Home » Here’s What Happened When My Diabolically Cheap Self Went Into A First-Class Airport Lounge For The First Time

Here’s What Happened When My Diabolically Cheap Self Went Into A First-Class Airport Lounge For The First Time

Polaris Lounge Ts
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This week, I’ve embarked on my first-ever trip outside of the United States. My mind has been blown more times than I can remember in the past 24 hours and I’m far from being done yet. All of it has been amplified by the fact that, for the first time ever, I flew something better than basic economy. So, what’s it like being a serial cheapass and flying first class? Let’s find out!

I’m in Nice, France to test the brand new Audi [REDACTED]. Normally, this would be the kind of trip we’d send a freelancer to go on so our full-time staff can focus on getting out the content you crave. However, the crafty Matt Hardigree and David Tracy decided to use this trip as a big push to motivate me to finally get my passport. I’ve been flying since 2016, yet I’ve never left the borders of the United States. As it turned out, getting a passport was totally painless and I wonder why I’ve waited so long.

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Now, it’s time to enjoy the spoils of international travel. Well, technically, I already am. I’m writing this from a ridiculously expensive villa on the French Riviera. I have so many comments to make already, including the fact that I just heard the sounds of a loud Harley-Davidson. Even when you’re thousands of miles away from home you can’t escape loud pipes!

But you’ll have to wait for my trip report. First, I want to talk about the experience of what it’s like flying first class as a cheapass, or something along those lines.

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(Full Disclosure: Audi invited us to Nice, France to test the new [Redacted]. Audi has paid for all of my travel, lodging, and food, with the interesting twist of paying for the best seats on every aircraft I’ll be flying on.)

Normally, we wouldn’t write about traveling to a press event because, really, who cares? The vast majority of the time the automaker will put you in a cattle class seat that, at best, might be Economy with a little extra legroom. You’ll usually sit in the middle of the plane, pay for your own checked luggage, and pay for anything additional that isn’t just plopping your tuchus down in an uncomfortable chair.

This is the standard procedure for most press trip travel, regardless if you’re flying to a Land Rover event or a Honda event. At the very least, I’m happy that the automakers put us on decent airlines. They could cheap out and put journalists on Spirit flights, though then you run the risk of your attendees not making it.

Audi could have done the same here, but it went beyond.

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As I said in my previous entry, Audi gave me a selection of different flights to get me to France. I chose my flights entirely based on aircraft type. I picked United as it paired me with a Boeing 787 for the leg across the Atlantic and a Bombardier CRJ-900. My other choices were Boeing 777s and Airbus A320 series aircraft, which are fine, but aren’t anything new for me. I’ve never been on a 787 and it’s been a few years since I was last on a CRJ, so that seemed to be a good pick.

Eventually, Audi sent over my flight details and I did a double-take at what I saw. These weren’t just seats, but United Polaris business class. If you’re taking an international flight with United Airlines, Polaris is likely to be the top class of the aircraft you’re on.

When flying Polaris, you sit at the very front of the aircraft in a little pod that’s like a tiny bedroom complete with a seat that folds into a bed. United then gives you more stuff than you know what to do with, including two different kinds of pillows, two different kinds of blankets, all the free drinks you could ask for, and piping hot cuisine inspired by different cultures.

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United Airlines

The price will vary wildly depending on where you’re going and when you book it, but the last time I checked, United said that flying from Chicago to Nice in Polaris business class costs $7,100 if the trip is booked a month ahead of time. The price goes even higher if you pick a more prime time. Matt Hardigree suspects that Audi paid about $10,000 for each direction for my trip.

That’s an unthinkable amount of money to my cheap brain. I’ve never flown anything better than Economy for my entire life. I paid $277 to fly to Florida to buy my Smart Fortwo Cabriolet and I think I overpaid for that. I pride myself in traveling over a thousand miles for $30 and I was excited to fly a round trip on Frontier for just $58.

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I’m just so used to plain planes like the one above and cannot fathom spending $20,000 for 20 hours worth of flying. I’ve purchased brand-new cars for less than that! I’m not sure if I’m programmed to do expensive things.

According to Forbes, the Polaris program was launched in 2016 with the installation of the O’Hare Polaris Lounge. The idea here was to give international business travelers an upscale experience on the ground so that they keep coming back to the airline. In 2017, the first aircraft with United’s Polaris seats, a Boeing 777-300ER, took to the skies. Since then, the Polaris Lounge network has grown to six locations: Chicago O’Hare (ORD), Houston Intercontinental (IAH), Los Angeles (LAX), New York/Newark (EWR), San Francisco (SFO), and Washington Dulles (IAD). Here’s what the Washington lounge looks like:

Image Washington Dulles Polaris
United Airlines

But how does all of this work in real life? I decided to document the surprises of what it’s like to live life like a rich gal, at least for a handful of hours, anyway.

