Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Whoa …. British Airways to move to ‘Avios per £1 spent’ in 2023, Iberia to switch now

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Iberia Plus, the Avios-based loyalty scheme for British Airways’s sister airline Iberia, has announced a massive overhaul of its Avios earning structure.

The Avios you earn will no longer be based on the cabin you fly and the distance you travel

From November, the Avios you earn will be based exclusively on what you spend and your elite status.

Iberia has also announced that British Airways will move to the same model in 2023.

British Airways to change how you earn Avios

Full details can be found on this page of the Iberia website.

The British Airways announcement is in the official press release:

Ian Romanis, Head of Retail and Customer Relationship Management at British Airways, said:

“We congratulate our colleagues at Iberia for introducing this change and we look forward to joining them in 2023. More announcements will follow about what this change will mean for our Executive Club programme, which will unlock even more opportunities for our Members to earn Avios when they fly.”

I challenge anyone to give an example of how these changes ‘will unlock even more opportunities for our Members to earn Avios when they fly’. When you have to resort to peddling claims like this, which literally don’t make any sense, you know you’ve lost the argument.

We’re getting ahead of ourselves, however.

What is changing with Iberia Plus?

It is, at least, simple. The number of Avios you earn per Euro is based on your status in the Iberia Plus programme.

A base level member earns 5 Avios per €1, whilst an elite member will earn up to 8 Avios per €1.

Importantly, the fare calculation used to calculate Avios is based on “your net spending, not including taxes or carrier charges.”

Or is it?

When Iberia’s website went live earlier today, it did indeed feature the wording above.

This has now changed. It now says “your net spending, not including taxes or fees”.

If carrier charges are not included, you would only earn 10-16 Avios on a return Economy flight to New York if BA adopted the same earning rates. This is how a typical ticket looks:

Base fare £2.00
Additional Charges (Adult) £397.96, of which:
Air Passenger Duty – United Kingdom £84.00
Passenger Service Charge – United Kingdom £56.06
Passenger Civil Aviation Security Service Fee – USA £4.80
International Transportation Tax – USA £17.00
International Transportation Tax – USA £17.00
Animal & Plant Health User Fee (Aphis) – USA £3.40
Immigration User Fee – USA £6.00
Customs User Fee – USA £5.60
Passenger Facility Charge – £3.90
Carrier imposed charge – £200.00
ba.com booking fee – £0.00
Total £399.76

Based on the original Iberia rules published online (Avios on base fare only, nothing awarded on carrier charges or taxes), and assuming that British Airways goes with a similar 5-8 Avios per £1 spent, you would earn between 10 and 16 Avios for flying on this ticket.

If carrier charges ARE included, you have a base fare of £202. This means you would earn between 1,010 and 1,616 Avios for a return flight.

Elite bonuses have been quietly cut

Whilst it isn’t immediately obvious from the numbers in the image above, Iberia has cut its elite tier bonuses.

At present, you get a bonus of 25%, 50% or 100% of Avios earned based on your elite status.

If you do the maths on the numbers above, working from a base level of 5 Avios per €1, elite status bonuses have been cut to 20%, 40% and 60%.

British Airways to change how you earn Avios

Is this model of awarding miles a good one?

This model of earning Avios has been used by other airlines and is generally agreed to be a dud. The only exceptions are Finance Directors, who can easily understand how the cost of miles is linked to the money coming in and so like the idea.

Those who think more carefully about these things usually don’t agree. This is because you are rewarding the wrong people most highly.

The people who are flying on £10,000 fully flexible business class fares to New York are the ones who are laughing all the way to the mileage bank. However, with few exceptions, these are corporate travellers whose choice of airline is made by their employer. You could give these people zero miles and it wouldn’t impact the money that their employer spends with the airline.

Similarly, it is (duh) the fullest flights which charge the highest prices. Because these flights are ALREADY full, it makes no sense to spend most of your loyalty budget rewarding the people who fly on them. Those seats would sell anyway, multiple times over.

On similar logic, fares are higher on routes where there is no competition – but on routes where there IS competition, and where fares are lower, the lure of Avios is more important. Weirdly, you will now be rewarded more for flying expensive routes where only British Airways could have got you there. You will earn fewer Avios on competitive routes where you can choose between carriers.

