Denver, CO
Capital One Lounge Crowds Are Out Of Control In Denver—Use This Quick Trick For Instant Privacy – View from the Wing
Capital One Lounge Crowds Are Out Of Control In Denver—Use This Quick Trick For Instant Privacy
Capital One’s Denver airport lounge could be great, but it’s too small. As a result, the place gets packed and waits to get in can be long. Once inside, the food is good, but too many seats don’t have power outlets. There is a trick to find some privacy amidst the chaos, though.
I visited the lounge a couple of times recently. The first time, during the early evening, there was a wait to get in that stretched more than 40 minutes. That’s typical of Dallas, as well.
The lounge is near gate A34. All of the concourses are connected by train, so from the middle of the B or C gates plan for about 15 minutes each way.
In the late afternoon, the lounge showed estimating a 55 minute wait. I added myself to the wait list. I was showing up at #72 (!).
And, in fact, it took a little over 40 minutes to be welcomed into the lounge.
When I arrived there was a long line. That’s not the line to get it – it’s the line of people showing up who aren’t on a wait list. They just come to the lounge, figuring they can get in. Now, they get to the front and a few questions quickly reveal that many of them aren’t eligible unless they pay. They’re trying to get in with Amex cards, with Chase Sapphire Reserve, or with Priority Pass. They can pay for entry on a single visit basis, if they wish! Those who have eligible cards (or are willing to pay) get added to the wait list and the are going to need to come back in about an hour.
If you see a line like this and it’s your turn, do not wait in it! It is not for you! Just walk right past the staff member at the front, or walk by mentioning to them that it’s your turn to enter the lounge. I headed up the escalator. There, there was a line of people whose turn it was also! So I had to wait in line – as time ticked by on my allowable 10 minutes to show up. They aren’t going to turn you away if you don’t make it to the front of the line in time, though.
The lounge has a bar and dining room, work rooms and a conference room, a shower suite and individual restrooms.
When the lounge is especially busy, look to the work rooms. These are reserved at the front desk – and as packed as the lounge seemed to be, these were empty. They aren’t at the windowline, but they give you space and furniture.
Overall though there was seating once you’re inside. Capital One does a good job managing queues so that the lounge itself remains nice even when there are lines. You can get access to the bar, too. My biggest complaint about the lounge is that not all seats had access to power.
The food and beverage offerings here are good. I enjoyed both an evening offering and a breakfast. I like the current menu better than Dallas, where food seems to have declined.
The afternoon and evening food offerings include:
- toy box caprese salad
- petite charcuterie
- arugula salad
- spicy tofu poke bowl curried cauliflower
- garbanzo bean dahl
- pasta bolognese
- pasta pomodoro
- chocolate brownie, macarons, croissant, caramel pecan cookie
My second visit was on a morning and there was no line around 8:30 a.m.
It must have been early for some people!
But there was plenty more seating open throughout the lounge.
Morning offerings included:
- overnight maple oats
- strawberry guava chia parfait
- strawberry banana smoothie bowl
- chorizo empanadas
- three cheese frittata
- tofu scramble
- elk sausage kolaches
Grab ‘n Go was good but also less than I used to see in Dallas (but there’s seemingly less grab ‘n go options there as well). ‘Grab’ a paper bag and fill up from the fridge and don’t forget chocolate on the way out – each lounge has its own variant of chocolate, here it’s “peaches and hops.”
Access is via Capital One Venture X card [guest and authorized user access change February 1, 2026]. You need a same day departing boarding pass, and can enter the lounge no earlier than 3 hours prior to your flight – even on connections.