Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Exclusive: Tesco Clubcard to Avios November promotion revealed

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Tesco Clubcard vouchers will soon be dropping through letterboxes. The key question is ‘Will Avios be running a conversion bonus this quarter?’

The answer is no, unfortunately.

Instead, there is a competition.

Every day from November 4th to December 4th, there will be a prize draw for everyone who converted that day. Six winners will receive a random prize of between 1,500 and 100,000 Avios.

You receive one entry for every £2.50 you convert.

If you automatically convert your Clubcard points to Avios, you will receive ONE entry every day. Anyone who has a very large amount of points autoconverting will be worse off whilst anyone with a small total will be better off.

This is not desperately exciting stuff, to be honest. There is no word yet on whether Virgin Flying Club will be running a conversion bonus.


How to earn Avios points from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (December 2021)

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

There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways BA Amex American Express card

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up, no annual fee and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending ….. Read our full review

British Airways BA Premium Plus American Express Amex credit card

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the UK’s most valuable credit card perk – the 2-4-1 companion voucher Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points, such as:

Nectar American Express

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & two airport lounge passes Read our full review

American Express Platinum card Amex

The Platinum Card from American Express

30,000 points and an unbeatable set of travel benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Run your own business?

We recommend Capital On Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, along with a sign-up bonus worth 10,500 Avios:

Capital On Tap Business Rewards Visa

The most generous Avios Visa or Mastercard for a limited company Read our full review

You should also consider the British Airways Accelerating Business credit card. This is open to sole traders as well as limited companies and has a 30,000 Avios sign-up bonus:

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express card

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

(Want to earn more Avios?  Click here to visit our home page for our latest articles on earning and spending your Avios points and click here to see how to earn more Avios this month from offers and promotions.)

Comments (90)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • Anon says:

    Hope’s well and truly dashed reading that headline, PAH!

    Some serious traffic generation you’ve created, how about some prefix to the head line
    ” (but its yet another disappointing BA Comp.) ”

    Still I dont feel so bad blowing £60 (14.5k Avios) of Tesco vouchers on a 2x boost deal of £120 towards the new 2nd Gen Moto G.

    To balance my minor moan above, I’m flying to London tomorrow, got redemption stay booked at the Conrad, £34rtn with Virgin +7500miles, so I’ll be thinking on during travels/stay, that’s I’m esp. grateful for Raffles & HFP.

  • Luc Charmasson says:

    Just wondering, why is it too late to switch now to auto convert and get the daily entry?

  • vindaloo says:

    Surely if you’re going to have a go then you should convert all your vouchers early, getting one entry per £2.50, and then enable auto-convert, earning another 30-odd entries at the rate of one per day.

  • RIccati says:

    BA.com shows cheap tickets but adds couple hundred quid after flight selection.

  • idrive says:

    saw that, the problem is that when i click, the fare becomes 364!

    • RIccati says:

      Fares quoted without ‘carrier-imposed surcharges’, which is added to fare, taxes and fees AFTER flight selection. Not a first for BA.com.

      It is ridiculous how far this effort of hiding ticket price into carrier surcharges goes, right on the border of mis-selling. Price shown at flight selection can be considered ‘a published fare’ so the airline has to sell at this price.

      • Vikrant says:

        Oops..sorry for my post then. I just assumed that unlike US prices displayed in UK included all taxes. Next time will confirm it all the way.

        • idrive says:

          to be honest, i thought it was supposed to be in EU too, i don’t recall seeing difference in prices when clicking the fare. not a bad deal but at that price at the moment i am considering some US routes to visit my friends. £172 would have been a click-no-think straight away! but thanks for clarifying the issue!

  • euflyer Tom says:

    It’s poor form (and bordering on misrepresentation) from BA though – on the foot of the page with the 2 x £86 flights it explicitly says:

    ABOUT YOUR FARE
    Taxes, fees and carrier charges for the entire journey are approximately £128.06 – £516.06 per adult and are included in the prices above.

    • Polly says:

      Definitely worth a challenge, anyone willing to take them on then?? And get that bargain flight to DBX!!!!

    • RIccati says:

      The ridiculous part is that BA.com added ‘carrier-imposed surcharge’ where BA is it’s own carrier.

      BA must be able to quote fares on its own flights outright.

  • Brian says:

    A hotel company (possibly IHG, but I’m not sure which one exactly) were recently forced to display all-in prices from the beginning, rather than having a price which seemed very cheap and then adding on taxes to make it less attractive. Don’t see why the same shouldn’t apply to airlines.

  • Brian says:

    If the Clubcard/Avios conversion was devalued, what’s the chances of it happening without giving people at least a reasonable amount of notice?

    I could be wrong but it would be very surprising if it happened practically overnight without giving people the chance to convert before the devaluation occurred?

    I’ve been saving clubcard vouchers up but getting a tad concerned re the devaluation chat.

    What’s the thoughts on this?

    Thanks

    • squills says:

      I’ve been waiting for about 2 years I guess, last thought about it seriously in the summer but there has been a lot of bad news since then. Starting to think that a bird in the hand might be a decent option. I think it went down 800—>600 last time, so wouldn’t surprise me to see either 400 or 500, which would make me pretty unhappy 😉

      • squills says:

        No rush, highly unlikely to happen before Dec 4th I suppose.

        Re: that point about reasonable notice – anybody remember how much notice there was last time?

    • RIccati says:

      It depends on how strongly the boat is rocked. If people who sit on piles of vouchers choose to convert them, Tesco would have to act to stop the outflow of cash.

      Lack of long-haul Avios availability helps because people don’t have that much use for Avios. I guess now is different from when it was 800 Avios for £2.50 and people had more opportunity to book family holidays/four seats in Business, etc.

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