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Vueling Club is live – how to earn and spend Avios on Vueling flights

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IAG’s Spanish low cost carrier Vueling (pronounced bwelin) joined Avios yesterday.  This is worth knowing about because of Vueling’s strong regional presence at UK airports.

The options are very confusing for me to follow, so heaven knows how members of the public are meant to cope.

To put it simply:

You can now earn Avios on Vueling based on your ticket price – unless you credit a flight to Iberia Plus, in which case you earn based on the distance flown

You can redeem Avios on Vueling purely on a ‘money off’ basis – unless you redeem via Iberia Plus, in which case you pay a fixed amount plus taxes based on the trip distance. And you can’t redeem via avios.com at all.

how to earn Avios with vueling flights

What is Vueling?

Vueling is a low cost airline, based in Barcelona, owned by BA’s parent company IAG.  It is run separately to Iberia.

Whilst Vueling doesn’t have the greatest reputation for punctuality or comfort, it now serves 138 cities on 345 short-haul routes.  The main base is in Barcelona with a secondary hub in Rome.

Vueling operates from seven airports in the UK including Manchester, Birmingham, Cardiff and Edinburgh as well as London Gatwick, Heathrow and Luton.  It flew 28 routes from the UK last summer – typical destinations are Barcelona, Rome, Alicante, Mallorca and Malaga.

Punto is no more

Vueling has moved its existing reward scheme, Punto, into Avios.

Punto is now renamed Vueling Club.  Existing points, if you had any, have been transferred into Avios at the rate of 1 Punto to 9 Avios.

The new programme has revenue based earning and revenue based spending.  Except where it doesn’t.

In an interesting departure from the BA model, you are able to use ‘part pay with Avios’ to cover the entire cost of a flight including taxes.

Full details of Vueling Club can be found on the Vueling website here.

This is a bigger upheaval for Avios than you may think.  There are two million people with a ‘Punto’ account, so the Avios customer base has jumped from 7m to 9m overnight before stripping out duplicates.

EARNING AVIOS ON VUELING:

Does this mean I can now earn Avios when flying Vueling?

Yes.

It was always possible to earn Avios with Vueling, but it was fiddly.  You either had to credit to Iberia Plus or book a BA codeshare service and earn in British Airways Executive Club.

How do I earn Avios now?

Now that Vueling Club is launched, you can earn Avios on ANY Vueling ticket booked via their website.

You do NOT need to join Vueling Club unless you want to create a profile to speed up the booking process.   Vueling Club membership numbers are actually just avios.com membership numbers ‘in disguise’ – just like Aer Lingus Aer Club.

Book a Vueling flight on vueling.com, add your avios.com number and the Avios will turn up. You cannot add a BA Executive Club number.

How many Avios will I earn flying Vueling?

It is a revenue based system.  The more you spend, the more you earn:

Basic Fares earn 3 Avios per €1 spent

Excellence and Optima Fares earn 4 Avios per €1 spent

Premium members – who take 40 Vueling one-way flights each year – will earn double Avios.

It isn’t clear how the earning rates are adjusted for the taxes and charges element of your ticket price.

But, just to cause confusion ….. hold your horses:

If you book an ‘Optima’ or ‘Excellence’ fare on Vueling, you can still earn Avios in Iberia Plus based on the old system.  The further you fly, the more Avios you earn.

Here are the earning rates if you credit a Vueling flight to Iberia Plus:

Vueling flight carrying an Iberia (IB) flight number:

    • Business – 1.5 Avios per mile flown (min 750)
    • Economy Flexible – 1 Avios per mile flown (min 500)
    • Economy Classic – 0.5 Avios per mile flown (min 250)
    • Economy Basic – 0.25 Avios per mile flown (min 125)

…. and on flights with a Vueling (VY) flight number):

    • Excellence Class – 1.5 Avios per mile flown (min 750)
    • Economy Flexible – 1 Avios per mile flown (min 500)
    • Optima Class – 0.5 Avios per mile flown (min 250)
    • Basic Class – 0.25 Avios per mile flown (min 125)

Note that the Vueling website implies that ‘Basic’ fares no longer earn Avios in Iberia Plus.  The Iberia website still shows that they do.  It isn’t clear which is correct.

You need to do the maths for every flight.  Depending on what you are spending, how far you are flying and what class you are travelling in, you need to decide whether Vueling Club / Avios or Iberia Plus is the better place to credit your Vueling flight.

And a double Avios promotion

Until 31st October, you can earn double Avios on all Vueling flights you book which are credited to Avios / Vueling Club.

You do not need to fly before 31st October, just book.

This does not apply to Vueling flights credited to Iberia Plus.

how to earn avios points flying vueling

SPENDING AVIOS ON VUELING:

Will I be able to spend Avios on Vueling flights?

