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Whoa: £1200 surcharges now showing on BA and Virgin Atlantic redemption flights

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Both British Airways and Virgin Atlantic have sharply increased surcharges on redemption tickets.

This definitely covers routes to North America – I’m not totally sure about the impact elsewhere due to a lack of historic data.

Avios flyers have some protection because of Reward Flight Saver which caps your fees, but you will take a big hit if you use Avios to upgrade to Business Class.

What’s happened with Virgin Atlantic surcharges?

Let’s take a look at what you pay, starting with Virgin Atlantic.

Here’s an Upper Class return to New York:

BA and Virgin sharply increase surcharges on redemption flights

£900 of ‘carrier imposed surcharges’ (which is pocketed by the airline) is pretty crazy, however you cut it. This is a £200 increase on what you would have paid last week.

Premium is ‘just’ £280 of ‘carrier imposed surcharge’ return:

BA and Virgin sharply increase surcharges on redemption flights

What’s happened with Avios surcharges?

Let’s go across to Avios.

Here’s a Club Suite return from Heathrow to New York JFK off-peak. The price is unchanged at 160,000 Avios + £350 because of the Reward Flight Saver cap:

However, if you look at upgrading a World Traveller Plus flight to Club World, you see the full force of the £900 ‘carrier imposed surcharge’.

Here’s a World Traveller Plus cash ticket to New York which is £999 return:

Let’s try upgrading this ticket to Club World with Avios during the booking process. You may, naively, believe that the price would be 48,000 Avios + the World Traveller Plus cash price of £998.59. You would be wrong.

Here’s exactly the same flight but using the ‘upgrade with Avios during booking’ option. The cash element shoots up to £1,619. The difference of £620 is because the ‘carrier imposed surcharge’ has jumped from £280 (World Traveller Plus) to £900 (Club World).

However …. want to see something weird?

BA has NOT increased the surcharge on First Class tickets, which is ‘only’ £550 return:

First Class – which is not part of Reward Flight Saver, remember – now has total taxes and charges of £849 between Heathrow and New York. Compare this to the £1,199 of taxes and charges you have to pay on a Club World seat when upgrading from World Traveller Plus.

Conclusion

It’s not a coincidence that BA and Virgin Atlantic keep their surcharges in step. This is always the case.

I don’t know who moved first here. The Virgin Atlantic increase happened in the last 48 hours but I don’t know when BA went to £900. If it was British Airways moving first, and Virgin Atlantic automatically followed, then Virgin Atlantic has been caught out.

Ever since BA moved to Reward Flight Saver for long haul redemptions, the carrier surcharge doesn’t have an impact on what you pay. The surcharge only kicks in for anyone upgrading with Avios or who doesn’t qualify for Reward Flight Saver – which isn’t many people.

For Virgin Atlantic, an increase in surcharges makes a difference to everyone who redeems.

£1,196 return for Upper Class is just silly. Pre-covid, BA Holidays would regularly offer Club World flights to New York, plus 3-4 nights in a hotel, for £1,299 per person all-in. Even in recent sales we have seen cash tickets to New York in Business Class drop back to the £1,500 mark.

We have, of course, seen Virgin Atlantic offer a lot of reward seat sales in recent months. There was one just last week. However, even with a 50% reduction in miles, you’d still be looking at around 50,000 Virgin Points plus £1,200 in taxes and charges for a return flight to New York. This isn’t much of a deal.

At the full price of 95,000 Virgin Points plus £1,200 of taxes and charges, you seriously have to consider what value you are getting out of Virgin Flying Club if your goal is premium cabin redemptions.

What is crazy is that you can still redeem Virgin Points for one way Delta flights in Business Class from the USA to mainland Europe for just £5 in taxes and charges.


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 (231)

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

  • sam says:

    Changes like this make me want to stop collecting air miles completely and move toward only redeeming at hotel stays

  • Colin MacKinnon says:

    Never really been fond of Virgin after they showed A Chorus Line on one of their early flights as the in-flight movie – the days when it was on a drop-down screen and you had no choice!

