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No Virgin Points? No problem. Virgin’s credit card 241 and upgrade vouchers work on cash tickets.

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A lot of people don’t understand how the Virgin Atlantic credit card vouchers work. We are going to deal with that issue today!

In August 2020 Virgin Flying Club made substantial changes to the annual vouchers given out to holders of the Virgin Atlantic Reward and Reward+ credit cards.

One key impact, which many people don’t realise, is that you no longer need to have any Virgin Points – null, zero, none at all – to get value from the annual credit card voucher.

Virgin Atlantic Rewards credit card voucher

The August 2020 changes removed virtually all of the restrictions over what Flying Club status you needed to have to use your voucher.

More importantly, it removed the distinction between cash and points flights. You can now use your credit card voucher to upgrade, or get a 241 deal, on a cash flight.

Because this is a frequent flyer site, we tend to look at how to use the credit card voucher on a Virgin Points booking. However …..

The Virgin Atlantic credit card vouchers are great for people who DON’T collect frequent flyer miles

Someone who has zero interest in air miles, and no air miles balances, can get a lot of value from the Virgin Atlantic credit cards.

This is actually a UK ‘first’. These is no other payment card in the UK which offers genuine benefits to people who pay cash for their flights.

As a reminder, you receive a voucher:

How does the Virgin credit card voucher work on cash tickets?

When you have your voucher, someone with no Virgin Points now has three options:

  • buy an Economy Classic or Economy Delight ticket on Virgin Atlantic for cash, and get an upgrade to Premium
  • buy a Premium ticket on Virgin Atlantic for cash, and get an upgrade to Upper Class
  • buy an Economy Classic, Economy Delight, Premium or Upper Class ticket on Virgin Atlantic for cash and get a 2nd ticket for free (well, £0 base fare)

Here’s the small print:

  • the upgrade or companion seat comes from Virgin Flying Club reward inventory. If there is not a reward seat available, you cannot complete the transaction.
  • on upgrades, additional taxes and charges may be due
  • on 2-4-1 tickets, taxes and charges are due on the second ticket
  • if a Red (base level) member of Virgin Flying Club wants to book a 2-4-1 ticket in Upper Class, they need to pay a surcharge – in Virgin Points, oddly – equivalent to 50% of the Virgin Points cost of an Upper Class seat

The final point is, admittedly, a bit of a pain. It means that, if you have no Virgin Flying Club status and don’t have a stash of Virgin Points, you are restricted to redeeming your 2-4-1 voucher on a cash Economy or Premium seat.

The voucher also works on points tickets too, of course

Whilst I don’t want to confuse this article by covering how the voucher can be used with Virgin Points you can use it – BA-style – to get a 2-4-1 or an upgrade on a miles ticket.

Our full review of the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card covers this in detail.

There is potentially a LOT of value here

Credit card rewards, outside the travel sector, have been on a downward trend for some time. The John Lewis and Waitrose card cut its cashback rate from 0.5% to 0.25% and competitors have done the same. You will struggle to find a Visa or Mastercard offering a better return than 0.25% these days.

Voucher on the Virgin Atlantic Rewards Plus Credit Card

The Virgin Atlantic vouchers are massively more valuable than 0.25% cashback

It is clearly difficult to put a value on an upgrade or a 2-4-1 ticket. Realistically, you are getting at least £500 – £1,000 of value if you upgrade a Premium Economy flight ticket to flat bed Upper Class.

Similarly, even after paying £500 in taxes and charges, you will get £750 – £1,250 of value from the 2-4-1 offer if used for Upper Class cash tickets. You need to have Silver or Gold status to do this.

If you only have Red status and you use the voucher for a 2-4-1 in Premium Economy, I still think £500 of value is achievable.

For Economy, if we’re honest, the value of a 2-4-1 could be low because taxes and charges make up the bulk of the ticket price.

Very quietly, Virgin Atlantic has created a product which a large number of people would be interested in.

Even in a scenario where you only save £250 by using your voucher – instead of the £1,000+ I suggest above – you are still getting a return of 1.25% on your £20,000 of annual spending. No other Visa or Mastercard benefit which doesn’t involve collecting points comes anywhere near.