Yes.

Have they made it insanely complicated by creating two separate pricing models with different websites?

Yes 🙂

You can either book Vueling redemptions on the Vueling booking site or via Iberia Plus.

Note – and this is important – you cannot book Vueling flights via avios.com or ba.com.  This is a mistake in my view because no-one is going to know that they exist.

Pros and cons of booking Avios flights on Vueling via vueling.com

Redemptions on vueling.com are ONLY available via the ‘part pay with Avios’ method.  Except, in this case, you can actually FULLY pay with Avios if you want.

Alongside Lufthansa short-haul, Vueling is one of the few airlines in Europe to allow you to get totally free flights, including taxes and charges, with your points.  That said, you cannot yet use Avios to redeem for additional services such as checked baggage or priority seating – although this is on the way I am told.

You need to log in using your avios.com account details on vueling.com.  If your Avios currently sit in a BA account, you will need to move them into avios.com using ‘Combine My Avios’ (click here).

(As of last night, the Vueling site was broken and did not allow you to log in using Avios or Iberia Plus IDs.  I am assuming that this is only temporary.)

Select the flights you want, in any class – Basic, Optima or Excellence.  You can book ANY flight.  There are no availability restrictions.

On the payment page you will be offered the chance to pay with Avios.

The rate is very poor, unfortunately.  You will be offered 0.55p per Avios.  Personally, I think you need your head examining if you accept such a weak redemption rate for your points.  I would want to get double that when redeeming.

In theory, because you are booking a cash ticket but paying with Avios, your redemption flight should earn Avios back if you credit it to Iberia Plus.  It may also credit to Vueling Club – it depends if they base Avios earned on the cash element of the fare or the cash you actually pay, which is nil.

Pros and cons of bookings Avios flights on Vueling via Iberia Plus

You can still redeem Avios via Iberia Plus for Vueling at fixed Avios prices.  This involves:

    • opening an Iberia Plus account at iberia.com
    • having it open for at least 90 days
    • earning at least 1 Avios in the account from a BA or oneworld flight, from crediting a hotel stay, from another partner or from moving across some American Express Membership Rewards Points and then
    • using ‘Combine My Avios’ to move your points to Iberia Plus

The problem is that Avios redemptions on Vueling are usually not competitive due to the taxes.   Avios redemptions do get a free checked suitcase, however, which may swing it.

I looked at a typical Vueling flight from Rome to Barcelona in January.  It priced up at 4,500 Avios plus £37.50 of taxes.  A cash flight on the same day was €52 for Basic (no luggage) or €66 for Optima (suitcase included, as you would get with an Avios redemption via Iberia Plus).  This is also a poor use of your Avios, although you may well find dates at peak times where it is a better deal.

You will NEVER find dates at peak times where it is a better deal redeeming via vueling.com, because the 0.55p per Avios redemption rate is fixed.  When cash prices go up, so does the number of Avios needed.

How to earn Avios points flying on Vueling

I never fly Vueling – is there anything in this for me?

Yes.

Another Avios programme gives you more opportunities for earning.

If there are any Vueling-only promotions running with partners, such as hotels or car hire groups, you can take advantage, earn points in Vueling Club and then move them across to British Airways Executive Club.

In summary …..

If you have any Punto points, they will be turned into Avios at a 1:9 rate

You can now earn Avios on any Vueling ticket, irrespective of cost, as long as you credit to a Vueling Club account or an existing avios.com account.  However, on Optima or Excellence fares you may earn more Avios by crediting to Iberia Plus where you will earn based on distance flown.

You can redeem Avios for a discount – of up to 100% – on any Vueling flight in any class via ‘part pay with Avios’ when you book at vueling.com.  You need to log in using your avios.com details and, if necessary, use ‘Combine My Avios’ to move your points from BA to avios.com.

You can also redeem for Vueling flights via Iberia Plus.  These rewards are priced using the standard distance model, eg 4,500 Avios plus taxes for a short one-way flight in Economy.

You cannot redeem via the avios.com platform.  This seems like a bad choice, strategically.  Most avios.com users will never know the Vueling options are there.  You also cannot redeem via ba.com.

You can find out more about Vueling Club on this page of the Vueling website.


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 (54)

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

  • Firemin says:

    If redemptions on Vueling are only available as “Part pay with Avios” does that not mean that they will still earn Avios if you then credit them to Iberia Plus (i.e. do the flights book into revenue fare categories)??

    • Rob says:

      Yes, they would do that, because you are buying a revenue ticket. Will add that in.

