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My review of Etihad’s A380 First Class Apartment – the best First Class product in the sky

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This article is my review of the First Class Apartment on the Etihad A380, flying from London Heathrow to Abu Dhabi.  This is a totally different product to the standard First Class Suite on the Etihad Boeing 777 aircraft which I reviewed earlier in the year.

This was part of my recent Middle East trip, which started with a visit to the Plaza Premium Lounge in Terminal 4 and a (not reviewed) revisit to the Etihad lounge.

I struggled to choose between the First Class Suite on the 777 and the Business Class Studio on the A380.  The First Class Suite is basically a standard sized First Class seat which just happens to have a door, which I never closed.  The A380 First Class Apartment is something entirely different.

Etihad has a special part of its website devoted to the A380 First Class Apartment.

When you enter the plane and turn left, this is what you see.  First Class is situated in the nose on the top deck.

Etihad A380 First Class Apartment seat review

You need to remember that this is a one-aisle cabin.  On an A380.  Which is a very wide plane.

There are nine First Class Apartments, four on the left and five on the right.  The ‘Residence’, the small private apartment, is at the front on the left.  There are two toilets, one of which includes a shower, on the right.

The genius of The Residence is that it uses dead space – it occupies the area of one First Class Apartment plus the space where Emirates and most other airlines have additional toilets.  Whilst Etihad admits that it only sells it occasionally, it isn’t costing them any revenue when it is empty and the PR ‘halo’ is of course fantastic.  You can see my photos from a mock-up of The Residence in this article.

Etihad A380 First Class Apartment seat review

When I walked into the suite, I genuinely went ‘wow’ in my head (the words may even have have popped out!).   In terms of, well, ‘wow factor’ this is is.  There is no other First Class product that comes close, the nearest is probably the the Singapore Airlines First Class Suite which I reviewed here.

Etihad A380 First Class Apartment seat review

We are talking about a suite which could easily seat six people.  Easily.  OK, it would be a bit like sitting on the back row of the bus, but you get the point!

Before you get any ideas, maximum legal occupancy is three because there are only three seatbelts.  Etihad does not allow guests from other cabins to visit.

It even had its own make-up mirror:

Etihad A380 First Class Apartment seat review

The washbag you see in that photo is empty.  Interestingly, Etihad has decided not to win you over with luxury branded toiletries – Qatar, as you will see in a few days, gave me a bag of Armani products whilst Singapore Airlines has a deal with Ferragamo.

You can just see in the picture that there are some small-brand toiletry items in the sides of the mirror – you are meant to fill your bag with any that you want.  I ended up leaving the bag behind and just taking a toothbrush and toothpaste.  I was also given a sleep suit, even though it was a day flight, which I used as pyjamas in the hotel!

The only other facility inside the Apartment, apart from the large TV, is a small soft mini-bar:

Etihad A380 First Class Apartment seat review

The names of the senior crew members were shown on the TV which I thought was a nice touch:

Etihad A380 First Class Apartment seat review

Obviously this is a stunning space to have to yourself for seven hours and only a curmudgeon would find something to complain about.  So I will, just to prove that nothing is ever ‘perfect’.

The base of the seat slopes backwards.  You can see this clearly in the 2nd photograph.  This had unfortunate repercussions – when I sat down, all of my coins and my house key shot out of my trouser pocket and slid down a gap between the back of the seat and the cushion.  There is no access to this area for the crew.  We thought that I would have to wait in Abu Dhabi for a maintenance team to take the seat apart but we managed to reach through the mechanical parts of the seat and find the key.  The money had rolled away but losing the key would have been a nightmare.

Because of the gap between the seat and the sofa / bed, it is difficult to get comfy.  Putting your feet on the sofa / bed is tricky because it is a long way away!

The apartments have different layouts to maximise use of space.  In mine, as you can see in the picture, I had no view of the window when seated.  I was facing forwards.  The row behind me faced backwards but the seat was next to the window.  The row behind that had both a seat by the window and faced forward.  I moved to that row after take off.

The light level is very, very low indeed.  With a 2pm departure, it was dark outside within an hour of take-off.  To all intents and purposes, this is a night flight in Winter!  Even with the very few apartment lights all turned on, I was struggling to read.  On long haul flights, reading is what I tend to do.  As usual, I ignored the onboard wi-fi and I ignored the in-flight entertainment and worked my way through a week or so of books and magazines that had built up at home.

If you want to sleep, the sofa turns into a separate bed.  The reason this is a different colour to the photos above is that I had changed seats by this point due to the lack of light in my original apartment:

Etihad A380 First Class Apartment seat review

Don’t take my complaints above too seriously.  This is a stunning space – I felt a bit sad that I was on my own, to be honest.  It is almost embarrassing to compare it to the standard British Airways First Class seat.

Since the Etihad devaluation, this has become a more expensive miles redemption via Etihad Guest.  When I booked it was 55,000 miles one-way from London to Abu Dhabi, which included chauffeur transfers at each end.  It will now cost you almost 88,000 miles each way plus the new fuel surcharge.  This is still astounding value compared to using 80,000 Avios for British Airways First Class one way, with no chauffeur service.

