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Home » Reviews » Lounge Reviews » Review: Lufthansa Senator Lounge Munich (MUC – G28)
Lounge ReviewsLufthansa

Review: Lufthansa Senator Lounge Munich (MUC – G28)

Matthew KlintPosted onApril 29, 2023November 13, 202311 Comments

Lufthansa Senator Lounge entrance at Munich Airport, featuring a prominent yellow sign, travelers with luggage, and a Cartier store in the background.

I spent 30 minutes in the Lufthansa G24 Senator Lounge in Munich prior to my flight to Frankfurt and enjoyed a tender piece of chicken and the ability to print, which was suddenly vital to continuing my journey to Kenya.

Lufthansa Senator G28 Lounge Munich Review (MUC)

I would not have left the Senator Cafe but I needed to print a document (my visa to Kenya) and figured a Senator Lounge would have a printing facility. Thankfully, it did.

Konica Minolta secure guest print instructions displayed on a printer, detailing steps for document submission, PIN entry, and print settings in a lounge setting.

Lufthansa has two Senator lounges in the Schengen Area of Terminal 2 at Munich Airport one near G24 and this one near G28. I prefer the G24 lounge because barista-made coffee is available, but had never checked out this one and it certainly served its purpose. This lounge is open daily from 5:00 am to 10:00 pm.

Lufthansa Senator Lounge reception area with a staff member in a mask, modern design, and prominent Lufthansa branding.

Access requires Star Alliance Gold status. Those passengers traveling in business class on a Star Alliance carrier can use the Lufthansa Business Lounge which is located directly above the Senator Lounge. For what it’s worth, I took a peak inside the business lounge (upstairs) and it appears a lot more modern:

Lufthansa Senator Lounge interior in Munich, featuring modern decor, seating areas, and greenery, showcasing a stylish and comfortable travel environment.

The Senator Lounge, at 5:00 pm on a Monday, was quite busy. Most seats were taken, though I still did not have trouble finding a seat. After dealing with the printing issue (which was not without trial – a lounge agent had to reset the machine and there are many steps before you can obtain the printout), I sat down to work. Internet was blazing fast and I also used the time to charge my devices, which I foolishly did not charge on my long flight from San Francisco to Munich.

Lufthansa Senator Lounge in Munich featuring travelers relaxing on plush seating, reading newspapers, and using devices in a modern, well-lit environment.

Lufthansa Senator Lounge in Munich featuring a modern seating area, travelers relaxing, and a large screen displaying a Lufthansa aircraft.

Lufthansa Senator Lounge interior with patrons seated at tables, modern design, and logo visible on the wall.

A couple small rooms with three windows are intended for telephone calls.

Gray doors with circular windows labeled "1" and "2" in a modern lounge setting, featuring a stainless steel trash can nearby.

I really wasn’t hungry, but the chicken looked so delicious I decided to try a piece…it was just as delicious as it looked and it nice that the COVID-19 cutbacks at Lufthansa Senator Lounges appear to have been rolled back. It’s a shame I had no appetite because the beetroot soup, Nurnberg-style sausages with sauerkraut, and falafel peas balls with spinach cream and baby spinach, all sounded delicious. There was a nice salad, bread rolls, meat, cheese, and a number of desserts also available.

Menu board displaying salad options, including mixed leaf salad and Caesar salad with ingredients listed in German and English, set against a neutral background.

Buffet station featuring various food items including pasta salad, yogurt, cherry tomatoes, cucumbers, and scrambled eggs in colorful serving dishes.

Lufthansa Senator Lounge snack selection featuring bowls of chips, olives, and a stack of white plates.

Lufthansa Senator lounge buffet with stacked plates, bowls, assorted meats, cheeses, salads, dressings, and condiments.

Bread and pretzel display in a lounge buffet setting, featuring assorted rolls, sliced bread, and freshly baked pretzels.

Menu board displaying various dishes including beetroot soup, goulash soup, and Nürnberger sausages with sauerkraut in a lounge setting.

Buffet display featuring various cooked meats, including sausages and chicken, alongside pasta and sauces, in a modern dining setting.

Condiments in small cast iron containers on a wooden tray, featuring chopped chives, red pepper flakes, and pumpkin seeds, with stacks of white plates and condiments in the background.

