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Virgin Flying Club changes its generous Hertz deal – are you a winner or loser?

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Virgin Flying Club has, for many years, offered a generous sweet spot for people who regularly did short car rentals with Hertz.

You would receive a flat 1,000 Virgin Points per rental. If you had only rented a car for a day or for a weekend, you were doing very nicely.

This has now changed with immediate effect.

Virgin Flying Club changes its generous Hertz deal

As you can see on the Virgin Atlantic website here, the deal with Hertz has moved to the more traditional revenue based route.

You will earn 5 Virgin Points per £1 spent on qualifying rentals.

As a special offer to soften the blow, you will receive 10 Virgin Points per £1 on qualifying rentals until 31st May. You need to book by 29th February to receive this deal.

This deal is only valid in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, UK, USA and Canada. Blackout dates over Easter apply.

The cash discount remains at 10%

There is no change to the Hertz discount you receive for being a Virgin Flying Club member, which remains at 10%.

As part of this special offer, this is increased. Book by 29th February for rentals collected by 31st May and, as well as double points, you will receive a discount of 15%.

Again, this deal is only valid in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, UK, USA and Canada and blackout dates over Easter apply.

What are your options if Virgin Flying Club no longer appeals?

If your Hertz rentals tend to be short and cheap, you may want to reconsider crediting them to Virgin Flying Club.

Earning Avios via Hertz

As Hertz is not a British Airways Avios partner, you have historically had to find an alternative home for the rewards you earn on your Hertz car rentals. The good news is that this is no longer the case.  You can now earn Avios with Hertz rentals by crediting them to Qatar Airways Privilege Club.

This is because Qatar Airways Privilege Club now uses Avios as its currency, and you can transfer the Avios onwards to British Airways Executive Club.

You only earn 500 Avios per Hertz rental, however.

Earning IHG One Rewards points via Hertz

There is a little known partnership between Hertz and IHG One Rewards – the Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, InterContinental etc hotel scheme – which is more generous.

IHG One Rewards offers Diamond Elite members Five Star status with Hertz – click for more details – which is an extra incentive to book.

ALL IHG One Rewards members, irrespective of status level, can earn points when they rent from Hertz.  Full details are on the IHG website here. You earn:

plus

  • an extra 125 IHG One Rewards points per day for non-status members, or
  • an extra 500 IHG One Rewards points per day for status members

This is pretty generous, especially for Silver, Gold, Platinum or Diamond Elite members who are guaranteed at least 2,000 points per rental.

I’m not sure if these points still count towards elite status since the launch of IHG One Rewards.

You must book via this link on this page of the IHG website

You can find out more about the revised Virgin Flying Club / Hertz deal on this page of the Virgin Atlantic website.


How to get FREE car rental status and other benefits via UK credit cards

How to get FREE car rental status and other benefits via UK credit cards (April 2025)

If you hire a car in the UK, you can get special benefits (discounts, upgrades, free additional drivers etc) if you have elite status with a car rental programme. You can get elite status for free via certain American Express cards.

The Platinum Card and American Express Business Platinum

The Platinum Card from American Express and American Express Business Platinum come with two free car hire status cards. Your supplementary Platinum cardholder can also receive status in their own right.

From Avis, you receive President’s Club status in Avis Preferred. This gets you up to 25% off standard rates, a free additional driver and a guaranteed one class upgrade. For weekend rentals you will receive a two class upgrade, subject to availability.

From Hertz, you receive ‘Five Star’ status in Hertz Gold Plus Rewards. This gets you up to 15% off standard rates, a free additional driver and a one class upgrade, subject to availability.

Hertz also offers Platinum cardholders a 4 hour grace period on rentals. Your final day is treated as 28 hours, so a 1pm pick up with a 5pm return the following day is only charged as one day, not two days. We wrote about the Hertz / Platinum 4 hour grace period here.

The Platinum Card also comes with full car hire insurance with no obligation to pay for the rental via American Express. You can refuse any attempts to sell you additional insurance at pick up. This benefit has substantial value if you rent on a regular basis.

You can find more details on the two Platinum cards, and apply, in our full reviews linked below. You can apply here for the personal card and here for the business card.

The Platinum Card from American Express

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

American Express Business Platinum

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

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is an excellent card in its own right. You receive 20,000 Membership Rewards points for signing up (convert to 20,000 Avios amongst other things), four airport lounge passes and £120 of Deliveroo credit. Even better, your first year is free.

There are two car rental benefits:

  • you receive Preferred Plus status in Avis Preferred
  • you receive a special package with Hertz – 10% off best available rates at participating locations, a one class upgrade for rentals of 5 days or more, subject to availability, and no additional driver fees

Find out more about the benefits of American Express Preferred Rewards Gold in our review. You can apply here.

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

Comments (15)

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

  • Mike says:

    The prices are always high though, so why would anyone use it. Like 20-30% minimum more expensive than even virgins own travel plus site.

  • Rich says:

    Virgin and IHG have both had a less than 50% chance of posting for me. And zero success when trying to retroclaim.

    I’ve switched to Hertz Rewards, which always post. Though never tried using them yet…

    • Rob says:

      Virgin works fine for me – retroclaiming if needed.

      Sixt on the other have hides away in the small print that prepaid rates get you nothing.

      • David S says:

        Totally agree re Sixt. I have never ever got any points to post nor any response from their customer services for bookings in 2022 / 2023. Their website seems to be based around not helping you in any way. It’s not as though they give many points out and the value of these probably is way way less than the savings you make by prepaying. On this basis I no longer use Sixt. At least with say Avis, you know what points you will get and that they will post.

        • GUWonder says:

          The only reason I even consider Sixt — in whose program I somehow still have status too — is if someone in my travel parties insist on a sort of flashier kind of car. Sixt in the US too is so very particular about the smallest thing even on run of the mill Audi sedans that I make a habit of video recording the car from bumper to bumper to side to side, from top down and back up and around twice more. Hopefully there ends up being enough light for a proper recording, something I needed more than a couple of times for such things as extremely light scruffs on car rooftop — presumably some kind of tree branches had brushed the car there but not sure as it could have even been from a roof rack — that were on the car and even indicated by me to the rental car agency personnel before driving off the lot. Fortunately I kept time-stopped video recordings of such things when renting from Sixt in particular.

  • Rui N. says:

    Bonus with Hertz is that if you rent in the US you might end up in jail

  • cin3 says:

    It was never a good deal in the first place…

  • AlanC says:

    Will actively avoid Hertz after they expired a good few thousand points during covid.

  • John says:

    Thanks for the timely post!

    Will def make use of this on an upcoming booking. Have a 2-day rental in the US coming up for $120 all-in. 2500 IHG points on that is an amazing return.

    Hertz has somebody forgot to demote me from President’s Circle as well so this should be good.

  • Derek-G says:

    Hertz may work for business expenses, however for social travel their prices are totally out of line with others. I have just booked for eleven days in Vegas with Alamo in a SUV for £387. A test run for the same with Hertz this morning £568.

    • AL says:

      I’ve never rented from Hertz, on business or leisure, for exactly this reason. Their rates are astronomical. There’s some hatred for Sixt above, but they’re my go-to at T5 for domestic rentals because they’re the fastest place to deal with, and usually reasonably priced.

  • GUWonder says:

    A lot of my VS points used to come because of this VS-Hertz arrangement, so I’m going to miss it.

    Thanks for the info about the IHG path. 2000 IHG points per one-day rental — my typical Hertz rental — isn’t as great as the VS miles, but a lot of people are going to have to seek out better options and should consider the IHG one and whatever else is out there.

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

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