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Virgin’s credit card 2-4-1 and upgrade vouchers work on CASH tickets – no points needed

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A lot of people don’t understand how the annual Virgin Atlantic credit card vouchers work.

In August 2020, missed by many during covid, Virgin Flying Club made substantial changes to the annual vouchers given out to holders of the Virgin Atlantic Reward and Reward+ credit cards.

One key impact, which many people don’t realise, is that you no longer need to have any Virgin Points – null, zero, none at all – to get value from the annual credit card voucher.

Virgin Atlantic Rewards credit card voucher

Virgin Atlantic has removed the distinction between cash and points flights. You can now use your annual credit card voucher to upgrade, or get a 2-4-1 deal, on a cash flight if you wish.

Because this is a frequent flyer site, we tend to look at how to use the credit card voucher on a Virgin Points booking. However …..

The Virgin Atlantic credit card vouchers are great for people who DON’T collect frequent flyer miles

Someone who has zero interest in air miles, and no air miles balances, can get a lot of value from the Virgin Atlantic credit cards.

This is actually a UK ‘first’. These is no other payment card in the UK which offers genuine benefits to people who pay cash for their flights.

As a reminder, you receive a voucher:

How does the Virgin Atlantic credit card voucher work on cash tickets?

When you receive your voucher, someone with no Virgin Points and no Virgin Flying Club elite status has three options:

  • buy an Economy Classic or Economy Delight ticket on Virgin Atlantic for cash, and get an upgrade to Premium
  • buy a Premium ticket on Virgin Atlantic for cash, and get an upgrade to Upper Class
  • buy an Economy Classic, Economy Delight or Premium ticket on Virgin Atlantic for cash and get a 2nd ticket in the same cabin for free (well, £0 base fare, taxes must be paid)

Here’s the small print:

  • the upgrade or 2-4-1 seat comes from Virgin Flying Club reward inventory. If there is not a reward seat available, you cannot complete the transaction.
  • on upgrades, additional taxes and charges may be due depending on what you paid in taxes and charges on your original ticket
  • on 2-4-1 tickets, taxes and charges are due on the second ticket
Voucher on the Virgin Atlantic Rewards Plus Credit Card

The voucher also works on points tickets too, of course

Whilst I don’t want to confuse this article by covering how the voucher can be used with Virgin Points you can use it – BA-style – to get a 2-4-1 or an upgrade on a miles ticket.

Our full review of the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card covers this in detail.

There is potentially a LOT of value here

Credit card rewards, outside the travel sector, have been on a downward trend for some time. You will struggle to find a Visa or Mastercard offering a better return than 0.25% these days. Some cards, such as the Sainsbury’s Nectar card, only return 0.1%.

The Virgin Atlantic vouchers are massively more valuable than 0.25% cashback

It is clearly difficult to put a value on an upgrade or a 2-4-1 ticket, but let’s look at a typical example:

Heathrow to New York, upgrading a Premium ticket to Upper Class, weekend of 20th – 22nd October

  • Cost of Premium cash ticket: £954 return (£651 base fare + £302 taxes and charges)
  • Cost to upgrade to Upper Class using your credit card voucher: £688 (difference in taxes and charges between the two classes)
  • Cost if you had paid cash for Upper Class: £2,784
  • Cost you have actually paid for Upper Class using your credit card voucher: £1,642 (£954 + £688)

You have saved £1,142 by using your credit card voucher, instead of buying an Upper Class cash ticket.

Heathrow to New York, getting a 2-4-1 cash ticket in Premium, weekend of 20th – 22nd October

  • Cost of 1 x Premium cash ticket: £954 return (£651 base fare + £302 taxes and charges)
  • Taxes and charges to pay when getting a 2nd ticket using your credit card voucher: £302
  • Cost if you had paid cash for 2 x Premium tickets: £1,908
  • Cost you have actually paid for 2 x Premium tickets using your credit card voucher: £1,256 (£954 + £302)

You have saved £652 by using your credit card voucher, instead of buying a 2nd Premium cash ticket.