A better deal, as long as you book before the March 2016 devaluation, is using American Airlines miles.  You only need 40,000 AA miles to book the First Class Apartment from London to Abu Dhabi one way.  You don’t even pay the fuel surcharge when using AA miles and availability is identical to booking via Etihad Guest. You could buy the AA miles you need for a modest sum via their current promotion.

Click here for Part 2 of my review of the Etihad A380 First Class Apartment with a look at the food and drink on board.


How to earn Etihad Guest miles from UK credit cards

How to earn Etihad Guest miles from UK credit cards (December 2021)

Etihad Guest does not have a UK credit card.  However, you can earn Etihad Guest miles by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cardsThese are:

Membership Rewards points convert at 1:1 into Etihad Guest miles which is an attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 1 Etihad Guest mile. The Gold card earns double points (2 per £1) on all flights you charge to it.

Etihad Guest is also a partner with the HSBC Premier Mastercard (0.5 miles per £1 spent) and HSBC Premier World Elite Mastercard (1 mile per £1 spent).

Comments (87)

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

  • Andrew H says:

    Off topic – I have just received my 250 Aer Club avios bonus in avios.com!

  • Stuart says:

    Massively OT but if anyone has been having problems with Award Wallet and Tesco it appears they have updated the login info to also ask for your clubcard no. You need to add this to enable login

  • James67 says:

    Looks fab, but I still would not detour via LHR to fly it when I can go direct from EDI. However, I hope they will deploy aa a380 to one or more of my Asian destinations once they receive further deliveries.

    • Rob says:

      You know what …. I would do. Because you can. The 2pm A380 works fine for an EDI connection too!

      • James67 says:

        The only flight I’m in the market for at the moment is BKK-EDI in October as I’m already fixed until then. So, I would need the flight in reverse. Also, would need to commit to it as my only way of funding it would be via purchase of AA miles now. Interestingly though the price at first glance does not look that much greater than my equivalent cost of CW with avios and this makes CW look like economy if we are honest.

      • Paul says:

        Doesn’t that screw you a bit for lounges? No lounge in EDI. And return, no lounge in LHR?

        • James67 says:

          EY use No1 lounge in Edinburgh but usually I clear security about 30 minutes before departure anyway. In LHR if I recall there’s now (orgoinb to be) a plaza premium arrivals lounge landside at T4, not that that helps much, and the new lounges at T5.

  • Alex says:

    An amazing review of an amazing product, thanks.

    PS Why on Earth would people put change and keys into their trousers pocket instead of safely storing them in their wallet or bag? (Also useful to speed up security screening at the airport for yourself and those behind you!). But it’s a separate question…

    • Brian says:

      Um, some wallets don’t have a coins compartment…And most men don’t carry bags with them, generally, so it’s a habit to keep them in your trouser pocket, even if you are flying.

    • Rob says:

      I have one key. That’s it. No key ring, just a key. Sits fine in my trousers!

  • VP says:

    Hi..I have read on this blog that Etihad keep swapping around their planes.. out of the 3 flights per day from LHR..is there any particular one which has maximum chances of being an A380? Is this temporary? i.e has Etihad announced when they would be shifting back to an all A380 service from LHR? The product looks great and would definitely like to try it in 2016 as I have enough AA miles for a one way but I would be gutted if I don’t get an A380 !!

    • Rob says:

      My flight was swapped. I was on the A380 at 9am on a Tuesday. This got swapped about 6 weeks before the flight, but luckily there was still a reward seat on the A380 at 2pm on Wednesday. (Even luckier, Qatar had a reward seat on Friday left too so I could push back my return by a day.)

      Even though I am Etihad Gold, they would not move me to the A380 on the Tuesday because there were no reward seats showing.

      There is nothing you can do about this unfortunately. I used to think that Qatar was terrible at this (and they still are) but Etihad was more reliable – that is no longer true.

      (After I’d booked my Doha to Paris A380 flight, Qatar announced that they were pulling the A380 from one of the two daily Paris flights. Luckily, it wasn’t the one I was on.)

      • VP says:

        Ok thanks. So looks like a game of ‘A380 roulette’!! So I guess I will be booking, praying and following up on the flight app you mentioned to manage my expectations in case of a plane change !!

      • Matthew says:

        So was mine, I must have got lucky as I had no status and they ‘opened’ up a seat for me on a flight that had all 9 F apartments takes (inc me). It was pretty busy!

  • Greg says:

    One day. One day !!!!!

  • magicgumdrop says:

    “Etihad has decided not to win you over with luxury branded toiletries…”

    I had two (highly enjoyable!) flights in the apartments in August, and then they were using Le Labo toiletries. Have they gone white-label since then?

    • Rob says:

      The (very small) lip balm and moisturiser were branded – just not with a name I recognised. It may well have been a well regarded niche brand, like REN, but it was not something I had seen before in any shop, hotel or airline bag.

      Qatar and Singapore like to ‘make a point’ by giving you big bottles of super-branded stuff. The 30ml bottle of Armani EDT will last about 3 months and, of course, whenever you use it you remember where it came from. Even the Armani shower gel Qatar gave me was pretty big – it is still going strong in our house two weeks on!

  • kevino says:

    Sorry to ask the childlike question, but what steps do you have to go through to book this using AA miles but from LHR?

    What if I then want to go on to Australia, or even New Zealand?

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