My journey started at O’Hare, where my Polaris seat gave me access to United Premier Access. This fancy program gives you benefits like a dedicated security line, priority check-in, and your bags are also given priority during loading and unloading. It’s basically a bit of a white glove service.

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I didn’t check my bag, so I went straight for the dedicated security line.

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This line was a fraction of the size of the regular TSA line at the airport and the TSA agents were a lot more chill. I read warnings that you should get to the airport at least three hours before an international flight. I didn’t want to miss this flight, so I got there five hours early.

I’m not entirely sure what I expected. It’s said you should arrive two hours early for a domestic flight, so I wondered what the extra hour was supposed to be for. At least in this case, it didn’t seem to mean anything. Security screening went exactly the way it does for a domestic flight, only I showed the TSA agent my passport in addition to my driver’s license. I even got through security in a third of the usual time.

Apparently, it was supposed to be even faster than that. There were a number of folks in line who were pissed off because the TSA wasn’t using every scanner and thus wasn’t going as fast as they normally go. One guy got so mad he even yelled at a random TSA agent about it.

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On one hand, I was excited by how fast and painless the dedicated United Premier Access line was. I never want to do standard security ever again! Yet, the people waiting in line were much meaner and more grumpy than the folks in the standard security line. I heard “we paid for this” quite a lot while in line.

Oh well, I was on a mission. I was super hungry, so I decided to go straight to the United Polaris Lounge at O’Hare.

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Viewed from the outside, the lounge doesn’t seem impressive. It just looks like a room in the airport. But walk through the doors of the Polaris Lounge, and you’re seemingly transported into a different, far more luxurious dimension than just any room in an airport.

The O’Hare Polaris Lounge is under construction and was about half of its planned size. You could have fooled me because the lounge was absolutely dreamy.

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First, I was shocked when I walked in because the lounge was such a huge departure from the rest of the airport. I love O’Hare’s design, but it’s nothing like this. I did a double-take because wait, hold on, I’m still in O’Hare? I adored all of the little details like the sparkly ceiling above the bathrooms, the elaborate chandeliers, and the stone accents.

Hot decor is a good start, but the Polaris Lounge goes way harder than that. The lounge has shower suites, day beds, and a relaxation area with a bunch of different body devices. Then you have your choice of a bar, a restaurant, or a buffet.

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I didn’t even know what to do. I usually eat at a food court and then “relax” in the hard chairs at the gate. Here, I was allowed to just walk up to a station, grab as much food as I wanted, and eat it while sitting in a comfy chair. I ate off of real plates and used real silverware, and the food wasn’t the same old awful airport food.

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Admittedly, I did zero actual research on the Polaris Lounge before I went into it, so I kept looking for prices on things. And where was the garbage can? Where do I put my dirty plate? Such things are not the concern of those in the Polaris Lounge. Wonderful people dressed to the nines take away your plates, your empty drink cans, and your trash. And the food I ate? It was included.

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Also included were some of the best mixed drinks I’ve ever had in my life. The Polaris Lounge at O’Hare has a huge bar and the bartenders can make any drink you can conjure up in your head. Check out this really spicy Bloody Mary! They’ll then keep serving you drinks, even if you haven’t finished your current drink. Once again, it felt bizarre to be downing drinks at a bar and not paying anything, so I tossed some cash into the tip jar.

The bartender assured me that the lounge was all-inclusive. At the time I thought that was unbelievable. However, if you’re paying $10,000 for a plane ticket I would hope for perks like these.

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Still, I felt like a fish out of water, a city girl in the country, or a Volkswagen that’s not in a shop. It felt so wrong. I saw women decked out head to toe in Prada, yet I was “slumming it” in my 10-year-old dress from Torrid. I felt like I didn’t belong.

Then I ordered another drink, sat in a chair, and did some plane spotting. I’ve never seen 5 hours fly by as easily as they did in that lounge. Forget sitting at a stuffy gate with crying babies, crowding, and hard chairs. You could walk into a Polaris Lounge, take a nap, and feel like a million bucks just to waltz out of the lounge and right onto your plane.

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I never want to sit at a gate again. Sadly, the only way to get into a Polaris Lounge is to get a Polaris seat on a flight or a premium seat on a Star Alliance member flight. That means you’re going to be burning a lot of cash or a lot of miles. So, this might be a very rare treat for me.

