Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Get a 30%-40% bonus when you buy Virgin Atlantic miles or use ‘Miles Booster’ – is it a good deal?

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Virgin Atlantic has launched its semi-regular bonus for buying miles and for ‘Miles Booster’.

The first offer is an ‘up to 40%’ bonus when you buy Virgin Flying Club miles.

The link to buy, transfer or gift miles is here.

The closing date for the bonus is 30th November.

Virgin Atlantic buy miles bonus

For the first time that I can remember, Virgin Atlantic is offering a staggered bonus:

  • 15% bonus when you buy 1,000 – 9,000 miles
  • 20% bonus when you buy 10,000 – 29,000 miles
  • 30% bonus when you buy 30,000 – 69,000 miles
  • 40% bonus when you buy 70,000 – 100,000 miles

Virgin now allows you buy to a whopping 100,000 miles per year at a cost of £1,515.

Is this a good deal?

As usual with these cases, the answer is “not really, unless you want to do an immediate redemption”.

To buy 30,000 miles, for example, comes out at £450. With the 30% bonus, you would actually receive 39,000 miles. This works out at 1.15p. You would struggle to get good value if you bought all of the miles you needed for a redemption at that price but of course topping up an account is a different matter.

Before buying, think if you have any American Express Membership Rewards points, Tesco Clubcard points, Heathrow Rewards points or hotel loyalty points which you could transfer instead. Remember that Amex points transfer instantly if your accounts are already linked. 

A cheaper way of getting 20,000 Virgin miles would be to get the free – in Year 1 – American Express Gold charge card and transfer the 20,000 Amex points sign-up bonus.

And, of course, until 14th December you receive 10,000 Virgin Flying Club with the FREE Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card and 25,000 Virgin Flying Club miles with the £160 Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card.  This is a better deal than buying the miles.  Full details of the offer are in this article.

Miles Booster

The second offer, ‘Miles Booster’, IS a potentially very good deal.

Miles Booster only works if you have a Virgin Atlantic cash or reward flight booked or have taken one in the last six months. You are able to buy an additional 200% of the base miles you will earn from the flight for just 1p each.

Click here for details. If you have a New York economy flight booked, for example, you would earn 6,916 base miles from your trip.

Miles Booster allows you to buy up to 13,832 additional miles for just 1p each. Plus, with this promotion, you would get an extra 30% bonus as well.

If you maximised the Miles Booster option for a New York economy flight, you would be able to buy a total of 17,981 Virgin Flying Club miles for just £138.32. That is 0.77p each, which is well worth considering.

You can retrospectively buy miles via Miles Booster for any Virgin Atlantic flights taken in the last six months, cash or reward.  Yes, even previously flown or currently booked redemptions count.

Even if you don’t have any current bookings, you may be able to take advantage of this based on recent flights.  At this price, I would consider the Miles Booster deal if you know that you will be using them in the short or medium term.


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 (80)

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

  • Dace says:

    OT – Does anyone have any experience of using the £200 off £600 spend on Amex Travel when not spending £600+ in one transaction? I ask as I need a couple of flights but cannot get it to load onto one bill. Has anyone done this before and still got the £200? I ask as I have used this offer three times before but they have always been £600+ transactions. Thanks in advance for any help!

  • 1nfrequent says:

    O/T but has anyone else had issues trying to combine Avios from Iberia Plus? I’ve tried using BA site and the Iberia site and every time I log on, it tells me my session has expired. Is this a known glitch or am I getting special treatment?

    • TM says:

      Its incredibly unreliable. I tried both BA and Iberia and it didn’t work. Tried again the next day and it did…

      Make sure your details match exactly, try incognito, etc

      • Shoestring says:

        Set up avios.com a/c – transfer to there first then transfer to BAEC

        • Peter K says:

          That’s not working properly either at the moment but it’s definitely worth a go if you’ve not tried it.

      • 1nfrequent says:

        Thanks, TM. Will give it another go later.

        1F

  • Gareth Morgan says:

    I can see forthcoming flights, including Delta SYD – LAX but i had a reward flight in June on Air China in 1st. Would that qualify. I can’t remember whether it was a codeshare.