      • Marc says:

        I do not think this is possible. If you want to earn Avios via Iberia Plus, you must add your IbPlus number during your booking process (if you do not do this, you won’t earn any IbPlus Avios). So essentially you can not add two FF numbers during the booking process, suggesting that you can not use Vueling Club Avios while earning Iberia Plus Avios ar the same time.

        • Rob says:

          It should be easy enough to swap it over, though – at check-in if not via Manage My Booking.

      • Marc says:

        Sorry this should be a response to your other reply, but can’t reply to that one from my phone. Historically you could not change your FF after you’ve done the booking (neither on line, via phone or at check in desk), and you could only claim Punto points after your flight (in case you did not introduce a FF number). I’m pretty sure Vueling didn’t change that IT problem/issue with the introduction of Vueling Club. Once youve selected your program during your booking, you can not change it. My two cents.

  • Lee says:

    Vueling makes Ryanair look decent!

    I think the biggest issue is weight for carryons – very restrictive.

  • Genghis says:

    I’ve no plans to fly Vueling but should I open an account now for potential future points collecting promos (ie any restrictions à la IB+?)

    • TripRep says:

      Was thinking that myself, no harm in doing so I guess, and yes they could possibly have the same 90 day exclusion as IB+???

      • Rob says:

        Possibly – you have another account for a Rocketmiles first user bonus or whatever. You are gettting a 2nd Avios account in reality though, I opened one yesterday and it is a 16 digit 301etc account number,

        By the way, this is how bad the website is. When you open an account, you must create a password. You are told it must be 6 characters. However, you are not told the other rules! Took me ages to work out it must also include a capital, a number and a special character. Jokers.

  • netxu says:

    “Note that the Vueling website implies that ‘Basic’ fares no longer earn Avios in Iberia Plus. The Iberia website still shows that they do. It isn’t clear which is correct.”
    –> until now, with the old punto scheme, you couldn’t earn Iberia Avios with Basic fares, only Punto points. So, maybe Iberia website has just been updated?

  • James says:

    AirBerlin allowed the use of TopBonus points to pay for the ticket entirely including taxes etc…

  • Concerto says:

    So does Miles & More for European flights.

  • David says:

    VY have actively pulled back from UK flying. This year we had BCN, ALC, TFS, FCO from MAN. Next year we only have the BCN route.

  • Save EC Rewards says:

    OT: I’ve written a blog post pulling apart a recent marketing article about Virgin Trains East Coast http://saveecrewards.co.uk/blog/vtec-and-happy-customers

    It seems like they think things like the BA iPad and personalised greeting you sometimes get as a frequent traveller are things that make flying more appealing. Totally overlooking the benefits of a decent loyalty scheme.

    As a BA Gold, I can count on my hand the amount of times I’ve got a personal greeting when not travelling in First. 2 of them were LHR-MAN,

    So I’m curious:
    – Does anyone get personalised greetings more frequently on BA?
    – Does this make you in particular want to fly BA more?
    – Would the chance of an occasional personalised greeting and random on-board surprise reward make you consider taking the train (this is assuming everything else is the same as now)

    I suspect most people aren’t too bothered about any of this. People like the defined benefits of BAEC (status, Avios)

    • Mr dee says:

      Once a male crew member serving the CE cabin did a personal greeting, this was the first and last time

    • Andrew says:

      A personal greeting is always good. It has to be done just the once though, hearing your name repeated over and over again is utterly irritating.

      East Coast are pretty good, at the smaller Scottish stations anyway, for greeting 1st Class passengers by name. If you are regular enough they will have the right coffee sitting at your table waiting for you.

      I have an old friend who works at Edinburgh Airport, he’s a bit of a joker. Approaching me as we disembarked he greeted me with a loud “Good Evening Sir Andrew, we were told there was a VIP on board. It’s good to see you again. Your driver is waiting for you outside”. He’d walked straight past two very well known and senior MPs to greet me… All fake, but it did make me smile as two MPs were looking at each other saying “who is he?”.

    • the_real_a says:

      This is one of those things that in isolation have zero retention value (apart from being nice) but when packaged together with other benefits add to the appeal of the package. Its a bit like removing the flowers from 1st Class on BA. No-one would stop flying BA solely because of it, nor would people change from Lufthansa if BA suddenly placed a floral bouquet in the Loo’s.

    • Paul says:

      We recently flew BA to Qatar in economy god forbid and a flight attendant saught out my gf to welcome her as a silver, neglecting me next door who was also silver. This snub to me worsened my experience but greatly improved my gfs.

    • Alex W says:

      I think I have been greeted a couple of times, which was nice I suppose but does not influence the decision regarding who we fly with.

      I want my status benefits guaranteed. The discretionary elements lead to a sense of alienation when you don’t get what you want/expect.

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