Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Why using Virgin Atlantic miles on ANA is the best way to get to Japan (and why we went)

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Regular readers will know from my hotel reviews that I was out in Hong Kong, Japan and China over Easter.  By coincidence, Anika was also in Tokyo for a few days as a guest of Japanese airline ANA / All Nippon Airways.

If you are considering travelling to Japan, the obvious options – especially if you want to earn Avios and British Airways tier points – are British Airways (two flights per day) and Japan Airlines (one flight per day).

There is a third airline flying directly from Heathrow to Tokyo – ANA.  ANA runs a daily service, departing at 7pm.   It flies to Tokyo Haneda, which is substantially more convenient than Tokyo Narita, used for one of the BA services.

ANA

ANA is a member of Star Alliance.  This means that you can credit ANA flights to Lufthansa Miles & More, United MileagePlus, Singapore Airlines Krisflyer, ANA’s own Mileage Club or whichever other Star Alliance airline you prefer.  You can also credit ANA flights to Virgin Flying Club.

ANA offered us a complimentary return Business Class ticket to Tokyo to review their seat and service.  You can read Anika’s two part review tomorrow.  As usual, Head for Points paid for all of its other expenses including hotel costs in Tokyo.

Using Virgin Flying Club miles to fly ANA

You can obviously redeem miles from any of the Star Alliance airlines for reward tickets on ANA.

You may not know, however, that ANA is also a Virgin Atlantic partner.  You can redeem your Virgin Flying Club miles for tickets on ANA. 

Even better, the rate is VERY attractive, especially when compared to an Avios redemption.

You can also earn Virgin Flying Club miles when booking cash tickets on ANA, if you want to steer your next business trip their way.

You can see the Virgin Flying Club earning and spending chart for ANA on this page of the Virgin Atlantic website.

Assuming you are based in the UK, these are the key numbers you need to know:

Economy return flight (London to Tokyo) – 65,000 Virgin miles

Business return flight (London to Tokyo) – 95,000 Virgin miles

First return flight (London to Tokyo) – 120,000 Virgin miles

Note that one way redemptions are not possible.

These are exceptionally good rates in Business and First.  For comparison, this is what you pay using Avios for a BA or JAL redemption:

Economy return flight (London to Tokyo) – 39,000 Avios off-peak / 60,000 Avios peak

Business return flight (London to Tokyo) – 150,000 Avios off-peak / 180,000 Avios peak

First return flight (London to Tokyo) – 204,000 Avios off-peak / 240,000 Avios peak

The price gap between Avios and Virgin miles is stunning.  Even with a British Airways American Express 2-4-1 voucher, it is STILL a better deal to use Virgin miles most of the time when travelling Business or First Class.

Even better, there are no fuel surcharges added to ANA redemptions using Virgin miles.  You will have to pay the usual Air Passenger Duty, Heathrow departure taxes etc.

If you can’t find availability on the ANA flights from London, they also fly to Tokyo from Frankfurt, Munich, Dusseldorf, Brussels and Paris.  Virgin appears to have the same availability as Star Alliance partners and the Aeroplan (Air Canada) and United Airlines websites are both decent places to search for seats before calling Virgin to book.

So …. if my recent reviews have made you consider Japan for your next holiday, you should be seriously considering flying ANA using Virgin Flying Club miles.  Anika’s review tomorrow will give you a good idea of what to expect in Business Class.


How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (December 2021)

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, one has a bonus of 15,000 points):

Virgin Rewards credit card

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

The UK’s most generous free Visa or Mastercard at 0.75 points / £1 Read our full review

Virgin Rewards Plus credit card

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

15,000 points bonus and the most generous non-Amex for day to day spending 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:

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

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with 30,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 30,000 Virgin Points:

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

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Virgin Points

(Want to earn more Virgin Points?  Click here to see our recent articles on Virgin Atlantic and Flying Club and click here for our home page with the latest news on earning and spending other airline and hotel points.)

Comments (66)

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

  • Sam G says:

    http://hiltonhotels.jp/sale-en

    “50%” off sale starting early Tuesday AM UK time. Looking at Conrad Tokyo I think it’ll be more of a 33% discount as their AP rates are already quite a big saving vs the Best Flex, but still worth a look !

    • HV says:

      Thanks for this. Looking to book hotels in Tokyo, Osaka and Okinawa for our Japan trip in November.
      We booked our internal flights in Japan on ANA using Jet Airways miles which were due to expire in June and saved the Virgin miles for later.
      The 2-4-1 off-peak J redemption was pretty good value I think.

    • Kevin says:

      Does anyone know when would be Hilton next sales for Europe and Asia?

  • Chris says:

    I have a fist class ticket booked for October and £130 for taxes and surcharges makes it an even better option

  • Waribai says:

    Unknown Air China works but has anyone managed to book with ANA or Singapore Airlines using flying club miles? I thought that the perceived wisdom was that actually finding availability is nigh on impossible as a) the seat availability pool is not the same as the regular star alliance reward pool and b) availability is not viewable online.
    So typically you have to go through a list of dates with an agent on the phone till one of you says “quits”. As our family are frequent travellers on that route, I would be genuinely interested to know if the situation has changed!

