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British Airways now guarantees 14 Avios seats per flight – 250,000 just released for booking

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British Airways has made a huge announcement this morning about Avios availability across the BA network.

The number of guaranteed Avios seats per flight has been increased SUBSTANTIALLY.

Long-haul flights will see at least 14 seats released when booking opens up at 355 days before departure. Short-haul flights will see at least 12 seats released.

This is a permanent change and has also been applied retrospectively. Additional seats are available on virtually EVERY British Airways flight between 28th July 2021 and 17th May 2022, which is as far out as you can book.

How many Avios seats are available per flight?

This is a genuine game-changing improvement to the Avios programme.

The two key points, at least from a HfP perspective, are:

  • the number of guaranteed Club World seats per flight is now four and not two – this is huge news for families
  • two World Traveller Plus seats are now guaranteed for the first time

Avios seats per flight from 28th July:

  • Club World (long haul business) – 4 seats per flight
  • World Traveller Plus (long haul premium economy) – 2 seats per flight
  • World Traveller (long haul economy) – 8 seats per flight
  • Club Europe (short haul business) – 4 seats per flight
  • Euro Traveller (short haul economy) – 8 seats per flight

Avios seats per flight at the moment:

  • Club World (long haul business) – 2 seats per flight
  • World Traveller Plus (long haul premium economy) – nothing
  • World Traveller (long haul economy) – 4 seats per flight
  • Club Europe (short haul business) – 2 seats per flight
  • Euro Traveller (short haul economy) – 4 seats per flight

There is still no guaranteed commitment to releasing First Class seats.

For absolute clarity, this new policy only applies to British Airways operated flights. It does not apply to Aer Lingus or Iberia, or of course to British Airways partner airlines. Iberia made its own recent changes which saw an increase in the number of guaranteed economy seats and two guaranteed seats made available in Premium Economy.

What seats have been opened up today?

For flights up to 27th July 2021:

Nothing has changed. You will not see any additional seats released.

For flights between 28th July 2021 and 17th May 2022:

British Airways has released additional seats to take each flight up to the new guaranteed minimums. However, this doesn’t mean that you will see the full amount.

Two Club World and four World Traveller seats were already released when those flights first became bookable. If those seats have been taken, you will only see the additional two Club World or four World Traveller seats today.

You will therefore see somewhere between 2-4 Club World / Club Europe seats and 4-8 World Traveller / Euro Traveller seats, depending on how many had already been booked.

Because the guaranteed two World Traveller Plus seats are brand new today, you WILL see 2 x World Traveller Plus seats bookable for Avios on every long haul British Airways flight between 28th July 2021 and 17th May 2022 – unless someone beat you to it.

On many peak flights you will still see no Club World seats because:

  • if BA has already opened up 4 x Business or 8 x Economy seats on a flight, no more have been released even if the seats previously released have been booked
  • the additional seats started to drop into the BA system from yesterday afternoon – many peak services have gone to people with SeatSpy alerts set up or who simply got lucky

The SeatSpy widget in the sidebar to your right, on desktop or tablet, or under this article, if you are reading on mobile, can help you search a particular route for a full year in a couple of seconds.

For flights from 18th May 2022, which are not yet bookable:

Going forward, on long haul you will see four Club World, two World Traveller Plus and eight World Traveller seats appearing at midnight GMT (currently 1am BST) each day.

Short haul will see four Club Europe and eight Euro Traveller seats released.

What do these Avios changes mean in practice this morning?

For a family of three or four – you WILL see lots of flights, even at peak dates, with four seats showing in economy. You will NOT see lots of flights with four business class seats available. BA has only released an additional two to top-up the two that were released when the flight first became bookable.

For a solo traveller or group of twoit’s your lucky day. You should see two business class seats, even on peak dates on peak routes, as well as two premium economy seats and four economy seats.

In truth ….

If you are a family of three or four, the real benefit from these changes will be in the months to come, not today. Every time that British Airways adds a route back to its schedule, four Club World seats will immediately appear for every flight for you to book.

As usual Head for Points will do its best to let you know immediately when new routes are added.

I’d probably get booking immediately but if you want to read some quotes first …..

Tom Stevens, Director of Brand and Customer Experience at British Airways, said:

“Our Members appreciate the benefits their Executive Club membership brings, but the feedback we hear is that people would like us to make it easier to book flights using Avios. We have listened and acted on this, and today’s announcement directly addresses this feedback, opening up six extra reward seats on a short-haul flight, and eight on a long-haul flight. We hope this means that a family holiday, or that big friendship group trip away, will be much easier to book using Avios.”

Adam Daniels, Chief Executive at IAG Loyalty, said:

“This is an exciting change that we have worked closely with the British Airways team to deliver. We hope it offers Executive Club Members even more opportunities to spend their hard earned Avios.”

Now, go and book something – click here for ba.com.


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 (319)

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

  • Melvin says:

    It’s an improvement for a family of 5, but not a game changer. Does anyone know what Virgin Atlantic guarantee (if anything)?

  • KS says:

    I wonder if it does increase availability on a practical level? All those families that would have historically have had to wait are snapping up seats as I write expect.

    And I have no problem with that, have done it myself.

