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Virgin Atlantic ends its Air China partnership – are there any good partner flight awards left?

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Virgin Atlantic has announced that it is ending its partnership with Air China.

It issued a statement to say:

“Our partnership with Air China is ending. Termination of the partnership is effective from the 16th March. Unfortunately, no more bookings can be made on or after the 16th March 2020 and Virgin Atlantic Flying Club members will not be eligible to earn miles on Air China flights from 16th March 2020.

Virgin Atlantic Flying Club members who fly prior to 16th March 2020 will continue to be able to retrospectively claim miles for up to 6 months after their flight. Plus, Flying Club redemption bookings made on Air China prior to 16th March 2020 will also be honoured (subject to standard terms and conditions).

If you have any queries or would like to retrospectively claim miles, please contact our call centre.”

If this came as a surprise, it probably shouldn’t.  Late last year, Air France, KLM, China Eastern and Virgin Atlantic signed a deal to extend the existing joint venture between Air France, KLM and China Eastern to include Virgin.  This covers all routes between Europe and China.

The glory days of Air China redemptions had already passed, in any event.   Until May 2018, Air China was THE sweet spot in the Virgin Atlantic reward chart.

You could book Air China in First Class, London to Beijing, for just 75,000 miles return.  If there wasn’t availability, you could get Business Class for 63,000 miles return.

In May 2018, Virgin Atlantic decided that this was simply too generous.  It increased the rate to 135,000 miles in Business Class and 200,000 miles in First Class.  That was almost 300% higher for First.

The Virgin Atlantic / Air China partner page is here.

Virgin Atlantic

Who are Virgin’s other airline partners?

Virgin Atlantic is not in a major airline alliance, despite Delta Air Lines – a core plank of the SkyTeam alliance – being a 49% shareholder.

Despite that, the airline does have a number of airline partners with whom you can earn and redeem Flying Club miles.  These include :

  • Air China (until March)
  • Air New Zealand
  • All Nippon Airways
  • Hawaiian Airlines
  • SAS (earning only)
  • Singapore Airlines
  • South African Airways
  • Virgin Australia

…. plus of course its shareholder Delta.

There is no standard partner redemption chart in terms of miles needed and it is difficult to get your head around what is a good deal.

We will come on to ANA in a minute, which is the infamously good one.

Apart from ANA, the only deal – on paper – that looks good is business Class on Air New Zealand, London to Los Angeles for 75,000 miles return.

However, in reality, you can pretty much forget the Air New Zealand option unless you want a regional flight.  It makes very little award space available from London for Star Alliance members, let alone partners.  Of course, this doesn’t matter anyway as Air New Zealand will no longer fly to London from October 2020.

You can also forget Singapore Airlines for long haul, because “Redemptions in Business Class and First Class on Singapore Airlines’ A380, 777-300ER and A350-900 aircraft types are not available” which covers virtually every aircraft they fly from Europe.  You can book regional Singapore Airlines flight around Asia which may be handy if travelling in the region.

Tokyo is your best choice

There is another good option – ANA, the Japanese airline.

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.  You may also find it tricky to find two seats per flight although one is more straightforward.

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.

Anika flew down to Tokyo with ANA in 2017 and you can read her review of ANA’s Business Class product here.  It is good.  And, of course, you now get (on the right plane) the fantastic new ‘THE Room’ business class suite.   This won ‘Best New Business Class Seat (Editor’s Choice)’ at the 2019 Head for Points Travel & Loyalty Awards.

Big changes are coming to Virgin’s airline partnerships, of course

Potentially the biggest upheaval in the UK frequent flyer game in 2020 is going to be the addition of Air France and KLM as Virgin Atlantic Flying Club partners.

From a miles point of view, this has some serious repercussions:

You will be able to redeem Virgin Flying Club miles on Air France and KLM.  This opens up a huge new range of redemption possibilities.  Virgin Atlantic has become very USA-centric in the last few years but this new partnership will open up pretty much the entire world.  Choosing Virgin over BA will become more attractive when you have such a wide choice of redemptions.

