Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

How to get a better Avios Oz / New Zealand flight redemption using the multi-partner chart

Links on Head for Points may pay us an affiliate commission. A list of partners is here.

I get a steady stream of emails asking about how to book Avios tickets to Australia or New Zealand.  My honest answer is – don’t bother.  Use cash.

There are three reasons for this:

Avios availability, if using a 2-4-1 voucher, is exceptionally hard to get.  You need to route via Singapore which means you are competing with people who just want an Avios ticket to go there. Capacity on the route has shrunk massively since Virgin withdrew and BA downsized to a Boeing 777.  This means that it is rare to see more than the two guaranteed Club World seats in premium cabins. 

The taxes and charges on rewards are disproportionately high.  Using British Airways, a Club World redemption costs 300,000 Avios (peak) or 250,000 Avios (off-peak) plus £700 per person. £700 is based on booking two one-way tickets – a return on one ticket is nearer £900.

Cash tickets to Australasia are disproportionately low.  On a ‘pound per mile flown’ basis, Australasia is astonishingly cheap if you pay.  Over the last couple of years we have seen business class cash fares from the UK – not starting in Europe – as low as £1500 on Malaysia Airlines and as low as £1400 to Auckland with Qatar Airways.  Those deals are unlikely to return, I admit, but you can virtually always find cash tickets ex-Europe for under £2,000.  When you factor in the taxes on an Avios ticket, plus the huge amount of miles earned back for paying cash, plus the ability to pick and choose when you go, it is no surprise that redemptions look second best.

To put the availability issue in context, as of yesterday afternoon there were just seven days between now and the end of the year when you get two Club World seats between Singapore and Sydney.  Even then, you would also need to match up suitable London – Singapore, Sydney – Singapore and Singapore – London availability, which is virtually impossible.

There is, however, one way to get an Avios reward flight to Australasia with far fewer availability issues and using far fewer Avios.  The only snag is that you can’t use a British Airways American Express 2-4-1 voucher.

95% of British Airways Avios collectors do not know that BA has a second redemption chart.

Many of you will never have seen this chart before (click to enlarge) or at least not before you started reading HfP:

OneWorld Avios redemption chart

You can see the original by clicking here to ba.com and scrolling down to click on ‘Partner Airlines’ and then ‘Avios costs for booking on two or more oneworld airlines’.  This is the reward chart that British Airways uses to price redemptions which include two or more oneworld partner airlines, excluding British Airways.

If, for example, you flew from London to Amman on Royal Jordanian and then caught a Qatar Airways flight to Doha, it would be priced using the chart above.

Importantly, this reward chart did NOT change when BA recently increased the redemption costs for partner airlines.

The chart above is for economy travel.  Multiply by two for business class and by three for first class.

Take a moment to note what I just wrote.  Whilst a standard Avios redemption in Business Class on BA costs 3x an economy redemption, using the multi-partner chart only costs 2x.  This makes the multi-partner chart very good value for Business or First Class Avios tickets.

How to use this chart to get to Australasia

If you use oneworld partner airlines to get to Australasia, you have a lot of options.

You have Finnair, which flies to many key cities in Asia.  Cathay Pacific can get you into Hong Kong and then down to Australasia.  Japan Airlines can do the same via Tokyo.  Qatar Airways can do the same via Doha.  Malaysia Airlines can do the same via Kuala Lumpur.  And, of course, there is Qantas too.

You will struggle to find a way of not finding business class availability when you have all these airlines to choose from.

Here is a real example from a Head for Points reader which he sent to me:

Heathrow to Tokyo Haneda (Japan Airlines)  5,957 miles

3 day stopover

Tokyo Narita to Brisbane (Qantas)  4,426 miles

Holiday

Cairns to Hong Kong (Cathay Pacific)  3,451 miles

3 day stopover

Hong Kong to Manchester (Cathay Pacific)  5,988 miles

Because this involves three non-BA oneworld airlines it prices off the multi-partner chart above.  As he is travelling 19,822 miles, the total cost in Business Class was 200,000 Avios plus under £600 of taxes.

This is a far better deal than 300,000 Avios (peak day) plus £700 of taxes if you booked London to Sydney on British Airways in Club World – and you won’t be doing that anyway, because availability is virtually non-existent.

