LOS · Lounges

Oasis Lounge

International Open · 06:30-23:00 Day pass ₦15000

₦15,000 at the door buys you Wi‑Fi, one hot meal, and a seat

Oasis Lounge sits airside in the International Terminal D‑Wing, open daily 06:30–23:00, and runs on a simple deal: pay around ₦15,000 or swipe Priority Pass, get one main meal, drinks, and a place to sit near the gates. It’s a contract lounge, so you’ll see Virgin Atlantic business‑class passengers in here instead of an airline‑branded space.

You reach it after passport control and security on Level 1, up a spiral staircase next to the Air France/KLM lounge. AF/KL signage is clearer than Oasis, so if staff point you to Air France or KLM, walk to that door and then look for the spiral stairs beside it; Oasis is at the top, still in the International terminal’s D‑Wing.

Check‑in includes a printed Wi‑Fi code, and regulars say the connection has been fast and stable on every visit, even in the evening bank of long‑haul departures. Soft drinks run essentially bottomless from the fridge, but staff usually cap alcoholic drinks at two per person and charge for anything beyond that limit.

Food is time‑dependent: breakfast runs buffet‑style with eggs, toast, and a few basic hot trays, then around lunchtime it switches to an à la carte menu with several Nigerian mains. Access includes a single main dish; if the first plate doesn’t fill you, extra meals cost more naira and are added to your tab at the front desk.

Layout is simple: standard lounge armchairs and small tables, with power sockets scattered but not at every seat, and big windows facing part of the International apron. There are toilets inside the lounge, but reviewers repeatedly note there are no showers, which matters if you’re connecting to or from an overnight long‑haul through LOS.

Regulars with Priority Pass or airline invitations typically arrive 90–120 minutes before departure, grab their one Nigerian hot meal from the lunch/dinner menu, work on the strong Wi‑Fi while nursing two beers or glasses of wine, then head to the International D‑Wing gates only when their flight shows “boarding.”

If you’re hungry and care more about a reliable Wi‑Fi code and a proper plated Nigerian dish than showers or premium drinks, plan to pay your ₦15,000, eat once, and then move on to the gate about 30 minutes before boarding starts.

How to get in

  1. 01 International Terminal
  2. 02 airside
  3. 03 D-Wing
  4. 04 paid entry
Walk-in day pass: ₦15000

Amenities

Showers
None
Hours
06:30-23:00

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