TSA · Lounges

ANA Lounge

ANA passengers at TSA use partner lounges, not an ANA-branded space

At Taipei Songshan (TSA), international ANA departures out of Terminal 2 do not have a dedicated ANA Lounge; eligible passengers are instead routed to partner and contract lounges airside after immigration. That means your “ANA lounge” access here depends on same-day ticket, cabin, and status, but the physical space carries another airline or operator’s name on the door.

This setup sits in contrast to ANA’s branded lounges at hubs like Tokyo Haneda (HND) and Narita (NRT), where the ANA Lounge name is on the boarding pass and the wall. At TSA Terminal 2, ANA simply lists partner lounge usage in its lounge policy, and the airport’s international side is compact enough that every lounge is within roughly a 5–10 minute walk of the small cluster of international gates.

Access rules follow the usual Star Alliance template: passengers in ANA Business Class on international flights from TSA Terminal 2 plus Star Alliance Gold members on ANA-operated departures can use the designated partner lounge airside. Economy passengers without status flying on NH codeshare services from TSA generally do not receive complimentary lounge access and would need to rely on paid third‑party options in the same international departures area if available that day.

Because this is not an ANA-operated lounge, you should not expect ANA’s standard Tokyo-style buffet lineup or the made-to-order noodle and curry bar you see at HND or NRT. Instead, food and drink at the TSA partner lounge typically look like a standard contract spread for a small regional international terminal: basic hot trays, packaged snacks, soft drinks, and a short list of beers or simple spirits, with everything laid out in a single compact room near the international gates.

Service policies also follow the contract operator rather than ANA’s own staff training. At TSA Terminal 2 the staff at these lounges usually handle multiple airlines’ premium passengers in the same sitting area during the bank of departures between roughly 10:00 and 20:00, so you will hear boarding calls for several carriers and see mixed-status passengers from different alliances sharing the same seating zone.

Practical tip: check your ANA e-ticket or the monitors near TSA Terminal 2 security for the exact partner lounge name and opening hours on your departure date, and budget only about 60–75 minutes total in the lounge, since walking time from any lounge in this small international zone to most ANA gates is under 5 minutes once you leave the seating area.

How to get in

  1. 01 Airside
  2. 02 international departures

Other lounges at TSA