UK flyers who travel with Air France or KLM (which I know is a lot of HFP readers) will be able to credit their flights to Virgin Flying Club instead of Flying Blue.  It is likely that they will count for status, and that Air France / KLM will recognise that status when you fly with them.

I am quite excited – mainly because my wife has 1.2 million Virgin Flying Club miles.  This should go live in the next few weeks.

Conclusion

The loss of Air China, and the end of Air New Zealand’s UK services, are gutting the Virgin Atlantic partner reward chart.  Only ANA remains as a genuine gem if you are flying from the UK. 

The arrival of Air France and KLM as partners will hopefully be a step change.


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.

  • Lumma says:

    Does anyone know if it’s possible to change flights with ANA when booked as a redemption thru Virgin Atlantic? Booked Frankfurt to Tokyo in three weeks and it looks like I’m on the older seats in both directions. Don’t want to change the dates just to the other daily flight

    • DK says:

      As long as there’s award availability you should be fine, it’s what I did. Although I had to pay an admin fee (£35 I think)

  • ChrisC says:

    “Heathrow Departure Taxes”

    And what would those be?

    Or do you mean the passenger service fees which aren’t of course proper goverment taxes.

    Please Rib it’s really not hard to get the description right.

  • Shoestring says:

    ANA – going to Japan? – Japanese for Beginners: Quick and Easy to Understand Lessons (free)
    https://www.udemy.com/course/learnjapanesefromsomeguy/

  • Jim Lovejoy says:

    Delta is also a good deal. To the U.S. ex-UK it’s still only 50k miles. Even better, from the US to Europe ex-UK, it’s still 50k miles and $5.60.
    If you can find availability, DUB to BOS or NYC with a return to either DUB, CDG, or AMS would be 100k miles and about 150£ in Delta One.
    Not the screaming deal that some redemptions are, but still very nice.

    • GRIMZ says:

      Availability not good?

      • Mikeact says:

        It’s OK…if you know where to look.

        • Lumma says:

          You can price up Delta redemptions on the Virgin site

          • Jim Lovejoy says:

            The Virgin site isn’t set up to be easy. Even if you specify ‘flexible dates’ if there isn’t availability it will just ask you to choose another date. Delta, always has availability. Just ignore the 320k skymiles dates. Also, ignore the 75k dates, they’re partner awards. Check that the 80k awards are direct, then go to the Virgin site. Once you find a date that works, you can go to calendar view.
            I believe, though I haven’t checked, that taxes and fees are lower for 2 one ways than for a round trip.

          • luckyjim says:

            It used to be that the all ’80k delta miles’ flights would be available on Virgin. Not so bad if you are flying solo and don’t mind going midweek but otherwise it’s a struggle.

  • Stu N says:

    It’s this sort of thing and recent SPG card changes that makes me think taking a two year Amex holiday is a bad idea. Earning is getting harder and spending more expensive.

    There are still ways and means to make a good return on cards when in the game – referrals (including cross-referrals with a partner), bonus point offers, transfer bonuses and supplementary cards – without getting too aggressive.

    The manufactured spend game is just too much hassle and I’m not prepared to run the risk of accounts being frozen and in extremis all assets being frozen for suspected money laundering. Admittedly the later is a remote risk but the “manufactured spend” stuff people talk about has all the hallmarks of money laundering and if you do it too much or for too long you’re going to set hares running.

    The game keeps changing and it’s going in one direction so might as well stay in it. That’s my take.

    • The Urbanite says:

      MS can lead to more sinister consequences than just funds frozen. Think we had one person on here saying they were reported to CIFAS following a misunderstanding from MS. And the police may eventually launch a full scale ML investigation if enough financial institutions report you to the NCA, which they tend to do to cover themselves if shutting down your account.

      It’s not all first class flights and five star hotels for everyone unfortunately!

      • EwanG says:

        Yes, consequences can be quite significant if you happen to work in financial services….!

        • ali says:

          “yes your honour, these £1000 a day transactions that were made on a credit card in my name that has since been cancelled which were used to fund a prepaid MasterCard debit card pertaining to a Russian-founded electronic money institution called revolut, which i then partly used to pay off said credit card, and partly withdrew as cash, were all completely legitimate, your honour.”