The itinerary above is actually a very simplistic way of using the multi-partner chart.  If it wasn’t for the fact that this itinerary is so close to the 20,000 mile threshold, you could have added in a number of domestic flights on Qantas or Japan Airlines.

What else can you do with the multi-partner reward chart?

Here is an example of a round-the-world routing using the multi-partner chart.

London – Delhi – Hong Kong – Tokyo – Los Angeles – New York – London is just under 20,000 miles.  This would be 200,000 Avios in Business Class for the whole trip.

It is worth noting that I have never seen a firm list of the rules for booking multi-partner reward tickets.  Most BA call centre agents will never have booked one.

In theory you are limited to eight sectors with just one overland sector – although a recent Flyertalk example had multiple overland sectors and was ticketed.

In theory you need to have every segment in the same class as just one in a higher class will reprice the entire itinerary.  However, some people have reportedly had agents charge based on the longest class flown, ie if 60% is economy and 40% First then they were charged economy!

In theory you can book a segment in economy – and the rest of the itinerary in business – and upgrade that segment later for free if availability in business appears

In theory, there are no rules on backtracking although this may be down to badly trained agents.  One example I saw was basically multiple holidays from London to somewhere, back to back, to get to eight sectors!  If the agent allows it you could book, say, London to Qatar and home, London to Hong Kong and home, London to Tokyo and home, London to Kuala Lumpur and home as one booking – as long as you are using at least two oneworld carriers – and save a huge number of Avios on booking four holidays separately.

In truth, no-one seems clear.  The ‘eight flights maximum’ rule does seem to be firm – but that still gives you a huge amount of flexibility to put together a great trip.

Comments (98)

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

  • Matt says:

    Entirely thanks to HfP and the community, I’m doing Australia next year using my 2-4-1 (F out, J back). It is doable although difficult I admit. But thanks all for posting your comments with tips and advice that helped make this happen.

    • Alex W says:

      How much are the charges? The article says £700 each but BA Redemption Finder says £936 each for club return.

      • Matt says:

        I was charged £895.51 per person.

        • Rob says:

          You don’t do that though. Unless you are using a 241, you book 2 x oneways which is £720.

    • Lux says:

      Agreed, doable but not impossible – I’ve done LHR-SYD on a 2-4-1 in J and F twice. It may not, technically, be the best value use of miles but it feels fantastic.

      • stuart says:

        Same. All this talk of LHR/SIN/SYD being like rocking horse sh*t is garbage. I’ve done this twice on 2-4-1, both times booking J and upgrading to F around 4 weeks before the flight. Agreed you have to be up at midnight GMT and call for the return, but not exactly as “impossible” as you’d be led to believe.

  • Mikeact says:

    The problem I have found is finding an agent who is familiar with multi partner awards…..finding award availability……hoping that availability is still open when you call…..having a back up plan when you call….and last but not least……lots of patience because in my experience, it can be very frustrating.
    I have two multi awards I am currently looking at, as above Aus/NZ and South Africa. We’re likely to start in Istanbul to make the maximum use of the total mileage. Not sure if it mentioned it above, but BA can be used for a segment, one or more. But certainly don’t use them to start from the UK for the obvious reasons.
    I found using GCM the most useful tool to work out mileage distances. Definitely a great use of Avios, (at the moment), as long as you maximise the mileage, maybe a weekend away in Paris e.g. to hit the maximum.
    Oh, and you can make date changes along the way….not the destination, (maybe if in the same zone ?, I’m not sure. )

    • Liz (a different one) says:

      I’d suggest not to use GCM – or if you do only at the initial planning stage. BA use the same distances as for calculating the Avios they give out on regular flights and they can differ significantly. I had a nice trip sorted out which totalled 19,860 miles per GCM, only for BA to decide it was 20,270 miles. Back to square one.

      I would echo the frustrating bit. They make up the rules as they go along so there is no consistency at all between different agents.

  • Benylin says:

    So would be better to do this if you want to go 2x tickets to Tokyo return from London, vs using BA combined with 2-4-1?