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This is only just part of the experience. The Polaris Lounge is followed up with the Polaris seat. I’m going to stop here, so you’ll have to tune in to the next chapter of my cheap-ass flying first class to find out if a $10,000 airplane seat is worth it or not.

(Images: Author, unless otherwise noted.)

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Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 month ago

Glad you had fun! It’s awesome they spent that much and it was so nice. Maybe they get a good deal on it all.
Wait, you didn’t make bets on which flights would land first like Kramer?

“Kramer: Bet? Um, not betting.

Earl: Friendly wager.

Kramer: I haven’t made a bet in three years, I-

Earl: Ah c’mon. Keep things interesting, pass the time.

Kramer: Okay, how much?

Earl: How ’bout 200?

Kramer: You’re on, cowboy!”

Lioncoeur
Lioncoeur
1 month ago

Any chance you will be passing through Paris or you can change your travel plans to spend a day or two here? This weekend (Saturday and Sunday, the 12th and 13th) is the 100th anniversary celebration of the famous and amazing Linas-Montlhery Autodrome just outside of Paris. It would be ashame to miss it when you are so close.

Lizardman in a human suit
Lizardman in a human suit
1 month ago

Back when I was a trucker with werner, I needed to get from Phoenix to Omaha to get a new truck. The big wigs were in town so they let me hitch a ride on the corporate jet. I haven’t flown commercial since then.

Stef Schrader
Stef Schrader
1 month ago

I don’t think I’ve ever ended up in a Polaris Lounge, but I will give Delta props for having pimiento cheese in theirs.

Also, it’s deeply frustrating that any access I’ve had to lounges with nap space never coincide with any of my dumb, long delays. (Looking at you, every time I’ve flown United out of O’Hare. Every. Single. Time.)

JP15
JP15
1 month ago

As someone who flies international business class a lot, be sure to take advantage of the lounge shower facilities on layovers! You usually have to ask the front desk for a time slot, but the refreshing feeling of washing away all the travel grime before your next flight is amazing.

Some airline lounges have outdoor patios and depending on the location, they make for stellar plane-spotting lookouts.

Also, it’s VERY easy to drink too much in the lounge and business class, since most airline staff seem incentivized to pump you with as much alcohol as possible. Take it easy.

For anyone flying in the US more than a few times a year, TSA pre-check is amazing. Even in rare instances where the line is long, not having to removing your laptop, shoes, jacket, liquids, etc keeps things moving quickly, and you can walk right through the metal detector vs. waiting for the body scan. It’s basically pre-9/11 security check speeds.

Hondaimpbmw 12
Hondaimpbmw 12
1 month ago
Reply to  JP15

Not if you have titanium replacement parts. My wife has replacement hip & knee. Telling the TSA that just ensures she has to go through the x-ray and still gets felt up, patted down and rubbed w/ alcohol wipes while balancing unsteadily w/o her cane.

FSDKS
FSDKS
1 month ago

As someone who has flown around the world multiple times with multiple airlines in Business and First Class let me congratulate you on both finally leaving the USA for a trip and enjoying yourself. Keep up the good writing.

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
1 month ago

An added perk of the lounges that thankfully you did not have to take advantage of, is that the agents at the lounges have the power to make *miracles* happen when things go sideways with your flights. I have had them get me a confirmed seat on an oversold flight where they were giving away $2500 vouchers to get people off the flight. My flight had cancelled due to the inbound aircraft not making it in the night before.

A lounge membership and long layovers are my cheat code for lots and lots of work travel. Usually anyway, this year has been dead.

ProfPlum
ProfPlum
1 month ago

I traveled a lot on airlines for work in the 80s through the 2000s as a consultant, but then I took a calmer job and don’t fly quite as much. I try to fly first whenever I can, even domestic first, which is kind of meh. I like the larger seat, which helps my circulation, a little more attention, and using the airline lounge.

One of the best flights I took was my first flight on a 787, Virgin Atlantic to London Heathrow. The US side lounge was very nice, and the arrival great as first class pax got expedited customs, but the kicker was the return at Heathrow, where you have your cab drive you into a special entrance, with their own check-in and security, everyone smiles and says “hello ProfPlum, so nice to have you with us today,” and you go straight to the lounge.

I’m fortunate that I’ve reached a point in my life where I can be bougie at times, so why not?

I’ll also chime in that you should at least get PreCheck if you don’t already have it to always get into the shorter TSA lines.

Drive By Commenter
Drive By Commenter
1 month ago

PreCheck gets you through the security line a bit faster. Global Entry makes getting into the States a bit easier. Those two made me hate air travel a bit less.