Unfortunately, it’s hard for Virgin Atlantic to capitalise on this

There is huge potential for a credit card like this outside of frequent flyer circles. In truth, however, Virgin Atlantic finds itself with a problem. The vouchers on the credit cards are too complicated to ‘sell’ to the general public in their current form.

The cards are too focussed on the benefits of earning and using Virgin Points, even though you don’t need any points, at all, to make a big saving with the new voucher.

Perhaps Virgin Atlantic and Virgin Money should launch another credit card aimed at the general public, including the Virgin Red customer base?

It could strip away all mention of points, and potentially not even earn them. The only benefit would be the 2-4-1 voucher or upgrade voucher for a CASH flight, not a redemption. It would trigger at a lower level than the current voucher – let’s say £7,500 of annual spending.

This is an easy message to sell to the general public, and in a market of faltering credit card rewards could prove hugely popular.

Conclusion

Even though you are a Head for Points reader, there is a decent chance that you don’t have many, or any, Virgin Points.

It doesn’t matter. As I hope I’ve shown here, you can still get good value from the annual credit card voucher by using it to upgrade or get a 2-4-1 on a Virgin Atlantic cash flight.

You can find out more about, or apply for, either of the Virgin Atlantic credit cards here.

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

(Want to earn more miles and points from credit cards?  Click here to visit our dedicated airline and hotel travel credit cards page or use the ‘Credit Card Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.)

Comments (84)

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

  • Sam says:

    Am I right to say the voucher is valid for 2 years? I.e I hit 10k spending on August 2022, and I need to complete the flights by August 2024? Also assume that even if I don’t renew my Virgin+ CC after the first year it’s fine

  • Mart says:

    We tried? to book flights using ours 1 in both of our accounts,took 1hr to get through then choose the flights then the lady says she needs to check with the loyalty team I presume voucher expiry dates and will ring me back that was 2 days ago what a frustrating experience,what is the current voucher rules ? 2yrs from accural to book or to fly?

    • Mart says:

      A little bit more info
      9th march 2020 was when I accured the oldest voucher is this still valid ?

  • Dean says:

    I’m sure I’ve triggered a voucher, but where can I find it? I’ve looked on My Account on Virgin Atlantic, but no mention. Maybe it’s expired? Can a new voucher be earned each year?

    • Red Flyer says:

      WhatsApp them and they will tell you. I got a nice surprise when i did as despite closing the card last year I have 2 and not 1 voucher, both expiring in late 2022.

  • Ant says:

    Meliá points- the points from my June stay have not posted. When I called Meliá rewards team they said I need to contact the hotel. I have emailed the hotel a few times and tried to call but no sign of the points. This was the ME Ibiza. Any thoughts?

    • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

      My thought is that you may have better luck asking this question in the general chat thread rather than in the comments section of an article on Virgin 2-4-1 vouchers 😀

  • David S says:

    Too much spend required and for a poor route network and probably limited redemption availability

  • sam says:

    I already have the free card, which currently spending around 1k per month.
    Do you think Virgin will give me a incentive/offer if i upgrade to the reward plus?

    I personally don’t want to upgrade if i don’t get any new customer offers i.e 15k reward point

    • Rob says:

      Not only do they not incentivise, they don’t make it easy to upgrade.

      You need to cancel your existing card, apply for the paid card, be rejected for the paid card (as you need a 6 month gap between Virgin Money products), ring Virgin Money to explain you were trying to upgrade and then be manually accepted. You won’t get the bonus either.

  • Chris says:

    This is a very basic question… How do you find out if you have a reward voucher? I’ve mainly switched to Amex rewards so probably don’t have one but I can’t see anywhere in the app that tells me if I have any.

  • Keith Taylor says:

    I’ve got the premium card and spent the required £10k but don’t seem to have received the voucher. Anyone have any ideas where or when it’s issued?

    • Rob says:

      You will have it (probably). Look at your Virgin Points account statement. There will be a one-line entry along the lines of “Credit card reward issuance – 0 points”. That’s it.

      • Keith Taylor says:

        Lol – You were right. I thought I’d looked everywhere! It seems odd they don’t send you an email as per BA.

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