No. 69 gets all the reviews; VIP Lounge 150 lives in its shadow.
In Shanghai Pudong T2, VIP Lounge 150 sits in the same terminal where everyone talks about Lounge No. 69, but this one only pops up in DragonPass listings. Access is through DragonPass only, so Priority Pass and airline status likely won’t help you here. If you already hold DragonPass for China trips, think of this as a backup option inside Terminal 2 rather than the headline act.
This lounge sits airside in Terminal 2, so you clear security first and then follow DragonPass directions to “VIP Lounge 150” on the lounge list; PVG signage can be inconsistent, and staff might default to pointing you toward the better-known No. 69 Lounge if you just say “VIP lounge.” Expect standard China contract-lounge basics: self-serve soft drinks, simple hot dishes, and basic spirits included, roughly on par with what you’d see in other generic VIP lounges across major Chinese airports.
Pricing is effectively baked into your DragonPass membership, which usually runs around USD 30–40 per visit if you work it out per swipe, so treat VIP Lounge 150 as equivalent to a mid-range paid meal in central Shanghai. Food at similar PVG T2 contract lounges often leans on fried rice, noodles, and a few dim sum steamers; quality swings by time of day, with fresher trays appearing in the 2–3 hours before big bank departures toward Europe and North America.
Operating hours for comparable contract lounges in PVG T2 generally run from early morning, around 06:00, through the late-night departure wave, often until 22:00 or later, and you should assume VIP Lounge 150 keeps a similar schedule. That usually covers flights on major carriers like China Eastern and its SkyTeam partners, which dominate Terminal 2. If your boarding pass shows a late-evening departure, confirm closing time in the DragonPass app before you trek over from a far gate.
Online chatter focuses entirely on the No. 69 VIP Lounge near many international gates in T2, with almost nothing concrete about VIP Lounge 150, so treat it as the lesser-known sibling and temper expectations. If you have a long layover of more than 2 hours, it can still beat sitting at a crowded gate with only a 20 CNY bottle of water from a kiosk, especially during peak departure banks when seating in the terminal gets tight.
Practical tip: open your DragonPass app at PVG T2 right after security, check the map pin for VIP Lounge 150, and choose whichever lounge on the list sits closest to your actual gate rather than chasing the one with the nicer name.
How to get in
- 01 Terminal 2
- 02 DragonPass