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BIG NEWS: British Airways is changing your tier point collection year

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From 2025, British Airways is changing your Executive Club membership year. It will be aligning tier point collection years for all members to start on 1st April.

The official British Airways page announcing the changes is here.

British Airways has updated its Q&A during Tuesday to reflect issues which we raised earlier in the day, and we now have a little more clarity.

British Airways changes your tier point collection year

The biggest winners are families where everyone has a different tier point year end. You can currently have a situation where each family member takes exactly the same flights but some gain status whilst others don’t. This problem will go away.

The biggest long-term downside is that the ‘grace period’ is cut from 7 weeks to 4 weeks. At present, your year ends on the 8th of the month but you retain your old status until the end of the FOLLOWING month. Going forward, all membership years will end on 31st March and all tier statuses will adjust on 30th April.

Why is British Airways doing this?

The official reason is ‘simplicity’.

You can’t argue with that. The current trial of awarding tier points for British Airways American Express spend, for example, is not working as well as it should because of different membership year end dates.

The real reason is probably to align the BA system with Iberia, which already uses April to March membership years, in advance of a joint change to the BA / Iberia tier point system at some future date. This seems likely to involve some sort of revenue or credit card spend metric, given how the world is moving.

How BA tier point collection years currently work

At the moment, your tier point collection year is based on the anniversary of the date you joined British Airways Executive Club. Your tier points would reset on the 8th day of your anniversary month.

For example, if you joined in March, your membership year would reset on 8th April. If you joined in November, it would be 8th December.

This meant that the entire cohort of British Airways Executive Club members is spread across twelve possible membership year end dates.

(This isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Whilst frustrating for families, it avoids any spike in call centre activity or tier point runs which will occur when everyone has the same date.)

British Airways changes your tier point collection year

How tier point collection years will work going forward

From 2025, British Airways is aligning tier point collection years for all members.

That means that instead of twelve possible combinations, everyone’s tier points will reset on the same date.

British Airways has chosen to follow the UK fiscal year, starting on 1st April and ending on 31st March.

That means you’ll need to earn enough tier points to qualify for Bronze, Silver or Gold status within this period.

The change will occur on 1st April 2025.

I’m not sure that 1st April is, logically, the best option because of how Easter moves from year to year and this tends to be a period with reduced corporate travel. In some years it will make it harder to push through additional flights in the weeks leading to 31st March. It will also impact leisure travellers who use long-haul cash flights over Easter to drive their tier points.

What this means for you

Depending on your current membership year, this change will affect you differently. For that reason, we have put together a separate article outlining how the transition from now until 1st April 2025 will be handled, which you can read here.

However, the bottom line is:

– If your membership year ends before the new rules kick in (1st April 2025), this year will be as normal
– Your next membership year will end 31 March 2025 regardless of how short this will be
– To make up for it, BA will re-credit any tier points earned in your old membership year from 1st April 2024 to your new partial membership year

Everyone’s tier point balances will reset on 1st April 2025, which will become the first full year under the new, aligned system.

What about your existing status?

Here is what British Airways says:

British Airways changes your tier point collection year

“No, there will be no change to:

  • Your current Tier status
  • The benefits you receive according to your Tier status
  • The way you can renew or upgrade your status during your Tier Point collection period ending on or before 8 March 2025

Any Tier status earned in your next Tier Point collection period ending on 31 March 2025 will be valid until 30 April 2026.”

BA has now updated the FAQ following our queries to add:

Any existing status valid beyond 31 March 2025 will continue for the full duration.

These means, for example, that if you have already earned Gold status in your current membership year, which ends 8th October 2024, your status will remain valid until 30th November 2025. It will not be shortened to end on 30th April 2025.

However, your ‘soft landing’ period will be reduced. In the example above, even though British Airways is allowing you to keep your Gold status until 30th November 2025, your soft landing to Silver – assuming you don’t requalify – will only last until 30th April 2026 and not 31st November 2026.

Conclusion

The changes BA is making to the Executive Club mean it make it simpler to understand. Rather than twelve different possible membership years, based on your anniversary of joining, everyone’s years will start and end on the same day.

(Of course, this also means that a lot of people will be doing tier point runs at the same time. I suspect flights to Sofia in Club Europe will be fully booked for all of March 2025, as this route earns 160 tier points return for around £200 in a sale.)

The change will also align BAEC with Iberia Plus, and should also simplify the IT backend required to make it all work if the programmes are moved to the same platform.

The good news is that BA is implementing a year-long transition period. This is a fair way of moving to the new system and allows everyone to earn status under both the new and existing system.

You can read more on the British Airways website here.


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

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Comments (358)

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

  • Rob S says:

    Thanks for the update. Very cheeky question – for the window where we would collect double Tier Points for the old system and the new, would that also cumulate double for lifetime tier points ? Asking for a lifer-gold seeker.