Economy isn’t such a good deal because taxes and charges make up a large proportion of the cash price – but when cash prices are very high, as they are now …..:

Heathrow to New York, getting a 2-4-1 cash ticket in Economy Classic, weekend of 20th – 22nd October

  • Cost of 1 x Economy Classic cash ticket: £634 return (£436 base fare + £198 taxes and charges)
  • Taxes and charges to pay when getting a 2nd ticket using your credit card voucher: £198
  • Cost if you had paid cash for 2 x Economy Classic tickets: £1,268
  • Cost you have actually paid for 2 x Economy Classic tickets using your credit card voucher: £832 (£634 + £198)

You have saved £436 by using your credit card voucher, instead of buying a 2nd Economy Classic cash ticket.

Using Virgin Atlantic credit card vouchers

Very quietly, Virgin Atlantic has created a product which a large number of people would be interested in.

Even in a scenario where you only save £250 by using your voucher for a 2-4-1 voucher or upgrade, you are still getting a strong return on the spending required to earn the voucher. No other Visa or Mastercard benefit which doesn’t involve collecting points comes anywhere near.

Unfortunately, it’s hard for Virgin Atlantic to capitalise on this

There is huge potential for a credit card like this outside of frequent flyer circles. In truth, however, Virgin Atlantic finds itself with a problem. The vouchers on the credit cards are too complicated to ‘sell’ to the general public in their current form.

The cards are too focussed on the benefits of earning and using Virgin Points, even though you don’t need any points, at all, to make a big saving with the new voucher.

Another problem is the need for reward inventory to upgrade or do a ‘2-4-1’ on a CASH ticket. This is too complex a concept to explain to the general public.

Perhaps Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Money should launch another credit card aimed at the general public, including the Virgin Red customer base?

It could strip away all mention of points, and potentially not even earn them. The only benefit would be the 2-4-1 voucher or upgrade voucher for a CASH flight, not a redemption. It would trigger at a lower level than the current voucher – let’s say £7,500 of annual spending. A simple online chart could show dates where the voucher could be used, a bit like a SeatSpy date summary display.

This is an easy message to sell to the general public, and in a market of faltering credit card rewards could prove popular.

Conclusion

Even though you are a Head for Points reader, there is a decent chance that you don’t have many, or any, Virgin Points.

It doesn’t matter. As I hope I’ve shown here, you can still get good value from the annual credit card voucher by using it to upgrade or get a 2-4-1 on a Virgin Atlantic cash flight.

You can find out more about, or apply for, either of the Virgin Atlantic credit cards here.

A fairly long PS ….

In the article above I say that you cannot use your credit card voucher for a 2-4-1 transaction in Upper Class if you have no Virgin Points. This is correct. However, you can use a 2-4-1 voucher in Upper Class, either on a cash or points ticket, in two scenarios:

  • you have Silver or Gold status in Virgin Flying Club, or
  • you have no status in Virgin Flying Club and pay 50% of the Virgin Points required for the second Upper Class seat, effectively making your 2-4-1 voucher into a 2-4-1.5 voucher

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (April 2025)

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

You can choose from two official Virgin Atlantic credit cards (apply here, the Reward+ card has a bonus of 18,000 Virgin Points and the free card has a bonus of 3,000 Virgin Points):

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

18,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

3,000 bonus points, no fee and 1 point for every £1 you spend Read our full review

You can also earn Virgin Points from various American Express cards – and these have sign-up bonuses too.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for a year and comes with 20,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 20,000 Virgin Points.

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 comes with 50,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 50,000 Virgin Points.

The Platinum Card from American Express

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

Small business owners should consider the two American Express Business cards. Points convert at 1:1 into Virgin Points.

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 Virgin Points

Comments (50)

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

  • AJA says:

    This ability to use the voucher on cash tickets is clever. The downside is that it still needs reward seat availability. The even bigger elephant in the room is the shortage of non-US destinations that these vouchers can be used on.

    Unfortunately the USA, currently, is incredibly expensive, not just to get to, but also to stay and eat out costs silly money. And are not helped by the GBP/USD FX rate.

    • EdForPoints says:

      I see people saying this a lot, and I agree the US is a very expensive destination now – certainly too expensive for me!

      But I wonder if the framing is wrong. Is the US more expensive or is the average UK tourist just poorer? Probably elements of both, but with the latter paying a greater part than most Brits are willing to countenance.

      • Rob says:

        It’s the weak £. Sterling was $1.65 for the majority of the last 20 years.