  • sayling says:

    HUGE NEWS! But not a huge shock that something that will benefit some people (families of four, for example) has led to many comments from people seemingly bitter that they have been personally slighted by a change that may not benefit them.

    The realisation that more availability on every flight means improved chances of grabbing reward seats for everyone trying to get them (possibly offset by families now also trying to grab them) seems slow to appear

    Sign of the times, I guess.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      No issue with families getting the seats they want.

      But to think this will add more reward availability total is nonsense.

      • Babyg says:

        Families (like myself) were still travelling with AVIOS under the old rules, thus taking “non family” seats… so doubling the number of Club seats will be a huge change, even people sitting on 500k+ avios will run out, and there will be an abundance of seats permanently.

      • Memesweeper says:

        “ But to think this will add more reward availability total is nonsense.”

        It may well do. You don’t know. I *do* know the one route I’ve been watching this summer just got more availability, given it was Portugal I doubt more seats would have been released otherwise.

  • TGLoyalty says:

    Glad I didn’t buy the hype.

    Good news there are more guaranteed T-355 seats but in reality there will be no additional award availability over and above what would have been made available throughout the T-355 and T period.

  • Patrick says:

    I am so grateful not to be someone miserable enough to greet this with anything but a positive response. Well done BA.

  • Doug M says:

    More changes hating on the singles. Wow is us.

    • Doug M says:

      Woe even……

      • Lou says:

        I’d disagree, I think the nectar points thing is a big win. What will be interesting to see over time is what happens to the redemptions. I have a feeling either a) BA won’t care, or b) BA is forced to reduce taxes and charges because everybody just gets Argos vouchers instead of redeeming

        • Rob says:

          Indeed. Nectar puts a huge amount of pressure on BA as you can see each time we write an article “it isn’t worth doing this redemption any longer because Nectar is a better deal”.

    • Rhys says:

      Not sure how this change affects single people 🙂

      • Andrew says:

        Yes, it’s still good news for a single looking for a seat and a couple has already taken a pair, then there’s still 2 left for you and another single. Plus you can annoy the families of 4 by taking one of the 4 seats! 😉

      • barnaby100 says:

        More poorly controlled children in CW?

      • ChrisC says:

        Some how I think Doug M is trying – and failing – to make a joke especially after the other day where he basically dismissed any concerns from solo fliers being excluded from the BA Hols double points offer.

    • Steve in Croydon says:

      Oh yes the single affluent traveller with no one to take on a AX 2-4-1. I stopped paying the £195 fee for BAPP after two 241 vouchers expired and the best I could muster was a CE return to Berlin with the last one. Had very good value in the past on extended family long-haul trips in big seats and two household BAPPs. How about a half price Avios return trip for the single traveller with 241? It amounts to the same thing … oh sorry, no opportunity for two sets of outrageous BA fees, how silly of me!!!

    • Patrick says:

      In what way? I`m currently single and think this is wonderful.

      • Rob says:

        Singles are the real winners short term. Families don’t benefit from seeing 2 extra CW seats released today. Medium term they are fine because they can pick up 4 seats as they open up.

    • Doug M says:

      OK, it was partly sniping at whingers, but I think the argument goes like this. Singles often have more flexibility because they don’t need to worry about school holidays or a second persons holiday from work. That flex plus needing only one seat meant redemptions were easier to find anyway. You then have the costs, if you say a LH USA redemption is 125K Avios + £650, that’s making a cost of £1650+ depending on how you value Avios. That’s a price often achievable in sales, and even more often with a quick flight to say Dublin to begin, again easier as a single. The real value in LH Avios redemption is using the 241 voucher, and this change will make it easier for couples to find availability.
      I’m not complaining, offers and changes are what they are, but from my perspective a single I see at best minimal benefit in this.
      I do realise that Avios tickets have the value of flexibility versus the discounted fares and cheapo ex-EU ones.

    • Nate1309 says:

      What about all those spare single seats from family of 3 bookings? Year could end up wide open for single seats.

  • SteveD says:

    Quick question on booking Avios seats 🙂

    Does the 24 hour cooling off period apply? Can’t see any mention of it on BA.

    • kitten says:

      yes

      • SteveD says:

        Thank you.

        3 ET seats to Tenerife next Easter secured. It’s quite possible these will become available again when MrsD gets home this afternoon…

  • NigelthePensioner says:

    Until you can fly somewhere worthwhile, this is another currently useless offer, unless you are an avid collector of vouchers that is! What will be the fees to change? What will be the rules to change?
    Please remember that irrespective of which countries are on various UK traffic light permissions to travel (which vary according to your UK country of residence), the country that you wish to visit will have its own regulations with regard to letting you in, let alone its testing and quarantine rules which it will subject you to! How anyone can find this confusing, goodness only knows. Oh, and before you start skipping countries to try to hide where you have come from, your passport will show exactly where you have been, when and for how long! That is what that innocent swipe is all about – it doesnt matter about stamps.
    If this is still in existence this time next year, without Avios devaluation, increases in fees and charges, includes the F cabin and allows the identical privileges to a fare paying passenger, then well done BA. However……I personally cant see it. I hope to be proved wrong……

    • Lou says:

      I’m not sure there’ll be an avios devaluation, not without reducing the value of nectar to avios, which would need notice. Drop the redemption value, and everybody cashes out

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