- Address
- Toulouse-Blagnac Airport, Hall C, opposite gate 36, Toulouse/Blagnac, France
- Access
- Pre-book / membership ↗
One shared lounge handles most airline traffic at TLS
Hall D hosts the Club Lounge at Toulouse-Blagnac, the single shared space used by multiple airlines and partners rather than several branded lounges. If your boarding pass shows lounge access in Terminal 1, odds are it points here. Signage in Hall D is decent but not flashy, so watch for airline logos rather than a big “Club Lounge” sign.
Access runs through Hall D airside, past security in Terminal 1, and you typically reach the door in under 5 minutes from most Schengen gates. Airlines and their partners control entry; walk-up day-pass pricing is not clearly published at TLS, so treat this as a benefit lounge first and a pay-in option only if your airline desk confirms it on the day.
The space mainly serves short- and medium-haul flights, so expect simple cold snacks instead of hot meals during standard European peaks, roughly 06:00–10:00 and 16:00–20:00. Food in comparable French contract lounges leans on bread, cheese, yogurt, and packaged items, with coffee machines and soft drinks rather than a staffed bar. If you want a full plated meal, plan to eat in the main Hall D restaurants before heading in.
Seating usually follows the standard contract-lounge formula: mixed armchairs, small tables, and some bar-height spots near windows, all within a few minutes’ walk of Hall D gates used by larger carriers. Power outlets in similar French Club-branded lounges can be sparse, so assume you may find only one or two sockets per seating cluster and charge fully in the terminal if you need 100% before boarding.
Because online reviews rarely separate “Club Lounge” from the generic Hall D lounge, hard data on crowding, showers, and alcohol policy at TLS stays thin. Other French regional lounges in this network typically skip showers entirely and pour basic beers and wines, so don’t bank on long-haul amenities here. If you need a quiet call, test the lounge first, then keep your backup plan as one of the quieter Hall D corners near the less-used gates.
Practical tip: ask at check-in or the airline service desk in Hall D whether your boarding pass includes access to the shared Club Lounge in Terminal 1; if they say no, you save the walk and can head straight for a seat near your exact gate instead.
How to get in
- 01 Hall D
- 02 airline and partners