  • Vit says:

    OT — Rob et al

    I am trying to make the most out of this offer from BA AMEX card with 3000 avios for £300 booking. LHR – INV (RT flight) for 3 pax but require only 2 check-in luggage. I am thinking of just making a single booking by having 3rd check-in luggage which is not required anyway for £18 extra to hit £300 for that 3000. Note that 2 separated booking won’t qualify and one single booking for all 3 pax without the check-in luggage does qualify but adding luggage after the flight is too costly (£25 one-way).

    So basically, 3000 bonus avios + (3 times x ticket cost using BAPP) avios = £18. Not sure from your experiences, is it worth it? Sorry I am quite a penny pincher!

    Cheers,
    Vit

    • Rob says:

      Yes, make sense as you will get more than 0.6p from the Avios. You could also add a charity donation during booking instead which I imagine you can get gift aid tax credit on.

    • Rhys says:

      Whilst the T&Cs often say that it needs to be one transaction, experience in the comments suggest that cumulative spend triggers the bonus too 🙂

    • Will says:

      The t&cs don’t say it needs to be in one booking?

      “Offer only available when you spend £300 or more at http://www.britishairways.com/en-gb/home/ by 16 February 2020 with the British Airways American Express card to which the offer was saved.”

      It’s always been cumulative in the past.

  • Mikee says:

    Booked and flew Johannesburg to London earlier this month in business class on South African using 55k Virgin miles and £214. Checked Expertflyer for award space and phoned Virgin Flying Club to book.
    For a 10hr flight, I’d say that redemption was really good value. Flight was great and arrived fresh for a full day’s work.
    Not sure if availability other times of the year but there were several dates available for redemption in Jan.

    • Rob says:

      Not bad at all I have to say.

    • Genghis says:

      I was speaking to one of our SA bankers back end of last year who was on the board of SAA. Even he didn’t fly SAA since they were so short of cash it was impacting maintenance. He resigned last week over it.

  • Andrew Bowness says:

    I’m doing ANA from Heathrow to Tokyo in first next month and I’m beyond excited. I’ve never flown business before and the only time I flew premium economy was a short flight in China. I’m more excited about the flight than the holiday!

    Can anyone advise on which lounge is best for me?

    • Rob says:

      United Club is the best option but it’s in the B satellite – although you are likely to be on B.

      • Andy says:

        Thanks Rob!

      • Pangolin says:

        I agree. That’s currently my favourite option for T2. Also, they now serve Champagne (ppl said that only the AC lounge served it IIRC). It’s Rodier btw, but I’m far from a connoisseur, so make of that what you will.

        I usually go out of A (LH/LO) but if I have time I generally make a beeline for the UA lounge.

        The OP has a lot to look forward to with that ANA F trip!

    • Kian says:

      I just used Singapore first class lounge when I flew ANA first class last week. It was really quiet and private as I was one of the only three passengers when I got there. It remained the case until the actual Singapore Airlines passengers started to arrive, but by then it was 1h to boarding anyway. The a la carte menu was great there. The self service area looks small, but if you want anything, the waiter will get it for you from the kitchen. I saw reviews that they had singapore sling icecream tubs in the business lounge, but I didn’t see any on offer in the first class lounge, so I asked the waiter, and he brought me a properly made icecream dish.

    • Neil Donoghue says:

      Any tips on finding availability? Did you book these 6 months in advance or 12 months for example? I have always struggled with this and would love to fly this route.

      • Pangolin says:

        For ANA redemptions you’ll have more joy looking to go ex-FRA than LHR.

    • DK says:

      United F and Singapore F lounges are both brilliant. I did the same flight and hopped between the two lounges. I was the only one in both of them for quite a while! Great memories. Unfortunately the ANA F lounge at Haneda was an abysmal experience so don’t get your hopes up.

    • Matthew says:

      Did you book with Virgin miles? Rumour has it that they now allow one-ways to be booked on ANA?

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