  • Jacqueline says:

    Interesting. Last year I did a routing to Sydney via Hong Kong on Cathay. There wasn’t full Club avail on all my routes so I did Club to Hong Kong plus a stopover. Prem Econ HK to Sydney. Sydney to Hong Kong Club. Hong Kong to London First. Cost 350K miles. The booking agent told me that whereas BA had off-peak pricing, Cathay didn’t, and the same routing on BA would have cost fewer miles.

    • John says:

      Yes, because this chart only applies when you use TWO oneworld airlines that are not BA.

      • Nik says:

        Yes! As John said, but just for clarity you can have BA in the mix provided you have 2 other oneworld carriers in the booking. I booked a WAW – DOH – SYD – PER – SIN – DOH – CPH – LHR (QR, QF, BA) for 200,000 earlier this year and only £400 odd taxes. Brilliant value.

  • Mikeact says:

    I should have mentioned that your ticket is of course, only valid for 12 months from the start. Rob’s example of 3/4 trips out of London is fine, assuming you can fit in all 4 trips within the 12 months !
    I’m looking to really maximise our trip to South Africa to include a further trip to the States….for us this means SA within the next 3 months or , followed by the States during the following 9 months.
    This can make availability more difficult to find on Business…I guess book Economy where necessary and hope to upgrade when possible.

  • Steve says:

    Many of you will never have seen this chart before (click to enlarge) or at least not before you started reading HFP…

    Oh, please stop it. Some people do understand FFPs and have been using them long before HFP came on the scene.

    • Rob says:

      There are 4m BAEC members in the UK. How many of them do you think know this exists?

      I get emails on a regular basis from long term HFP readers who don’t even know, to take one example, you can book a 241 as an open jaw.

      Or, put it another way, if our readers all knew this existed then I have totally and utterly failed in marketing this site to the ‘Mr/Mrs Average’ business traveller it is aimed at ….

    • Nick says:

      That is right. Some would. Many wouldn’t.

    • Sussex Bantam says:

      Good for you Bob.

      I didn’t – and I do now ! Thanks Rob…

  • Bob says:

    This is a load of fabricated rubbish.

    Good luck with back tracking etc when you try and book. It’ll get flat denied. Just shows the posters lack of knowledge.

    • David says:

      (Are you sure your name isn’t Dennis? – bmi joke)

      Seriously, many of us have been playing this game for 20+ years or longer. Nobody is saying you have an absolute right to back track, but they may let you. There will be situations where back tracking is essential to get from A to Z. Also, BA fudge things too – look at some of the zones certain cities are in.

    • Charlieface says:

      I’d say probably the ticket must be pieced together and priced manually so if the agent doesn’t follow the rules it would still ticket. As opposed to standard Avios tickets which I believe there isn’t an easy way for them to override anything.

    • Mikeact says:

      I’m not sure you are quite correct…. I’ve spoken to two agents, reasonably knowledgeable, and they both said I could do anything I wanted within the mileage limits, including back to London with a weekend away in Amsterdam to finish up the mileage. And there is certainly no problem with my proposed 2 trips within the mileage I’m looking at, S Africa first and then States 6 months later…..positioning start in Istanbul…finishing at Gatwick.

    • guesswho2000 says:

      Well that’s a ridiculous statement. Take UL for example, you connect via CMB. HKG-MEL via CMB is a backtrack of several hours, but it’s a valid route, and I’ve booked it that way (this was before UL stopped flying HKG-CMB, but it’s now operated by CX, so a true multi-partner award).

  • Nathan says:

    The partner chart can be awesome but finding availability can be just as exhausting, although there’s fun to be had in the search if you’re that way inclined.
    Last time out, I ended up not using it as I had time pressures and not the luxury of stopovers. I will use it again for NZ next time, targeting AKL via SCL, but last time out ‘normal’ redemptions provided optimal positioning and worked out cheaper.
    LHR-SIN-KUL-SYD-AKL-ZQN-DUD-AKL-MEL-SIN-LHR in a mix of J/W/Y for 140k-ish avois and c. £500 taxes (95%+ of which were LHR levies)
    Hat tip to Qantas Premium Economy, I found it to be a great product and would actively choose to fly it again.
    One thing to note, those were point-to-point tickets. Not for the front of heart. Caveat emptor!

    • Nathan says:

      ^’front of heart’? Damn you autocorrect.
      Feint. Or. Faint. ? No there’s a question to ponder 🤔

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