Airport Lounge Access
Via partner cardsDreamFolks
Lounge and airport-services aggregator delivered through banks and cards.
By Marcus Tan·Verified
The verdict
DreamFolks is relevant if a card or programme you hold uses it; it is not something you sign up for on your own. For direct, predictable lounge access, Priority Pass or a pay-per-visit pass remains simpler.
What’s good
- Covers airport services beyond lounges, such as dining and meet-and-assist.
- Strong presence across Asian airports.
- No separate cost if a card or programme already includes it.
Worth noting
- Not available to buy directly as a consumer.
- Exact benefits depend entirely on the partner programme.
- Less recognised by travellers than Priority Pass.
The details
- Starting price
- S$0.00
- Pricing model
- free
- Standalone membership fee
- Not sold standalone — comes via a partner programme
- Per-visit charge
- Set by the partner card or programme
- Guest fee
- Depends on the partner programme
- Service network
- Lounges plus airport services such as dining and spa at many airports
- How you get it
- Through partner banks, cards and travel programmes
- Coverage focus
- Strong across Asian airports
- Standalone signup
- Generally not available
Pricing notes. DreamFolks is not sold directly to consumers — access is provided through partner banks, cards and programmes. Any per-visit charge depends on the partner programme you hold.
GST. Charges flow through the partner programme; the SGD amount can shift with exchange rates.
About DreamFolks
DreamFolks is an airport-services aggregator — lounges plus extras like dining and meet-and-assist — that reaches travellers through partner banks, cards and programmes rather than direct sale. For Singaporean travellers, it is another access route worth checking your cards for, with particularly strong coverage across Asia.
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