    • Waribai says:

      “Unknown” Sorry I meant to write “I know”

    • Drav says:

      VFTW wrote about his experiences booking this just over a week ago… said it was relatively straight forward

      • Waribai says:

        Ok, thanks. Got 200k FC miles so this could come in very handy!

        • Drav says:

          In that case… sounds like i would be rude not to!

        • ankomonkey says:

          We are a family of 4 and fly UKTYO at least once a year. Finding reward availability for 4 has eluded us for many years. You may get lucky with 1 or 2, but in my experience anything more is unrealistic.

          • Waribai says:

            Are you talking about using Avios or FC miles?
            BA availability direct to TYO used to be easy to find but over the last couple of years things have changed.

    • SydneySwan says:

      I have never succeeded in booking SQ using flying club miles. I have tried several times trying to book J but there is never availability. They can find availability in Y if dates are flexible enough but the cash component is almost the same as buying a cheap Y fare.

      • Rob says:

        SQ is virtually impossible due to the restrictions on aircraft type. They also make it hard for Star partners, it is only easy with their own miles.

  • Geordie says:

    Another option for Avios is Japan Airlines via Helsinki – a benefit being very low surcharges if availability can be found. Helsinki transfers are super fast and total flight time is not substantially longer than direct from LHR. Plus if UK regions, it is arguably easier to transfer in HEL than LHR. Plus Finnair OW Emerald and Sapphire lounges. Plus JAL service.

  • Jarvis Marcos says:

    Given how much airplay this redemption has been getting recently, I wouldn’t be surprised to see it suffer the same fate as the Brussels Air and ANA redemptions on Etihad…

  • Greg says:

    I used my avios points on a return to Tokyo for this September using 39000 still cost £350 I expect that was taxes ? Via ba . Fairly new to avios so still learning.

    • TripRep says:

      BA bundles up all cash amounts charged on an award booking and staff often incorrectly refers to them as “Taxes”

      When in reality, the BA surcharge can be even greater than the Air Passenger Duty + Airport Fees combined.

      • John says:

        Actually it’s Rob who incorrectly labels all charges as taxes, e.g. he refers to”Heathrow departure taxes” above.

        Sure it’s a privately collected tax but so is renting in central London.

        BA calls them taxes and fees, IIRC (don’t know about phone agents though)

  • Aliks says:

    I was thinking of using soon-to-expire Etihad points for Prague – Seoul and a short hop across to Japan for the main holiday in 2018.

    I could then use my Virgin Flying club points for China Air 1st class flights to Beijing for a second long haul holiday.

    Anyone know how China AIr 1st class compares to ANA business?

    • Rob says:

      Air China would require fewer miles and availability is good. Some issues, historically, with Air China cancelling redemption tickets if they suddenly find they can sell the same seat for cash …..

    • Mark Spivey says:

      Pretty sure Virgin have discontinued the Air China relationship because they kept bumping customers with confirmed bookings.

  • wayne says:

    WOW the ANA redemption business/1st is stunning value, im looking at maybe Japan on a 2 4 1 with ba next year 1st. I have only Avios, but maybe the Helsinki route might offer better value & use the 2-4-1 another time? dah, its making my head hurt….

    Rob’s got the life…..;)

    • Rob says:

      I didn’t fly it, I sent the staff 🙂 I am cutting back and just doing First Class reviews (which are usually self funded with miles anyway) and Anika is doing Business Class, unless it is somewhere I really want to go.

      This is mainly for family reasons at my end, but also because they do take a heck of a long time to write up afterwards.

      • Cate says:

        There is another article that needs writing – how best to maximize travel when partners are employees and have limited holidays. My partner’s costing me a fortune in points with just weekend breaks as he can’t leave until late Friday night and has to be back Monday….

        • John says:

          BA RFS seems ideal for this… Just go when nobody else is on holiday

          • Cate says:

            Quick Europe hops are ok but we’re missing out on breaks that take more travel time. I’ve got two 2-4-1 vouchers still outstanding and looking to off load them now for two weekend trips to Madeira as anything further won’t work for both of us. It’s not a good use of the vouchers or points (although we don’t fly BA anymore).

            It’s just depressing seeing flash sales like Qatar’s appearing knowing I can go but partner can only go if we can fly out Friday night and come back ‘on the Sunday.

        • Rob says:

          We have actually had to restructure our October holiday because I just went off and booked, oblivious to the fact that my wife can’t actually take all the time off she wants. Looks like she will be joining us 3 days later.

          • Cate says:

            I feel your pain.

            I do feel though that men travelling alone have more of an advantage than women; my partner would worry if I was on my own for three days in some countries. Ho hum.

      • Lady London says:

        Testing Business Class flights is a tough job but someone’s got to do it 🙂 I feel for poor Anika lumped with this.

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