There is a certain philosophy at work in the Swiss First Class Lounge at Zürich Airport that is entirely at odds with the arms race currently underway among premium airline lounges globally. While competitors pile on the square footage, the celebrity chefs, the rooftop terraces, and the cocktail bars that could pass for upscale hotel lobbies, SWISS has gone in precisely the opposite direction.
The result, accessed through the dedicated First Class check-in at Terminal E and then elevator to the first floor opposite Gate E55, is something far harder to manufacture than spectacle: genuine calm. Real exclusivity. The feeling — increasingly rare in modern travel — that the space you occupy has been designed for you, not for Instagram.
First Impressions
The lounge opens to a central seating area arranged around windows overlooking the E-apron. At the time of our first visit — a midweek morning in June — there were perhaps twelve other guests present. The capacity is strictly limited, and it shows: every seat has breathing room, every table has actual space, and there is no competition for the window positions.
The furniture combines bespoke Swiss oak pieces with seating upholstered in muted textiles running from oat to slate. Nothing announces itself. Everything is considered. The champagne bar at the centre commands the room with its large floor-to-ceiling wine humidor — a quiet, confident statement of intent.
Food & Beverage
The dining area operates on a full à la carte service model. There is no buffet — you are seated, handed a printed menu, and attended to by dedicated staff. The menu rotates seasonally and on our summer visit featured a chilled gazpacho, a slow-braised veal cheek with Spätzli, and a selection of Swiss cheeses that would embarrass most restaurant boards.
The champagne on pour is Krug Grande Cuvée — not a budget decision, and not hidden. The wine list leans, predictably and delightfully, toward Swiss bottles that rarely make it into export markets. A Chasselas from the Vaud, served slightly cool, was the kind of discovery that makes the whole journey worthwhile.
"The best lounge isn't always the biggest — it's the one that understands exactly what you need at 6am on a grey morning. And this one does."LastManBoarding — Swiss First Class Lounge, ZRH Terminal E
The First Class Terrasse
The outdoor Terrasse is the lounge's defining feature — and one of the few genuinely unique elements in any European airport lounge today. Accessed through a glass door at the far end of the seating area, it opens onto a private outdoor deck with unobstructed views across the entire E-apron and main runway. There is nowhere else at Zürich Airport where you can sit outside, under the sky, with a glass of Krug, and watch a Swiss 777 push back ten metres away.
The terrace furniture is minimal — a handful of tables and chairs, shade sails overhead, and the ambient sound of jet engines that, in this context, sounds less like noise and more like the lounge's own curated soundtrack. The planespotting from this position is extraordinary: the E-gates are the primary departure point for SWISS long-haul routes, and the traffic during peak morning hours is relentless and spectacular.
On our first visit, in June, the Terrasse was closed due to rain — a minor disappointment, though the lounge interior more than compensated. On our return visit in July, on a clear late-morning, it was open and precisely as good as the staff had suggested it would be. We stayed considerably longer than planned.
It is worth noting: the Terrasse is weather-dependent and can close at short notice. If access to the outdoor space is your primary motivation, aim for a morning departure on a clear day between May and September. It is, genuinely, one of the finest single features of any lounge in Europe.
Shower Suites & Spa
The shower suites are private rooms named after Swiss destinations — ask for "St. Moritz" if it is available. Each suite includes a dedicated changing area with full-length mirror, warming rack, and products from Sisley Paris. The folded towel presentation is the kind that takes a moment to locate the correct edge.
An added benefit that few lounges offer: you can arrange to have clothing pressed while you shower, with garments returned to you at the suite door. At the time of writing, there is no formal spa treatment programme at the Terminal E location, though shower suite bookings should be made at reception on arrival — demand is high.