    Thanks
    Rob

    • Rhys says:

      No – if you read the FAQ it states tier points won’t be counted twice for lifetime status.

  • BJ says:

    In the good old days I would not disagree … today it frequently amounts to slow fast track, overcrowded lounges,, shambolic boarding, an 18×30 shorthaul seat half way down the plane, pre-selecting a suite that is marginally better than most of the others, bonus avios in a new earning structure that might cause clinical depression … all at a real cost that might blow our minds and leave airlines, their strategic and loyalty alliances, and now increasingly common currencies laughing all the way to the bank at our expense and discomfort.

    • BJ says:

      Sigh, that was supposed to be @Stu_N 15:14.

      • Stu_N says:

        I see what you’re saying – but if you can secure status by diverting spend you’d make anyway and fiddling with plans a bit here and bit there, it can still work out for time and effort that is commensurate with the benefits.

  • Cranzle says:

    Can anyone point out which part(s) of this article have been updated?

  • Andy says:

    Rob, Rhys

    Is it a definite that the (max) 200 tier points from the Amex spend offer will be counted as those earnt through flights? Having an existing year-end of 8th May (and already renewed status) it was going to be a tricky task to time all my spending between 8th and 20th May ( when offers ends). Now with the transition period, I can trigger all spend between 1st April and 20th May I believe, and it will count towards my next year( realising I still need the 4 flight requirement)

  • babyg_wc says:

    Not sure i agree with “The biggest winners are families where everyone has a different tier point year end”. It has been advantageous to have BAEC year ends offset in our family. My daughters BAEC date is 6months out from mine…. this give us two the most coverage should one of of statuses expire, it also helped us in the covid tier extension lottery… but i can see why BA would do this…

  • Boris Johnson says:

    It’s explained in a confusing way by BA. What I think they should do:

    – extend membership year until 31st March for anyone who has a membership year running from Jan/Feb etc for example.
    – for those who have a short collection year, work out a formula to apportion or carry TPs in to the new 1st April membership year so they don’t lose out.

    If that’s what BA are actually doing, then great, but whatever the weather the communication could have been clearer.

    If this statement from HFP is correct:

    “Any status earned between 1st April 2024 and 31st March 2025 will be valid until 30th April 2026, regardless of your membership year anniversary.”

    …then presumably those of us with say a Feb membership year will get a little extra to qualify, but what isn’t clear to me is whether March 2024 TPs will count in the case of a Feb 9th 2024 membership year.

    However, the statements below confuse me. Is it 9th Feb 2025 in the 2nd line? Or 9th Feb 2024? Presumably 2025, meaning February folk get an extra couple of months. But then they further confuse that by talking about 1st April 2024 to 8th February 2025. It can’t be that complicated!

    “Ending in February
    Your Tier Point Collection Year will renew on 9 February 2024 and continue as normal until 8 February 2025
    The following collection period will be 9 February – 31 March 2025
    Tier Point Adjustment: we’ll add on any Tier Points you earn during 1 April 2024 – 8 February 2025 to work out your Tier status
    Any Tier status you receive during the transition period will expire on 30 April 2026”

  • SG says:

    I really do wonder about BA’s strategy with customer loyalty. Every change they make seems poorly thought through and alienates scores of their most valuable customers. The approach here creates obvious unfairness for some randomly based on when their tier year runs from. I’m not personally affected but it annoys me that it’s so random. With Qatar and Finnair recently adopting Avios as their currency, you’d think BA would be more conscious of the need to keep status holders happy. If they move to revenue based tier earning, I wouldn’t hesitate to switch to one of the others.

    • Magic Mike says:

      It would be an interesting HfP article to compare status earning across the different Avios carriers…

  • Lula says:

    So my year ends 8 June. I requalified for gold, but because the year doesn’t tick over until near the individual year end, my account still shows my status as expiring on 31 July. I know that’s not correct, but the system apparently doesn’t.

    Do I just need to wait and see what happens?

    • Stu_N says:

      This has always been how it has worked if you requalify for your current status. It will show expiry on 31-7-2024 until you get to your year end then your expiry will tick over to 31-7-2025 at some point in June 2024.

      • Lula says:

        Yes, that’s exactly what I’m thinking about. Because by the time June 2024 comes, won’t expiry be the end of March? Or am I misunderstanding this whole thing? I found the explanation very confusing, tbh, so it may well be my misunderstanding!

        • Stu_N says:

          To be clear that’s how it works absent the changes.

          Post-changes, I am still confused too. A clear worked example and definition of “transition period” in the month-by-month examples on the BA FAQ would help enormously.

    • Rhys says:

      You should be ok, based on the updated wording on the site.

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

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