PSA: get minor child(ren) a passport and Global Entry. Yes it’s expensive and a pain up front. When said minor has a medical emergency in a foreign country, their passport makes booking new flights a snap. Also, no waiting for the “local” consulate to get an emergency ID for a one way flight back home. Just do it.

Crisis
Crisis
1 month ago

Revel in the luxury of the Polaris treatment on the 777. Your next flight on the CRJ will bring reality rushing back to you all too soon.

PlatinumZJ
PlatinumZJ
1 month ago

So fancy!!! I’m glad you’re getting to have this experience, and even happier that you’re sharing it with us!

One guy got so mad he even yelled at a random TSA agent about it.

The last time I was at O’Hare, some guy yelled at me because I still had my mask on after getting off the plane. Between that and the horrifically inadequate restrooms, I’ve gone out of my way to avoid that airport ever since. The dinosaur was cool though.

EsotericBlue
EsotericBlue
1 month ago

Congrats on getting the passport and your first trip outside the ole USA, Mercedes!!

It’s hard to go back to “regular” seats after biz class, but it’s good to experience at least once. especially when it’s on another persons dime.

Love these personal perspective stories (and look forward to the actual car one), hope there’s more!

EsotericBlue
EsotericBlue
1 month ago
Reply to  EsotericBlue

Also, awesome that you chose your flight based on aircraft type. If that doesn’t say Autopian, I don’t know what does.

LMCorvairFan
LMCorvairFan
1 month ago

Many decades ago I used to travel on business quite a bit. The European and Asian first class lounges and planes were out of this world. North American where poor second cousin in comparison. I became quite jaded from the experience and still don’t enjoy air travel.

Manwich Sandwich
Manwich Sandwich
1 month ago

 and feel like a million bucks just to waltz out of the lounge and right onto your plane.”

Did you do an International Standard Waltz or a Viennese waltz?

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
1 month ago

No. Midwestern Walz

PresterJohn
PresterJohn
1 month ago

The craziest thing is that lounges and business class on US-based airlines are downright homely compared to certain Middle Eastern and Asian airlines. If you get the chance to test drive some supercars in the UAE or something, I strongly suggest trying out the Q-Suite on Qatar Airways.

Thomas Metcalf
Thomas Metcalf
1 month ago

Even during Covid times, the Maple Leaf Lounge at Pearson was very nice. I only get to use that on work trips though as I am also a cheap bastard.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago

I’d travel so much more if a first class ticket wasn’t the price of a nice used car. Flying coach, especially international, is a horrible experience.

Kevin B Rhodes
Kevin B Rhodes
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

You can usually find a business class ticket across the pond for $2500 or so. Or just do what I do, spend some of your millions of FF miles from work travel.

I am too old, too fat, and have too much money/miles to fly coach over water.

WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
1 month ago

Welcome to the dark side. FYI, an Amex Platinum card comes with Delta lounges (if you’re flying Delta) and Priority Pass for a ton of others. For years, a group of buddies all shared an account that we never spent anything on to get the card perks.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago

Is Amex Platinum still worth it? I thought I read the lounges were “watered down” so to speak at this point. Too many people with access, not as nice as they used to be.

I was looking at doing some traveling next year, and I got a fresh Amex Platinum offer for like 175k sign up bonus points or something.

Stef Schrader
Stef Schrader
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

Delta’s pulled back lounge access from a lot of folks lately, but most of them are still pretty busy. Like, I used to be able to buy one-time passes to the lounges with the Delta-branded Amex Platinum card, but they quit offering that. I think the normal Amex Platinum still has lounge access as an extra, though.

Given how much a crappy sandwich costs out of the lounge in an airport, IDK, the free snacks and beer in one almost made up for the single-use pass cost and/or the crowds. If I have access to it through a seat or whatever, I’ll usually end up in there to eat cheese. (You may want to ask someone with more lounge experience as I’m mostly just there to eat pimiento cheese.)

Last edited 1 month ago by Stef Schrader
WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
1 month ago
Reply to  Stef Schrader

Yeah, the actual Delta Amex is kinda worthless now. The straight up Platinum Amex is a much better travel card. I still get Delta access and all the Priority Pass lounges.

My card is paid for through my business so there’s that too. If I had to pay the annual fees out of pocket, I’m not sure it’d be worth it.

Stef Schrader
Stef Schrader
1 month ago

Ooh yeah, that’s a nice business perk. (I do not have a fancy business card.)

Given that I fly a lot less, though, I guess the Delta-branded card still has its use to force big expenses to feed into my Nürburgring Trip Airline Mile Hoard.

