
Have you ever walked through an airport with hungry kids, backpacks slipping off, and a line snaking out of Starbucks and Peet’s?
In that moment, you know the truth: The family vacation starts before takeoff. And for families like ours, that first few hours in the airport can make or break the entire journey.
This year, my family and I had the chance to experience some incredible lounges across the Middle East, Asia, Europe and the U.S. Not as a “points flex” but as parents who truly understand how much a calm, comfortable space can change the energy of a long trip especially long-hauls to Asia.
And here’s the twist: None of these lounges were random luck.
They came from a few intentional card and points decisions long before I ever searched for award flights and hotels. So I want to share the five lounges that shaped our 2025 travels and the real lessons families can bring into 2026.
1. Etihad Airways First & Business Class Lounge (Abu Dhabi)

This lounge was the re-definition of calm and extravagance.
My real lesson wasn’t the luxury.
To kick off our summer trip to Japan – Hong Kong – Italy, I treated myself to a little self-care routing. Instead of flying Japan Airlines’ new A350-1000 first class again, I pivoted last minute: JFK – Abu Dhabi – Singapore. All in Etihad Airways First Apartment.
Why? Because I discovered very late that my Etihad Airways award miles were expiring. Etihad Airways’ expiration policy is one of the most unforgiving in the industry.
- No extension (yes, only flying!)
- No exceptions.
- No “please help me.”
- Just….gone.
So the whole routing? Pure survival of expiring award miles. But it turned into one of the most meaningful trips of my year.


Here’s what I want families to hear: Etihad Airways award miles require extreme caution. They expire. They’re strict with the change and cancellation too. And for parents juggling school calendars, kids’ schedules, and life….hard change and cancellation rules can ruin a year of effort. If you want to fly Etihad Airways business class or first class in 2026, the safer, family-friendly way is through Flying Blue or American Airlines program, because:
- American Airlines award miles don’t expire (and now you can earn through Citi Strata Elite)
- Flying Blue miles extend with activity (and lots of credit cards points transfer bonuses)
- Planning is much more flexible
Etihad Airways premium cabin products are absolutely worth experiencing with their network expansion to Taipei and Chiang Mai. What you do is just book it the smart way.
How I accessed:
First class award ticket access to both first class & business class lounges.
2. Cathay Pacific First & Business Class Lounges (Hong Kong)

Cathay Pacific lounges are where “family premium travel” really becomes real for us. Before my daughter and I flew to Rome on Cathay Pacific business class (84,000 Cathay miles at the time, now 88,000 miles), we did a little lounge-hopping. It turned into one of my favorite mother-daughter memories. At check-in, the staff noticed my Oneworld Emerald status and said: “You should visit them all today. Start at The Wing First. End at The Pier First. Make it fun.” So we did.




The Pier first class lounge still feels like therapy to me that is warm, quiet, grounding. Benny and I celebrated our 25th anniversary there last Christmas so it carries a lot of meaning.


If you go, put your name down for the massage right away. Prime hours fill up fast. But here’s the real takeaway: We earned this access on purpose, not accidentally. I’ve built Oneworld status year after year with the Citi / AAdvantage Executive, earning American Airlines Loyalty Points through strategic spending.
And now, thanks to Bank of America Atmos Summit, families finally have a second real pathway to Oneworld Sapphire / Emerald status. Many parents think status is “for someone else.” It’s not. With the right plan, it becomes a tool especially for long-haul Asia trips and family milestones.
How we accessed: Oneworld Emerald status via earning American Airlines Loyalty Points on Citi / AAdvantage Executive.
3. Japan Airlines First Class Lounge (Tokyo Haneda)

Walking into the Japan Airlines first class lounge felt emotional. After years of writing on Japan award trips, I finally had my own photos, not stock pictures! A few things I learned right away:
- the main hall gets crowded
- the sushi bar is calm (and that chef is so photogenic!)

