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Virgin Flying Club Silver or Gold? You can still gift your annual credit card voucher

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In late 2021, Virgin Atlantic announced a mini-overhaul of Flying Club. Easily missed as it was during the pandemic, it introduced features such as:

There was another change which Virgin Atlantic didn’t bother to mention but just slipped out via their website: Silver and Gold members of Virgin Flying Club can gift their annual vouchers from the Virgin Atlantic credit card.

Transfer Virgin Atlantic credit card voucher

This benefit seems to have survived the recent upheaval at Virgin Flying Club.

As you can see on the Virgin Atlantic website here (scroll down to the tier comparison table), Silver and Gold members have as a benefit:

“Gift companion and upgrade vouchers to your loved ones”

There is literally no more information provided. I am guessing that you need to call Virgin Atlantic and give the agent the account number of the Flying Club member who is to receive your voucher.

How do the Virgin Atlantic credit card vouchers work?

Your annual voucher is triggered IMMEDIATELY upon hitting the spending target.  The target is £20,000 in a card year for the free Virgin Atlantic Reward Credit card and £10,000 in a card year for the £160 Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card.

You can see details of your unused credit card vouchers on the Virgin Atlantic website. You will also see a line on your Flying Club account statement showing ‘Virgin Atlantic Credit Card Voucher – 0 points’ which confirms it has been issued. The voucher can only be redeemed by calling Virgin Atlantic.

Unlike British Airways American Express vouchers, there is no difference between the voucher you receive for spending £20,000 on the free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card and the voucher you receive for spending £10,000 on the £160 Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card.

Both vouchers are valid for two years and both vouchers have the same value.

Transfer Virgin Atlantic credit card voucher

How can you use your annual Virgin Atlantic credit card voucher?

There are two ways of using your voucher:

  • if you bought a ticket, for either cash or Virgin Points, you can use your voucher to pay for a 2nd ticket (same flight, same cabin) for a companion
  • if you are travelling alone, you can use your voucher to upgrade a cash or reward ticket by one class

Your voucher has a fixed value:

  • Flying Club Red members can redeem their voucher up to a maximum of 75,000 Virgin Points
  • Flying Club Silver or Gold members can redeem their voucher up to a maximum of 150,000 Virgin Points

The value of your voucher will be calculated by your status at the time of booking, not when you fly or when you receive the voucher.

No ‘change’ is given if you use your voucher for less than its maximum value.

Let’s talk about ‘dynamic pricing’

In October 2024, Virgin Atlantic opened up ALL seats for points redemption. However, most are priced at stupid levels, eg 700,000 Virgin Points plus £1,000 of taxes and charges for an Upper Class return flight.

The only good value flights are ‘Saver’ flights. These are priced at substantially lower levels and are no more expensive than reward seats were under the old structure. Virgin Atlantic does NOT guarantee to release ‘Saver’ seats on all flights, however, and many leisure routes have virtually no Upper Class availability.

Transfer Virgin Atlantic credit card voucher

You can top up your voucher

You can use your voucher even if it doesn’t cover the full amount of the companion ticket or upgrade, as Virgin Atlantic will let you top it up.

For example, if you book an Upper Class reward ticket to New York for 170,000 Virgin Points for yourself, you could book a second ticket for (170,000 – 75,000) 95,000 Virgin Points if you have no elite status, or (170,000 – 150,000) 20,000 Virgin Points if have have Silver or Gold status.

For a companion ticket, full taxes and charges are payable. For an upgraded ticket, additional taxes and charges may be payable if there is a difference between the cabin you booked and the cabin you are now flying in.

You can’t use your voucher for a totally free ticket for yourself

You cannot use a credit card voucher for a straight 75,000 or 150,000 points discount on a ticket for yourself. If you are travelling alone and only using points, you need to pay the points cost of the cabin below the one you wish to fly in and then use your voucher to cover the difference between the cabins.

For example, let’s assume an Upper Class ticket is 130,000 points and a Premium ticket is 50,000 points. You CANNOT use a 150,000 points voucher to cover the full cost of the Upper Class ticket. You need to spend 50,000 points booking the Premium ticket and then use the voucher to cover the upgrade.

Is transferring vouchers now less useful?

There is, of course, a slight spanner in the works now when it comes to transferring vouchers.

