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WORLD FIRST: Earn tier points towards status on Virgin Atlantic redemption flights

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Virgin Atlantic will become the first airline in the world, I think, to let you earn tier points when you book a redemption flight on the airline using your air miles.

This will allow you to earn elite status in Virgin Flying Club without necessarily ever purchasing a cash ticket! This is possible if you earn all your miles from credit cards or other non-flying partners.

There are a number of improvements – genuine improvements – to Virgin Flying Club announced today,, so I have split them into three articles:

Full details of the changes can be found on the Virgin Atlantic website here.

Virgin Atlantic to offer tier points on redemption flights

This is the standout change in my mind, although the credit card changes will probably have a greater impact on more people.

From 1st September, Virgin Atlantic will offer tier points when you take a flight booked with Virgin Flying Club miles.

This is a genuine shake up for the industry. Virgin says that it wants to ‘ensure members are rewarded every single time they choose to fly with Virgin’.

Virgin Atlantic to offer tier points on redemption miles flights

This is how it will work:

You will only earn tier points when you redeem on Virgin Atlantic flights. It does NOT apply for redemption flights on partner airlines, even when those flights are codeshares with Delta, Air France or KLM.

You will NOT earn tier points if you redeem miles from other programmes for Virgin Atlantic flights. You cannot book a Virgin ticket using Flying Blue or Delta SkyMiles and earn tier points.

The tier points you earn are based on the lowest amount offered for that ticket class. For example, if you book a cash ticket in Economy on Virgin Atlantic, you would earn between 25 and 50 tier points each way. On a redemption, you earn 25 tier points each way.

You will not earn redeemable miles when you fly on a reward ticket. You only earn tier points.

How many tier points will I earn?

You can learn about tier points on this page of the Virgin Atlantic website.

On redemption flights, you will earn the following:

  • Economy: 25 tier points each way
  • Premium: 50 tier points each way
  • Upper Class: 100 tier points each way
Virgin Atlantic to offer tier points on air miles free flights

How many tier points do I need for Virgin Atlantic status?

There are two elite tiers in the Virgin Atlantic programme:

Silver requires 400 tier points in a rolling 12 month period. The key benefits are free seat selection in Economy Light, use of premium check-in and 30% bonus miles on cash flights. You do NOT get lounge access.

Gold requires 1,000 tier points in a rolling 12 month period. The key benefits are access to Clubhouses and the Heathrow Revivals lounge, use of Upper Class check-in, additional luggage allowance and 60% bonus miles on cash flights.

You can see full details of Silver status on the Virgin Atlantic website here.

You can see full details of Gold status here.

Is this a good deal?

Yes. You can’t argue that this is an excellent opportunity to earn Virgin Atlantic status.

Realistically, I doubt many people would redeem enough miles on Virgin Atlantic to be able to progress beyond Silver status if they had no cash flights as well.

Of course, once you have earned some tier points using ‘non flying’ miles, you may well be tempted to buy some cash tickets to push you over the next status tier.

For people who already fly Virgin Atlantic for cash and manage 400 to 600 tier points per year, Gold status could now be within reach. It would only take a couple of Upper Class redemptions within a 12 month period.

Why is Virgin Atlantic doing this? Perhaps they are nice people. Perhaps they want to encourage redemptions on Virgin Atlantic, rather than via partner airlines or into wine or Hilton or IHG hotel points. Whatever the reason, it will be interesting to watch how it works – and whether British Airways follows suit.

You can find out more on the Virgin Atlantic website here.


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 (38)

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  • memesweeper says:

    > Why is Virgin Atlantic doing this? Perhaps they are nice people.

    If TPs and status are there to assist the *frequent* flyer then how they pay for their ticket is immaterial. So I support this 🙂

    As for a wild guess as to why, they have no short-haul European network, so competing with BAEC to attract those that care about status just got easier. BAEC would really struggle to match this offer with the number of Avios issued annually. In fact, if BAEC followed suit I’d have been Gold most of the last five years, as would many others — so they really can’t. Smart move by Virgin.

    • Ben says:

      BA could in theory overcome this issue by awarding TP only on reward flights redeemed for translantic flights, not for European segments, that would be directly competing with virgins network of customers

  • Shane says:

    As I remember, in the very early days of BAEC tier points were awarded on reward flight. I certainly benefited from this at one time (thinking very early 90s). I don’t think it lasted too long however, as BA rightly worked out that it was much better for them if customers used reward flights for additional travel, rather than replacing existing travel plans.

  • Osagie says:

    “children cannot join Virgin Flying Club, unless the parent has Gold status”. Just to correct you Rob, the Virgin T&Cs don’t state that, and don’t even have a minimum age stated, although for those under 18 parental consent may be required. However, the online enrolment, even when inserting the age of those under 2 years old, allows them to be enrolled.

    The real advantage of Gold (in addition to the companion ticket on gold renewal which I think you should have mentioned) is in the ability to organise a family pool.

    Great news with the ability to earn tier points on reward flights. With the insolvency proceedings, I was getting worried since I’m sitting on over 2 million miles, having bought a load of virgin miles for myself and family members when they had the 50% bonus sale in February for 1p/mile. Because BA & virgin flights to Nigeria are so overpriced given the distance, I’m easily getting 2p/mile value.

    Now I just wish that Virgin and BA would allow tier points in excess of what is required for gold to roll over into successive years, as is the case for Air France, in order to provide extra incentives to keep on flying.

    • Dezbez says:

      Yeah both my children are members; my youngest was about 10 I think when I signed her up. And I’ve never been anything more than lowly Red

  • Hingeless says:

    Not a first! Qantas are already doing this and have been doing so since January for elite members of its points club.

    • SydneySwan says:

      That’s correct. Unusual for Qantas to introduce a change that actually benefits its flyers but they did with this feature.

  • ADS says:

    Didn’t British Midland regularly hand out miles for reward flights flown ?

    I always assumed it was an error due to poor IT

    • Rob says:

      If you sent in your boarding pass after a redemption, they credited it like it was a paid flight ….

  • Munch says:

    Currently Silver until March 2021. Need 300 tier points to retain Silver or 500 to reach Gold. Is it worth chasing Gold based on the new changes to the 2 for 1 voucher etc? Would I receive a soft landing from Gold to Silver in 2022 if I reached Gold in 2021? If so it maybe worth chasing the extra 200 tier points.

  • Phil G says:

    A few years ago BAEC used to credit TPs on reward flights if you claimed missing Avios

  • Stephe. Payne says:

    If virgin really do wish to treat all
    Customers equally. Why don’t they offer tier points on their UK credit card to match the bonus the US Virgin credit card offers. Then maybe those of us Leisure customers who lost gold status under the last changes might be able to retire our gold status

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