  • RussellH says:

    Anyone noticed the letter from Alex Cruz in todays Sunday Times? “We don’t charge for choice’ (of seats).
    🙂

    • FlyUpTop says:

      Tried to search it but wants me to sign up, could you copy paste Cruzs statement. Thx

    • Graham Walsh says:

      Have the Times in front of me and can’t see it.

    • Scallder says:

      BA BOSS: WE DON’T CHARGE FOR CHOICE

      In response to your report “British Airways customers charged up to £100 if they want adjoining seats” (News, last week), not only are couples flying with BA not “charged up to £100 if they want adjoining seats”, but the example given in the article took place on an entirely different airline.

      Our aim is to always give customers the greatest possible amount of choice, and seat selection is no exception. We provide the option for customers to select seats at the point of check-in for free, or to reserve a specific seat in advance. Nobody is “asked to pay extra” to sit with somebody else. In addition, our most frequent flyers (gold and silver Executive Club members) can select seats for free at the point of booking.

      Contrary to the impression given in the piece, we go into seating plans several days before departure precisely so that we can sit families together, and accommodate others such as travellers with a disability.

      After all, we have been in the business of bringing people together for nearly 100 years, not keeping them apart.
      Alex Cruz, chairman and chief executive, British Airways

      • Shoestring says:

        blocks speak

      • Lady London says:

        written by a marketing person. themes and weasel words.
        People are being charged for seats.
        It actually looks as if it was ghosted by someone that used to work for Ryanair. Except Ryanair wouldn;t be apologising.

  • FlyUpTop says:

    OT:
    Lounge Buddy states there are three BA business class lounges to choose from at LHR T5. I’ve entered our CW booking in LB but it states one of the three BA biz lounges we do not have access to?

    • Doug M says:

      Wrong I think. As a Silver previously I used North, South and T5B. Perhaps it skips the B lounge in case your flight leaves A gates. You can still use the B lounge, which I think is the nicest, just make sure if you do then leave from A you allow time and walk back to A through the tunnels, do not take the shuttle, you must walk.

      • Tilly71 says:

        Thanks, it was T5B I wanted and it originally stated no access to my flight entry using CW.
        Played around a bit & now states access allowed?

      • Lyn says:

        Yes, I forgot about having to walk back to A if your flight goes from there.

    • Lyn says:

      There are two BA lounges in the main terminal at T5 – Galleries South and Galleries North I think they are called. Plus the quieter one in the B terminal. So probably those?

  • Graham Walsh says:

    OT In the PP lounge in T5 and it’s 1 year old. Very nice cakes https://www.dropbox.com/s/w5iwbayazovibe3/IMG_4157.JPG?dl=0

    • mr dee says:

      To think Greece should be under EU Consumer Law too and be civilised …

    • mr dee says:

      Gold car have been useless for me in the past, making me wait an hour to get a car and the queue was only 4 people long, no business sense at all, the car rental market needs some disruption

    • mr dee says:

      It was a civil matter and they had no recourse asking security to help, they should have just taken their deposit money that is what the deposit money is of course for and probably mounted to more than £500. All this was of course a ploy to pocket some cash rather than put it through the card system even though they paid by debit card in the end.

      No Rhodes for me if people can act like this and be taken serious by the security personnel.

      • Shoestring says:

        All Rhodes lead to ruin

      • Jonathan says:

        Without excusing the actions of Goldcar in involving airport security, you have to question the decision making of the couple involved. You can’t just abandon a hire car at your hotel & head to the airport & board a flight without resolving things with the rental office. Firstly, if it was a flat battery it’s unlikely this came about when parked for 5 days without a light etc being left on.

        Secondly did they not consider bump or jump starting the car (not always possible with some fancy cars but fine for usual rental fodder) or finding a local mechanic as there must have been one closer than 2 1/2 hours away.

        Finally send one person to the airport in the cab & the other stay behind to wait for mechanic then claim for a new flight from travel insurance if necessary. If you’re car broke down on way to airport in UK you wouldn’t just leave it on the hard shoulder and get a taxi! All the above options would have cost far less than £600!

      • Anna says:

        It would have been a civil matter in this country and no legitimate operator would dare use force to get money out of a customer but practices differ wildly from one country to the next. It’s part of the great EU myth that everyone operates to the same standards.

  • mr dee says:

    OT: Cancelled a IHG Credit Card night and not had the voucher come back, anyone have any experience getting the voucher back? (Not expired)

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