Dish of creamy mashed potatoes in a black serving pan with a serving spoon, placed on a countertop near stacked white plates.

Lufthansa Senator Lounge buffet featuring a variety of desserts, including cakes and pastries, with plates and glassware in a modern setting.

Dessert display featuring glass cups of creamy panna cotta topped with orange and pink layers, garnished with almond slivers, set on a stainless steel serving station with plates in the background.

Pretzel display on a wooden stand with multiple pretzels, featuring a bar setting in the background.

Assorted jars of snacks including gummy bears, dried fruits, and nuts on a white counter in the Lufthansa Senator Lounge, with a blurred background of travelers and a Lufthansa airplane image.

Food preparation station with partially assembled pinza, fresh oranges in a bowl, and condiments including flour and spices, set in a modern lounge environment.

Roasted chicken leg quarter on a white plate, showcasing golden-brown skin and served on a wooden table.

Alcohol was self-serve with beer, wine, and spirits (including four different Bacardi rums and three different gins from Bombay Sapphire). Soft drinks, coffee, tea, and juice were also available.

Selection of premium spirits including Bombay Sapphire gin, Bacardi rum, and Grey Goose vodka displayed on a bar shelf, with glasses arranged below.

Lounge bar display featuring a variety of wines, sparkling beverages, and soft drinks, with glasses and utensils in a modern setting.

Wine menu featuring various selections of sparkling, rosé, white, and red wines displayed in a lounge setting, with bottles visible in the background.

Self-service coffee machines with touchscreen interfaces, surrounded by stacked cups and glassware, in a modern lounge setting.

Coca-Cola beverage dispenser featuring various drink options including Coca-Cola, Fanta, Sprite, and still and sparkling water, set in a lounge environment with wine bottles and glassware in the background.

Restrooms were available and showers were available upon request, with a hilarious warning to take short showers “if possible.”

Modern bathroom interior featuring three white washbasins with chrome faucets, illuminated mirrors, and a black trash bin against a dark tiled wall.

Lufthansa Senator Lounge reception area featuring a wooden counter, a tablet on a stand, a bell, a flower arrangement, and informational signage.

Lufthansa shower service notice on wooden counter, providing guidelines for guests in German and English, emphasizing limited shower time and hygiene measures.

I was tickled to see newspapers and magazines available. I dislike the trend to digitize all newspapers and periodicals, though I understand that achieves both cost-cutting and “green” goals.

Shelves displaying various newspapers and magazines, showcasing a collection of print media, including current issues and stacked publications.

CONCLUSION

While the G24 Senator Lounge (or nearby Senator Cafe) are both superior Lufthansa Senator Lounges in the Schengen area of Munich because both offer barista-made coffee, I appreciated the generous selection of food and ability to print in this lounge. Bottom line: this lounge served my needs and helped me to get my document printed. Although that seems almost antiquated today, I still appreciate lounges which have printers, copiers, scanners, and fax machines.

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About Author

Matthew Klint

Matthew is an avid traveler who calls Los Angeles home. Each year he travels more than 200,000 miles by air and has visited more than 135 countries. Working both in the aviation industry and as a travel consultant, Matthew has been featured in major media outlets around the world and uses his Live and Let's Fly blog to share the latest news in the airline industry, commentary on frequent flyer programs, and detailed reports of his worldwide travel.

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11 Comments

  1. AlvinReply
    April 29, 2023 at 7:12 am

    You’ve heard of chicken and waffles, but Matthew’s lounge criteria are “chicken and printer”

    • Aaron Reply
      April 29, 2023 at 7:54 am

      And barista made coffee.

      • Matthew Klint Reply
        April 29, 2023 at 8:08 am

        Most important thing!

  2. DC Reply
    April 29, 2023 at 10:31 am

    Interesting that you bring up the magazines and newspapers being in print form. I often prefer print for magazines and wondered if the print magazine was a dying thing and recently tried to figure that out. Best I could tell from searching around on the internet, print magazine readership seems to be holding steady as of late. Anyone else have some insight/ data on that?