Only a Silver or Gold member of Flying Club can transfer their voucher. As we showed above, the voucher is worth 150,000 Virgin Points to such a person.

However, if you transfer your voucher to a Red member of Flying Club, it is only worth 75,000 Virgin Points. Half of the value is lost.

Conclusion

The ability to transfer your credit card voucher to anyone if you have Virgin Flying Club Silver or Gold status is an interesting perk.

The snag, of course, is that unless you transfer to a fellow Silver or Gold member, it will lose half of its value. You need to think very carefully about whether transferring it is the right thing to do.

Our full review of the free Virgin Atlantic credit card is here (3,000 Virgin Points sign-up bonus). Our review of the fee Virgin Atlantic credit card with 18,000 Virgin Points bonus is here. You can apply for both cards here.


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 (32)

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

  • Prat123 says:

    I think this is a really an amazing perk of VA – one might even say a distinguish factor with BA. I can use my voucher as a companion voucher for both my parents without me traveling with them.

    • Travel Strong says:

      If true, please can you elaborate on how you booked this? From your account using your points and vouchers, or did your parents have to use it with their own points? (are they also silver/gold?)

      Please ignore if the comment is actually from the virgin social media

  • Chris says:

    Anyone have any details on the gifting of clubhouse passes? Sadly can’t see anything official, just a previous HfP article and a FlyerTalk page which links back to a HfP article

    Currently silver, and set to fly premium out of LHR this week, wondering if there’s something I’ve missed that I could take advantage of

  • Keiths says:

    Like Chris, I’m due to fly next month in P/E.
    I recently attained Silver.
    I had no idea that new Silvers get a CH pass.
    Does anyone know where this is shown or how to activate it?

  • Travel Strong says:

    Interesting. Given that I can book for others using my points, the vague wording of the benefit certainly led me to believe I could book for others and use the voucher, if silver/gold.

    Can it really only be ‘transferred’ rather than gifted by means of booking them a flight?

    As you say, it is not that useful to transfer to a red member… And I would probably have to transfer/HHA them the points too!

    I have vouchers building, but using them looks increasingly unlikely.

  • smartboyalec says:

    Got a voucher through the credit card but sadly only a red member on the flying club which limits my ability to maximise the voucher to the way I’d like – any clever solutions to overcome this without having to take 100s of flights to bump from red to silver and so on? Thanks a lot.

    • Rob says:

      No.

      • Froggee says:

        Status match from BA but this only kicks in after you’ve flown the flight you used for the status match

      • Iamsmurphslaw says:

        Given that the colour RED features strongly through Virgin marketing etc etc, you’d think they might want their status RED customers to feel that bit special?
        But no, with everything they now do you’re a third class citizen, unless you’re silver or gold!
        May as well be red or DEAD!

        • smartboyalec says:

          RED does feel a bit poorly – just need to still find a way to make the vouchers work for me. Wife is also Red and has a VA plus card so now thinking if she is better off with another card once the current year finishes.

  • roberto says:

    Virgin has become a non starter for me with its sad demise since pre-covid times. The lack of routes, planes and now the lack of general award availability at “affordable” prices has removed my desire to fly with and collect virgin miles.

    I for one wont be bothering with Virgin once the last of my Miles are burnt next month flying back from Barbados. It was good whilst it lasted but I’m out.

    I am sure I wont be the only one and whist it might not affect their bottom line I cant see it being a positive either. Virgin has had its day – time to curl up and get absorbed in to Delta.

    • MPC says:

      Yup, this would be a great perk if it wasn’t now almost totally useless. I’m trying to work out how to best tactically spend my last 2 vouchers – Not many options, miles or cash.

  • Niki says:

    I have VA Voucher that is valid for another year and unlikely I will use it. Anyone interested?

    • Robert says:

      @Niki yes please (if you definitely won’t be using it) – I replied below instead of replying to your comment

  • chris says:

    The more I look into this I assume the silver clubhouse pass benefit has been removed.

    below the membership benefits section there’s this line
    ^Each invitation can be used for one entry into the Clubhouse. Invitations are valid for 12 months from the date of issue and can only be used when travelling on a Virgin Atlantic or Delta Air Lines flight. Clubhouse Invitations can be used on Virgin Atlantic when travelling on reward seat bookings.

    but there’s no corresponding ^ in the above benefits sections, so assume they’ve removed the benefit and haven’t done a good job clearing up the docs

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

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