If you shelled out $3,000 or more for a United Polaris ticket this summer, you might assume the Polaris Lounge is part of the deal. As of spring 2026, that assumption can bite you at the door.
United quietly introduced three-tiered Polaris fares. Only Standard and Flexible tickets guarantee entry to the Polaris Lounge. The new Base fare — often the one that shows up first in searches — gets you the lie-flat seat, one checked bag, and access to a regular United Club. No Polaris Lounge, no free seat selection, restricted changes.
It's a fundamental shift. Paying full freight for business class no longer automatically buys you the premium ground experience United built Polaris to deliver. The lounge, with its sit-down dining, showers, and relative quiet, is now reserved for the higher fare buckets or specific elite and card combinations.
New Access Rules in Detail
According to United's updated policy, Polaris Lounge entry on a United-operated long-haul or transcon flight requires a same-day boarding pass in a Standard or Flexible Polaris fare. Base fares are explicitly excluded from the Polaris Lounge and redirected to United Club.[[1]](https://www.united.com/en/us/fly/travel/inflight/united-polaris.html)[[2]](https://www.united.com/en/us/fly/travel/airport/lounge-access.html)
MileagePlus Premier status doesn't automatically save you. Even 1K members flying a Base Polaris fare get Club access only. The United Club Infinite Card (the $695 one) delivers a full United Club membership and Star Alliance Gold benefits, but it does not grant Polaris Lounge entry on its own — you still need the qualifying Polaris boarding pass in the right fare class.
The co-branded United Polaris Visa card offers some travel credits and priority, yet lounge access still ties back to your ticket type. No credit card alone buys your way into Polaris Lounge anymore. It's ticket-driven now, full stop.
How Competitors Handle Paid Business Class
Delta and American make the contrast painful. A paid Delta One ticket — even the cheapest — gets you into the Delta One Lounge where available, or at minimum a Sky Club. Delta 360 members flying First get in too. No fare tiers carving out the lounge from the cabin.
American is even more straightforward. A qualifying Flagship Business or Flagship First ticket on international or transcon routes grants Flagship Lounge access, period. No Base/Standard split that leaves some business class passengers eating generic snacks in the Admirals Club while others enjoy the proper experience.[[3]](https://www.aa.com/i18n/travel-info/clubs/flagship-lounge.jsp)
United's move feels like a quiet devaluation aimed at revenue management. The $3,000 Polaris ticket that once delivered the full premium package now sometimes delivers half, depending on which fare bucket you land in. Competitors haven't followed suit — yet.
Official Communication and Workarounds
United rolled this out in spring 2026 alongside the new fare structure with minimal fanfare to existing cardholders or elite members. The changes appeared on their lounge access page and Polaris booking details without a widespread email blast. Many high-spending MileagePlus members learned about it the hard way at the podium.
Status-match offers from United remain aggressive if you're coming from Delta or American, but they won't restore lounge access on a Base fare. Upgrading to a Standard or Flexible ticket post-booking is possible but often expensive. The cleaner play is selecting the right fare class at booking.
Funny how the airline that spent years marketing Polaris as a coherent premium product is now nickel-and-diming its own ground experience. The lie-flat seat is still there. The pre-flight ritual that justified the premium over a European carrier? Not so much.
Action item: Before locking in any summer 2026 United Polaris itinerary, check the exact fare type. Only book Standard or Flexible if the lounge matters to you — or route through Delta One or AA Flagship instead. Your $3,000 should still buy what it used to. Make sure it does.