    • vietri Reply
      April 29, 2023 at 11:13 am

      It’s not necessarily becoming obsolete but it’s mixed. My mother and her next door neighbor still love their many magazines..Real Simple, People, Us, Better Homes and Gardens and many others, plus local and national papers. They trade magazines weekly or monthly. Forbes and Quora detailed these challenges with magazines. Consumption seems to be the most relevant behind cost:

      1) Cost. Cost is the most obvious one: Printing a magazine costs money, and those costs go beyond the actual physical printing of the publication itself. There’s the cost of staffing a print magazine, which requires art directors and/or designers, plus writers. Art is another cost: We hire illustrators and photographers to create original art, and we license existing art for stories where we might need historical or other existing images. For this special edition, we worked with two separate fact-checkers as well as a copyeditor. Then there’s the printing of the magazine itself, and if you’re a regular print magazine with subscribers, the cost of postage is one major expense that few people think about.

      2) Competition. Competition, of course, is always going to be a challenge—whether you’re in publishing or any other business. The key here is creating a product that clearly stands above the “competition,” while becoming unique enough that you almost have no direct “competition.” But whereas 10 to 20 years ago, a print magazine’s main competition came from other print magazines, now it comes from the web, too. Which means that anyone who is creating content is competing with millions of other places that produce content, so you need to make sure that it’s compelling and unique.

      3) Consumption. Consumption is a digital era challenge: Millennials and younger generations have grown up in a largely digital-only era, meaning that consuming their content via digital devices is what they know and are most comfortable with. So if you want to attract these readers to a print magazine, you have the added challenge of selling them on the power and benefit of print. (In case you’re wondering: Several scientific studies have shown that print can be great for your brain and your health.)

      4) Cutting text to fit. One other challenge I want to mention, which I know my print editors out there will understand: Cutting text to fit! Fitting copy within a certain space isn’t something you have to think about when you work on the internet. Once we were looking at layouts for the magazine, we realized that many of our stories were way too long, which meant we spent hours cutting that text to fit. When I worked in print, I loved cutting fit; it’s one of those tedious tasks that appeals to me because it’s almost a puzzle to be solved—how can I express what we’re trying to say in a sentence instead of two paragraphs? It is torture when you’re doing it, but when that piece finally fits, you feel like you could take on the world.–

      “In America, 25,000 companies are specialists in commercial printing. It generates approximately $900 billion in revenue annually,” according to Vice President of Sales Pratik Mistry, with Radix, who wrote about “The Future of Print Industry in 2023 and Beyond.”

      Although the printing industry as a whole has been experiencing growth, newspaper pressrooms are shuttering or consolidating at accelerating rates. For example, the Los Angeles Times will shut down its downtown Los Angeles printing facility in 2024.–

      https://www.editorandpublisher.com/stories/print-is-far-from-obsolete,241894

  3. JJ Reply
    April 30, 2023 at 7:51 am

    I could sit there and eat Käsebretzeln and Weissbier for hours. Thankfully for my waistline, it don’t get to go too often.

  4. Steve Reply
    April 30, 2023 at 1:48 pm

    I am glad that the (some?) LH lounges still have printers as those have been useful several times over the past few months. I guess LH figured out that printers don’t spread COVID. I’d like to see UA return printers to its lounges.

  5. 121Pilot Reply
    May 1, 2023 at 8:48 am

    So LH has three lounges if I’m tracking. First (though maybe the First Class Terminal and the First lounges should be viewed as distinct products), Business, and Senator. Do I have that right?

    Is Status the only way into the Senator lounge? Is it a step up from the Business class lounge or essentially equivalent? If your flying Business with status which lounge do you think is better?

    • Drake Reply
      July 8, 2023 at 8:20 am

      Status is the only way to get you into Senator Lounge. Senator lounges offer slightly superior food and drink variety and are often less crowded (quite common to be standing in Business lounges in FRA and MUC during peak hours). Flying business class with status, going to Senator lounge instead of business is an obvious choice.

  6. rdinsf Reply
    May 11, 2023 at 11:11 pm

    Amex Platinum Card holders on a business class ticket also get access to this lounge. (and Amex Platinum holders on a coach ticket gets access to the Business Lounge. Zoo)

  7. NRA Reply
    May 15, 2023 at 7:50 pm

    Was there recently and not impressed.

Leave a Reply to AlvinCancel reply

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