Last edited 1 month ago by Stef Schrader
Banana Stand Money
Banana Stand Money
1 month ago
Reply to  Stef Schrader

Yeah, one of the reasons I can still justify the annual fee on a platinum AMEX is having Centurion lounge access. Its a huge bonus if you travel fairly frequently. The lounges vary by location – the new DC Reagan Centurion lounge (and the pimento cheese) is actually quite nice.

WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
WasGTIthenGTOthenNOVAthenGTIthenA4nowS5
1 month ago

The Centurion lounges really are the best when you’re talking domestic flights.

Mike F.
Mike F.
1 month ago

Forget sitting at a stuffy gate with crying babies, crowding, and hard chairs.

For me, this is the true benefit of getting into the lounged. I f-ing HATE waiting in airports. Particularly when I need to get something to eat, as the “restaurants” are almost all completely unshielded from the beeping vehicles, the melting-down kids, the melting-down adults, and the general chaos and cacophony of the terminal. There are very few places to eat that are walled off from all of that noise. (Classified, in Newark, is an interesting but flawed one.) The fact the possibility of TSA issues or other delays require that you show up early makes sitting around the goddam airport mandatory, so lounges that provide a calm and comfortable place to sit are a godsend.

And Mercedes, the fact that you didn’t end up enjoying so many delicious, free cocktails that you missed your flight means that your first trip to the lounge was a roaring success!

Michael Costello
Michael Costello
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike F.

Nobody’s ever done that, right? (Me, on my very last trip. The gals at the desk worked wonders to get my drunk ass on the very next flight to my destination.)

B L
B L
1 month ago

One guy got so mad he even yelled at a random TSA agent about it.”

This guy is what is colloquially known as a “douchebag.”

Phuzz
Phuzz
1 month ago
Reply to  B L

Be interesting to watch him try and shout at security staff in most countries. Or maybe getting a full cavity search is what he’s after?

Peter d
Peter d
1 month ago

Next time see if there is a Virgin Atlantic flight – their lounges rock – worth getting to the airport early just to visit the lounge. I have never done a Polaris lounge, but this one sounds really nice.

Note that many of the pedestrian Airport lounges have become rather miserable and overcrowded making it tough to get a seat (or sometimes to get in at all) – Delta has too many credit card holders with status, which crowds their lounges and actually screws up my Economy Plus seating – when I book/check-in I look for a seat with empty seats around me, but Delta always fills these seats with free upgrades to their credit-card holders – I like JetBlue much better, you need to pay extra for the extra legroom seats so usually what you see is what you get when you check-in – unless staff or family are flying standby. I think United in general does a better job at this kind of stuff than Delta, I haven’t flown American for a while and remain pissed off from last time when they didn’t shuffle the planes so my earlier flight took off on time instead of letting the next flight to the same destination take-off while we waited for our plane to be released from maintenance – and then the morons boarded us and then decided we needed to sit on the plane for another couple of hours at the gate while they tracked down a new cabin crew since this one timed-out – like WTF?

Mike Postma
Mike Postma
1 month ago

Nobody tell Mercedes about the Lufthansa Fist class terminal in Frankfort, she’ll never come back to America LOL

A4A
A4A
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Postma

Fist class does not sound like a pleasant experience (unless you’re into that)

Also, Mercedes moving to Germany is a pretty fun idea! She would have easy access to all kinds of weird Smart and VW products that Americans could only dream of.

Last edited 1 month ago by A4A
Lincoln Clown CaR
Lincoln Clown CaR
1 month ago
Reply to  A4A

If anyone would be into that, it would be the Germans.

LTDScott
LTDScott
1 month ago
Reply to  Mike Postma

I’m amazed Lufthansa has any presence in Kentucky.

PRNDL
PRNDL
1 month ago

These “Dispatches From The [redacted] Trail” are wonderfully entertaining. Some of your best writing, me thinks. Enjoy the adventures and don’t allow anyone to tell you that you can’t act like a 10 year old on their first trip to the circus. Keep it up!

John Beef
John Beef
1 month ago

I never want to sit at a gate again. 

Yeah, the problem with luxury is once you get used to it, all the regular stuff seems crappy. It’s not a good thing.

V8 Fairmont Longroof
V8 Fairmont Longroof
1 month ago
Reply to  John Beef

As someone who flew a LOT before Covid, I concur… almost back to Gold now, but it has been grim.

Strangek
Strangek
1 month ago

I love masquerading as a rich person, it’s like being dispatched on an undercover mission from Poorsville.

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