        • DonLee says:

          I think the margin of salary between US and UK is another factor. 210k $ vs 80k £ for same position where I work

        • Andrew says:

          Strong dollar rather than weak pound surely. Over the last decade the euro’s down by just about exactly the same percentage against the dollar.

          • Mikeact says:

            As someone with property in the Midwest, trust me, it is a whole lot more expensive now than certainly pre pandemic….and not just the exchange rate…lodging, eating out, car rentals together with ‘suspect’ add ons to your final bill…eg Environmental surcharge 5% or Church Restoration Funding 5%..(Next door to the restaurant with the old Church needing some TLC) And then you end up paying taxes on taxes, in places……just be aware, and speak up if in doubt.

      • Tariq says:

        Currency most of the issue IMO. I just came back from NYC and although noticeably more expensive (particular certain things rather than universally), I didn’t find it to be as disproportionate as the level of noise on the subject would portray.

      • Dace says:

        I don’t think it is necessarily being ‘poorer’ the single biggest problem is the f/x rate. That alone accounts for a 25% increase 1.65 v 1.23. The reason for this is principally due to covid as the dollar being the ‘world’s currency’ is less risky. So, with Covid plus the inflation in the western world, it has been much stronger than it has historically been.

        Another problem is the service culture in the US which has got worse as time has gone in. When I first visited the States, tipping was rife but the percentages were still sane and you didn’t feel you were going to be chased if you left a ‘below par tip’. Now it is an absolute minimum 18% and there are all sorts of other charges that have now come about like church levies, resort fees etc.

        For me, the US has become more expensive for everyone, not just UK nationals.

  • Chris W says:

    As you have said, this product is too complicated for most people to understand and therefore bother with compared with BA Amex cards where people see tube adverts and think “that card is enough for a free flight to Rome”

  • Chabuddy Geezy says:

    Are infants 10% of the relevant cash fare on redemption tickets with Virgin?

  • Nigel Thompson says:

    The one issue that puts me off the Virgin voucher scheme is that you can’t find out how your spend for the year is going towards hitting your target £10,000. You only know if and when you hit it. With the BA scheme your statement can always be referred to in order to see your progress.
    Or am I missing something ?

    • Travel Strong says:

      Takes a couple of minutes max to flick through the statements in the app and add them up, then subtract it from £10000.
      I would not let that put me off the benefits of the card, if I was interested in collecting them.

  • paul says:

    Still have to factor in the £160 V+ card fee and spending on the card to qualify for the voucher.

    Same with free V card but higher spend target to get voucher.

    So, either way you naturally end up with points.

    Only way of using the voucher without having points is perhaps to buy a lot of sausage rolls first 🤣

    • Travel Strong says:

      Or a cruise or two?
      Which is the situation I now find myself in – points depleted, and 241 on the way.

    • Rob says:

      You would get some points, of course – but the point of the article is that you don’t need 100k to get a good deal.

  • Melonfarmer says:

    I managed to earn a few of these vouchers (had both cards), but never managed to use them as there was never any premium economy (my preference) availability. Hopefully they’ve changed (or will) the fact that you need to ring up to book the upgrade. Barclaycard voucher is much easier (even with BA’s IT). The VA card sits in the drawer now.

  • Travel Strong says:

    It is interesting how little this option seems to be exercised in practice (using their 241 with a cash ticket). Maybe there is the odd post that I haven’t noticed, but within the HFP forum I do not think I have ever seen anyone talk about actually doing it.

  • Paul says:

    They need to reduce the “taxes” element of the ticket as they’re ludicrous right now.

    Combine that with expensive US – due to weak £ and US inflation (which, despite officially being lower than UK, seems in reality to be a lot higher!) – and the hay days of transatlantic voucher redemptions are over, for now.

    • Tariq says:

      Agreed, think I would be aggrieved at the additional taxes/charges required to use the upgrade to J. Seems like the best value is a short route K flight if you can get the total spend to £1100-1300.

    • Rob says:

      Difficult to claim the taxes are ludicrous when you look at the cash prices in my example.

      Remember too that these are ‘Saturday night away’ leisure prices. Travel out and back midweek and you can double or treble those numbers.

      • Lev441 says:

        Ludicrous compared to BA who at legacy rates of 100k return off peak £850 which is a crazy price in itself…

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

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