SKG · Restaurants

Skyserv Lounge

Lounge · Business

2 Post-security

Most non-Aegean business tickets at SKG end up here

Terminal 2’s Skyserv Lounge sits airside after security, filling the gap for carriers that don’t use the Aegean lounge. If your boarding pass shows lounge access out of SKG but the airline isn’t Aegean or Olympic, odds are you’re sent to Skyserv. It’s signed simply as “Business Lounge” in Terminal 2, a short walk from the main international gates.

This is a standard contract lounge setup: one shared space, mixed airline and Priority Pass traffic, and basic cold snacks instead of hot meals. Expect self-serve drinks, packaged nibbles, and light bites suited to a 45–60 minute sit rather than a full dinner. Seating is mostly standard armchairs with a few table sections; think more “quiet waiting room” than destination bar.

Skyserv opens in line with the day’s departures from Terminal 2, so you usually see doors open from early morning wave through the late-evening Europe flights. Because it is post-security, you clear passport control and screening first, then walk to the lounge and keep an eye on the overhead monitors for your gate. Figure 2–3 minutes on foot to most Schengen and non-Schengen gates in T2.

Prices for walk-up access vary by program, but Priority Pass and similar cards typically treat it as a standard lounge with a 3-hour stay cap. Food and drinks are included once you’re in, so this can be cheaper than ordering a sandwich and a drink at the Terminal 2 cafés, where a basic meal can easily hit €12–15.

Practical tip: if you have a choice between Skyserv Lounge and Aegean’s lounge on the same Terminal 2 flight, pick Aegean; if Skyserv is your only option, use it for Wi‑Fi, a power outlet, and a drink, then head to the gate 20 minutes before boarding.

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