It should all be about the marginal Euro (or Pound)

The secret for an airline is to attract marginal spending. This means:

  • attracting the leisure Euro, from self funding passengers who often won’t have status (and so, in this structure, earn just 5 Avios per £1)
  • attracting small business travellers and the self-employed, who do an important job of filling your aircraft at off-peak times, but who are now given less incentive to do so

The bottom line is that you don’t make money by getting more people to travel on full flights, because this isn’t possible. You make more money by filling seats on cheaper, off-peak flights which would otherwise be empty, and this is where your loyalty budget should be focussed.

This model quietly ignores huge corporate rebates

There is one other factor which is generally ignored when thinking about the link between Avios and money spent.

I would be surprised if Iberia has any big corporate contracts where there is not a massive rebate paid at the end of the year. These are generally along the lines of ‘if you spend £2,500,000 with us during this calendar year, we will pay you £500,000 back at the year end’.

What this means is that the traveller on a notional £10,000 ticket, and being ‘over rewarded’ with 8 Avios per £1, isn’t even spending £10,000. A large chunk of that money is coming back to their employer at the end of the year.

An SME traveller choosing to spend £8,000 – with no corporate contract to rebate 20% of the fare – is spending the same net amount but earning fewer Avios. This is also the traveller who is likely to have a choice about which airline to fly with.

So …. the bottom line tends to be that this model of mileage earning:

  • over-rewards corporate travellers who have no choice over which airline to fly and whose published ticket cost is highly inflated due to rebates, whilst
  • under-rewarding small business travellers and leisure travellers, who have 100% control over which airline they use and who pay the full sticker price
Avios earning changes

Other key points about the Avios changes

The way you earn status is not changing

For clarity, there is no change to how you earn status with Iberia. There will be no linkage, at all, with spending.

The existing system of Elite Points remains.

We can guess that British Airways will also retain the existing tier point system.

It is likely that Avios earning with partners will not change

Due to IT complexity, it is highly likely that flights from airline partners will continue to earn Avios based on a combination of cabin class and distance flown (eg 125% of miles flown for discounted business class). This is because partner airlines do not receive fare data from the operating carrier.

However, British Airways will be moving to ‘Avios per £1 spent’ earning on transatlantic flights on American Airlines, Finnair, Iberia and Aer Lingus. This is possible because it does see the underlying fare data on these flights due to the joint venture in place. Other flights operated by these carriers will continue to earn Avios based on the standard charts.

Of course, if you don’t like the British Airways changes in 2023, you could credit your flight to Qatar Airways Privilege Club (assuming you don’t need the tier points) or even a non-Avios programme.

And, of course, ‘earning from flying’ is not that important these days

The writing was on the wall for earning Avios from flying when British Airways reduced its minimum earning rate from 500 Avios to 125 Avios per flight.

For a number of years now it was likely that, if flying discounted economy, you would earn more miles from your credit card spend when you buy the ticket than you earn from actually flying it. Nothing announced today will change that.

You can find out more about the Iberia changes on its website here. We will no doubt be returning to this topic in the future.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2025)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses!

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

Get 5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

30,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending £15,000 Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points. These points convert at 1:1 into Avios.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 30,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

Run your own business?

We recommend Capital on Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, and the standard card is FREE. Capital on Tap cards also have no FX fees.

Capital on Tap Visa

NO annual fee, NO FX fees and points worth 1 Avios per £1 Read our full review

Capital on Tap Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits Read our full review

There is also a British Airways American Express card for small businesses:

British Airways American Express Accelerating Business

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

There are also generous bonuses on the two American Express Business cards, with the points converting at 1:1 into Avios. These cards are open to sole traders as well as limited companies.

American Express Business Platinum

50,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year Read our full review

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

Comments (287)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Can says:

    Avios is becoming more and more of a currency — constant devaluations, different but simple investment tools, interesting mutual funds with Qatar and Nectar.

    The game is changing fast. I am not sure why most are upset — we’ll find ways to maximise our ways.