- upstairs wine and coffee bar is slow and intentional, drip coffee is phenomenal

- The Red Suite feels like stepping into Japan Airlines time capsule

But the real insight came from the routing: Tokyo wasn’t our plan, it is just one of our options. We flew from Fukuoka and had overnight connections in Tokyo Haneda and moved onto Hong Kong. They were all on one ticket (hello, married segment magic!). That overnight became a mini-reunion with my sister, that was unplanned and unexpected and unforgettable.
It reminded me:
- Families need more than one Asia gateway
- Flexibility creates magic
- Searching multiple airports opens doors
- Your points strategy determines what’s possible
And everyday household and business spending is what put me in a first class lounge even when flying business class or premium economy class.
How we accessed: Also through Oneworld Emerald via earning American Airlines Loyalty Points on Citi / AAdvantage Executive.
4. Swiss International Air Lines Business Class Lounge (Zurich)

Zurich was our positioning city on the way home from Bologna. And yes, positioning flights are real and they work. Most families avoid them because they feel “too complicated.” But this one move opened everything up. The Swiss International Air Lines business class lounge was exactly what we needed after a day of trains, repacking, and airport hopping. It was bright, clean, simple and restorative.

Here’s the lesson: Positioning flights give families freedom. I know many parents want “nonstop or nothing.” But positioning flights can:
- Unlock award space
- Have better cabins
- Open Europe to U.S. West Coast routes
- Save hundreds of thousands of miles / points
When I search, I rarely type only one city. I type “EUR” or “SCH” to open the whole region. This tiny habit means huge payoff.

How we accessed: Star Alliance partner airlines business class (United Airlines Polaris business class award tickets from Zurich to San Francisco).
5. United Airlines Polaris Lounge (San Francisco)

People love to drag U.S. lounges, but United Airlines Polaris Lounge at San Francisco Airport is one I’ll defend every time. When we fly Star Alliance partner airlines business class like ANA, Lufthansa or United Airlines, the Polaris Lounge is where our whole trip always begins. Yes, it’s busy. Remember to put your name down for the private dining room immediately. But once you’re seated? It’s consistent, calm, and a genuinely solid start before a long-haul to Asia.

Here’s what shifted for me: Your first airport sets the tone for the entire trip. A smooth first leg means kids fed, everyone relaxed, zero chaos. It changes the energy of the whole Pacific crossing.
How we accessed: United Airlines Polaris business class or Star Alliance partner airlines business class award tickets.
Bonus: Alaska Airlines Lounge (San Francisco)

This lounge has saved me more times than I can count (And you all know it!!):
- Red-eyes

- Domestic flight connections.
- Last-minute pivots.
- Domestic flight arrivals.
When I switched from San Francisco to New York on red-eyed flight to catch Etihad Airways First Apartment award ticket, my Citi / AAdvantage Executive got me into Alaska Airlines lounge. For domestic travel with kids, this credit card is honestly underrated: access for you & spouse + two guests or kids under 21.

How we accessed: Citi / AAdvantage Executiveoffers the Admirals Club membership which also include the access to Alaska Airlines lounges. Also, Bank of America Atmos Rewards Summit offers up to eight Alaska Airlines lounge passes annually.

The Big “Aha” Moments
Here’s what clicked for me this year and I honestly wish more Asian American families knew this before planning a trip home to Asia: business class doesn’t happen because you refresh Roame or Seats.Aero 200 times. It happens because you make a few smart decisions before you search. Every lounge we visited from Etihad Airways, Cathay Pacific, Japan Airlines, Swiss International Air Lines, United Airlines and Alaska Airlines wasn’t luck. It wasn’t about “having a ton of points / miles.” It came from a handful of things we set up months earlier:
- Choosing the right credit cards for our travel patterns
- Earning status intentionally
- Avoiding programs that punish families
- Searching multiple Asia gateways (Tokyo / Seoul / Hong Kong / Taipei)
- Building multiple route options, not clinging to one
When you’re flying kids (or grandparents) 10 ~ 14 hours across the Pacific, then the comfort and rest matter, and avoiding stress matter even more. The real secret isn’t the points. It’s the clarity behind how you use them. Once you understand the few decisions that matter most, business class to Asia stops feeling impossible. Then you starts becoming something your family can repeat. That’s what I want every parent to feel heading into 2026: you can do this and it gets easier once you know the credit cards and the points / miles that actually make your trip happen.
Final Thoughts
At the end of the day, these lounge moments weren’t about luxury. They were about giving our family a little calm before a big trip and reminding me what’s possible when you plan with intention instead of stress. If 2026 and 2027 is your year to fly home to Asia with your kids, parents, or the whole multigenerational crew, I hope this gives you clarity, confidence and a gentle push forward. Because the truth is: your family can do this too and I’ll be right here cheering you on.