    So I wasn’t sad to transfer out to Hilton during Covid. And I am now focussing solely on BA (or should that be Iberia from Madrid with Easyjet from Edinburgh) and Qatar, again ex-Edinburgh, heading East.

  • Noggins says:

    It gave me the final nudge today to cancel my reward+ account. I tried to apply for a free card (which I used to have but apparently cancelled – more than 6 months ago) but the system just sends me round in repeating circles. I have about 250k virgin miles. Now, about that transfer out idea……..I may have to look into that!

  • KEVIN says:

    BA Miles becoming worthless and for people living in the North, transitting via Heathrow or Gatwick, is not a pleasant experience. I’m moving my travel to LH/Swiss now, or Emirates if going to Dubai.

    • Robert says:

      Kevin, totally agree. I said something similar 3 weeks ago on here as I had to let 2 2-4-1 vouchers go to waste for lack of options and some southern folks didn’t seem to geddit. BA so called “loyalty” schemes are a waste of time if you live away from LHR or LGW since they withdrew all intercontinental flights from MAN.

  • Peter says:

    Reading the thread here, I can see that Barclaycard vouchers are not impacted by this new ‘hit’. The rationale is they are not redemption. Can Rob just show an example of why there is no impact… or maybe doing that would persuade BA to change another set of rules

    • Rob says:

      Because it’s not an upgrade voucher. It’s a ‘book a redemption flight and pay the Avios of the next lowest cabin’ voucher, so it prices like a normal redemption just with fewer Avios.

      • Peter says:

        Does this mean the BA upgrade voucher for 2500 tier points becomes less attractive now?

  • J says:

    It seems VS have dropped their YQ back down to £700 again now?

    • Adam says:

      All those busily cancelling their credit cards, never flying VS again, taking the time to tell us knew this was coming for 30 years etc etc maybe should have taken a deep breath for a few days.. 🫣

    • Rob says:

      Wow.

      They did this a few year ago – put it up and then reversed after massive pushback.

      • memesweeper says:

        I’m willing to bet their policy is just “follow BA”, so the policy was followed. Now some good sense has been applied.

      • memesweeper says:

        Virgin, Next month, Upper return, cash Lon — NYC YQ £900.00
        BA, Next month, Club return, cash Lon — NYC YQ £900.00
        (figures from Matrix)
        … I suspect they are just copying BA still.

  • Mikeact says:

    You do realise Rob, that your readership is going to drop significantly, with numerous numbers calling it a day, with BA and Virgin. Coupled with the ‘never again BA’ lot after lockdown. Suits me…if that means I can get the seats I want, but then again, I’m still up against millions not on here.

  • Harold says:

    Wow what an interesting article this was and the response has been rather more explosive than most could’ve imagined. I wonder whether HeadforPoints could do a deep dive investigation into this in several parts, if resources allow. Perhaps a comparison of the same route across different airlines, factoring in points and surcharges. I believe HfP has done that before on a small scale. That would finally cut through the focus on points, when secretly we’re all being skewered with these surcharges.

    Airlines should be posting these surcharge figures NEXT TO the required miles shown in the tables. If this was a product being sold, surely trading standards would be all over this.

    What’s the point of getting the best credit card to earn the most miles, calculating the best value redemption per mile etc, when the airline just whacks a ridiculous fee on the end, depending on their mood on the day?

    • newbz says:

      A meaningful comparison is difficult, each program has its sweetspots etc. US airlines have don’t have surcharges on TATL routes but often require significantly more miles, but since they’re more or less dynamic, the amounts can vary vastly. Then also, not all J products are created the same – BA CS is superior to UA Polaris or VS (especially the old product – and try to price in the unpredictability of VS’s aircraft roulette). And then the lounge offering, JFK vs EWR preferences…

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

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