 gets you into this 190 m² lounge by gate 1
This is Sala VIP Cap des Falcó in T1, at the far end of departures near gate 1, on the right after security. It’s an AENA-run room with around 40 seats, Priority Pass access and a walk-up rate of €33.90 per person. Think compact space with air‑con and separation from the main hall rather than a full-service premium lounge.
Opening hours vary with season, but it typically tracks the main departure bank in Ibiza’s summer schedule, closing once the late flights leave T1. Entrance is through the main terminal departures area, so there’s no landside access and no need to exit the secure zone early. Check your Priority Pass or airline status rules carefully; one AB topbonus Gold on Iberia Air Nostrum was refused despite Iberia Gold normally qualifying.
Food is cold only: packets, simple sandwiches, and basic snacks very similar to other AENA lounges. One review flatly calls the choice “poor” and “unappetising,” and BoardingGroup.One notes there is zero hot food even though a warmer sits on the counter. If you want a real meal, plan on the public café in T1 and use the lounge for Wi‑Fi and seating instead.
Drinks run to self‑serve beer and wine in the fridge, soft drinks, plus spirits that live in cupboards. Several flyers mention you have to ask staff where the spirits are, then help yourself once you know. Don’t expect champagne or fancy cocktails; think basic bar stock suited to a short hop to London, Madrid or Barcelona.
Wi‑Fi gets mixed but generally decent feedback: a BA Gold on Flyertalk called it “good,” while BoardingGroup.One says it’s fine for browsing but not for streaming full movies. The main ergonomic drawback is power. Multiple reviews flag a lack of sockets, and you won’t find an outlet at every seat, so grab a wall spot early if your phone is at 15%.
Space is tight for a 40‑seat lounge in a party island airport, and reviewers warn it can feel rammed in peak summer midday waves. Regulars with BA status tend to use it only outside the worst July–August banks, nursing a drink and light snack while enjoying the views over Las Salinas and the Med from the gate 1 windows. Staff get mixed marks, with some TripAdvisor comments calling the welcome frosty.
There are no showers anywhere in IBZ, including this lounge, so don’t bank on a post‑beach rinse before your evening flight. One last tip: if you’re paying the €33.90 day pass, compare it against a coffee, sandwich and seat by the public windows in T1; several reviewers flatly say the paid value proposition doesn’t add up.
How to get in
- 01 Main terminal
- 02 departures
- 03 Priority Pass and pay-per-use