  • David says:

    For the last few years I’ve gotten some flights ex-EU to Cancun, Miami,Puerto Rico for £600-700 for family of 3 in Eco. 9k Avios was the average we got for the whole booking.

    On one booking £645 to Cancun it was made up of £639 taxes and fees. So I would be in line for laughably 6 Avios come next year.

  • StanTheMan says:

    Can we assume this means less Avios are being earned ??
    Im guessing that’s a main driver of the airlines doing it?
    If so, it cant be a devaluation can it?

    • Rob says:

      Obviously it depends how fare levels pan out, but given the reduction in elite bonuses I suspect that it will mean fewer awarded.

      • G says:

        £2000 net spend for bronze, £5000 net spend for silver and £10,000 for gold anyone?

    • Peter says:

      Well if you get 6 Avios per £1, then a flight to US for £300 will give you 1800. Worth £14.40 (at Sainsbury’s), so you’re not really collecting miles but getting delayed discount – paying £285.60. Why not fly with any other airline cheaper than that?

      • marcw says:

        Well, probably 90% of that fare is taxes and surcharges… so no Avios on that part.

        • Rob says:

          Real example, Heathrow to NYC in Economy:

          Fare £2.00
          Additional Charges (Adult) £397.96
          Air Passenger Duty – United Kingdom £84.00
          Passenger Service Charge – United Kingdom £56.06
          Passenger Civil Aviation Security Service Fee – USA £4.80
          International Transportation Tax – USA £17.00
          International Transportation Tax – USA £17.00
          Animal & Plant Health User Fee (Aphis) – USA £3.40
          Immigration User Fee – USA £6.00
          Customs User Fee – USA £5.60
          Passenger Facility Charge – £3.90
          Carrier imposed charge £200.00
          ba.com booking fee £0.00
          Total £399.76

          • Charles Martel says:

            The carrier imposed charges are a fare by any other name, exempting them is at the very least dishonest. The rest are admittedly outside the airlines control.

      • Charles Martel says:

        Most people have no idea what an Avios is worth and are much less interested in the faff of linking their nectar account and transferring. They’re look at the headline fare, it’s why Ryanair are so successful.

        • G says:

          It’s also worth pointing out that Ryanair are cheaper and more timely than BA are. Ryanair and Virgin’s success stem mostly from BA’s hubris.

          Which is what the vast majority of the public want.

  • Bernard Bjorn says:

    Very poor communication from BA not to tell members first.
    BA is a mediocre airline with awful IT that’s been propped up by BAEC. Just like the removal of seat allocation by the subsequently convicted paedophile Andrew Barker – since reversed, then if Avios earned are minimal, the product is mediocre and Avios redemption on anything useful is impossible or has eye watering copayments, then what’s the point?
    An unusual move into the cusp of a deep recession, and I wonder if BA has a clue what it’s up to?

  • Samuel says:

    This is an incentive for me to completely move away from being loyal to BA. Part of the fun is getting (perceived) value for money, not just through the flight price but also through the Avios you win. Seeing what is basically a penny pinching operation, I might as well simply choose the cheapest airline instead of looking for the Oneworld ones to earn Avios.

  • Hugo says:

    On the bright side – fewer Avios issued means less chance of devaluations
    However with the Taxes&Charges having skyrocketed in the last few years (£842 T&C for NYC?!) and the devaluations in categories here and there (partners, some shorthauls)…I increasingly feel like it’s death by 1000 cuts
    This change does feel a bit counterproductive though, the analysis in the article hits the spot…

  • Jack says:

    Iag once again proving their on a race to the bottom why should how much you pay affect earning and why status bonuses people earn by flying with you . Will seriously reconsider travel with BA in the future if this is the way they wish to treat loyal customers it’s disgusting this isn’t soddding easyJet may as well call it that now nothing special anymore

  • Ed_fly says:

    I have a handful of work flights per year London to Edinburgh and the Avios earned travelling with BA often sways me to booking with them. If they gut the earning rates, I’ll almost certainly fly with easyJet more often. I know my flights are very limited, but I suspect I wouldn’t be alone. From BA’s perspective the £5 of Avios currently awarded is more than offset by the fare.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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