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British Airways has killed the value in the ‘double Avios’ Gold Priority Reward

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If you have British Airways Executive Club Gold status, the ‘Gold Priority Reward’ was one of the most valuable but least known perks.

I have now had enough reports from readers to seemingly confirm, unfortunately, that the value in this reward has now officially gone. You will struggle to find situations where you would want to use it, although there is the odd exception.

Let me explain …..

British Airways Gold Priority Rewards Avios

What is an Avios ‘Gold Priority Reward’?

British Airways always did a bad job of communicating Gold Priority Rewards to its Gold members.

Very simply, a British Airways Gold member can book a seat on ANY BA flight using Avios.  The catch is that you have to use DOUBLE the normal amount.

You cannot use an American Express 2-4-1 voucher.

Your flight must be booked more than 30 days before departure.

There is some further information on the BA Gold benefits page here.

There is one other rule.  You can’t use a Gold Priority Reward on a BA CityFlyer service which means all of the short-haul services from London City Airport.  This is because, technically, CityFlyer is a separate business inside British Airways and not treated as part of the ‘mainline’ operation.  I would guess that the new BA EuroFlyer operation from Gatwick will also be excluded.

There never was any value in using a Gold Priority Reward for a long haul flight. Let’s take one of my regular family runs to my sister-in-law in Dubai.  Four Club World tickets on a peak day, including one on an Amex 2-4-1, cost 360,000 Avios.  Using a Priority Reward, it would cost a crazy 960,000 Avios for four people – plus the standard taxesYou wouldn’t have caught me doing that in a hurry.

Gold Priority Rewards could be a good deal for short haul

For short-haul European bookings, these rewards did have some use.  Let’s take my standard run to Hamburg to visit my parents in law.

  • A standard Avios reward ticket on a peak day is 9,750 Avios + £35 taxes
  • A ‘Priority Reward’ would cost me 19,500 Avios + £35 taxes

Importantly, you can cancel the BA ‘Gold Priority Reward’ and switch to a normal reward at any point as long as standard Avios seats open up.

Let’s look at the costs here.  If a flight has no Avios availability, it is likely to be a busy flight.  This means that the cash price is also likely to be higher than average.  Let’s assume we are heading to Heathrow from school on a Friday afternoon and need to be on a particular service.

You’d be looking at £250 return to Hamburg for cash in Economy.  Knock off the £35 Reward Flight Saver tax charge and you would be saving £215 by using 19,500 Avios to book a Gold Priority Reward.

You are getting over 1p per Avios in this scenario, which is our target. More importantly, you are locking in a hard cash saving and you get to travel on the exact flights you want.

British Airways Executive Club status cards

What has gone wrong with Gold Priority Rewards?

A couple of years ago, British Airways added the option to use lots more Avios but pay only £1 of taxes. This is the default pricing option that ba.com now gives you.

This is a truly terrible deal. My personal view is that BA is making a mistake here, because most people are more Avios constrained than they are cash constrained. There is no point saying how wonderful it is to pay just £1 in taxes and charges when the Avios component is ludicrous.

Using the Hamburg example above, you can – for Economy – choose to pay for a return flight:

  • 19,500 Avios + £1 or
  • 9,750 Avios + £35

…. or various other options inbetween.

Gold Priority Rewards are now priced off the £1 rate

When BA introduced flights with £1 of taxes, some agents in the call centre would use the higher pricing when you tried to book a Gold Priority Reward. Others would use the ‘standard’ rate with £35 of taxes.

It now seems clear that BA policy for Gold Priority Rewards is to base it off the £1 price. There are still occasional stories of agents being persuaded to use the £35 price but these are rare.

This means, if we stick with the Hamburg example, a Gold Priority Reward in Economy would cost you 39,000 Avios + £1 per person.

You can’t use a British Airways American Express companion voucher, so you’d need 78,000 Avios for two people. To Hamburg, in Economy.

You’d need a pretty big microscope to see the value in that deal.

What is the best use of Gold Priority Rewards?

The Gold Priority Reward is dead, but the corpse is still twitching slightly.

The best use of Gold Priority Reward flights is for ski resorts at February half term.  We have done this a number of times over the years.

This is what is costs to fly to Salzburg for February half-term in 2022, assuming you want well-timed flights travelling Saturday to Saturday which is what ski hotels usually insist on:

It’s still a great deal to pay 39,000 Avios plus £1 in taxes and charges to avoid paying £997. It arguably justifies a push for a Gold card on its own if you are getting close.

With this rare exception, for most people, most of the time, the value in the Gold Priority Reward seems to have gone.


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 (45)

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

  • Keith says:

    Can you use this to upgrade a cash booking to a higher cabin?

  • Kishan Majithia says:

    Thanks Rob. Are you saying that it is is no longer possible to adjust the £1 default tax pricing to the £35 ‘normal’ amount for Gold priority rewards? If not, and you can indeed revert to this, then what has actually changed?

    • NorskSaint says:

      Correct. I booked a LHR/OSL flight using this method at the weekend, and as Rob states there is no other option than Avios + £1, you cannot adjust it.

      While it has curtailed their use, have to disagree with Rob slightly, don’t think its killed its value, just made less sense to use it. In my circumstance, 51k Avios + £2 far outweighed the £600 BA wanted for 2 seats on the same flight. Was my final 51k I had left to burn with BA.

      Having moved to Norway I now have the delights of SAS….. never complain about BA again!

    • Rob says:

      With a few rare exceptions you can’t get the agent to price it off the £35 fare.

      • David says:

        I got the £35 in early October for and early November INV-LHR with no haggling required so it must be a relatively new policy enforcement. Saved my bacon as they were the last 4 seats (full Y) and I’d left booking return from half term holiday in Scotland a tad late!

  • FrontFlyer says:

    Oh dear £4000 for a family of 4 to fly to Salzburg and back….better take the Montcler salopettes back to Sloane Street!! :- ))

    • jj says:

      When my kids were in school, we usually found it cheaper to go to North America at half term – especially some of the resorts like Jackson Hole with no direct lfights from the UK.

      Better skiing and much less crowded, too. Well worth the journey.

    • Doc says:

      US and Canadian resorts are far better value and stunning.

    • Lady London says:

      Moncler. No ‘t’.

  • Robert says:

    Does this impact 241 vouchers at all? I’m planning a switch from Marriott to BA AMEX in January, but would stick with Marriott if they also charge the higher avios figure with 241.

    • Peter K says:

      You need to read the article again to get the detail. This is nothing to do with 2-4-1 vouchers.

  • K says:

    Rob, when you write ‘one of my regular family runs to my sister-in-law in Dubai’ – do we assume you are visiting your wife’s sister, and not your brother?

  • ringingup says:

    I booked one on Saturday. The agent quote the price with £1 but when I said I wanted the standard price she quoted that, debited the Avios and said she had to send the booking to a queue for manual issuing.

  • Paul says:

    Rob surely you have enough contacts at BA to get a definitive ruling on this! While I am no longer a hold card holder, I did use this for ski flights and had to push back hard on the £1 fees issue to get standard redemptions and the double. BA ought to tell members officially about changes such as this as it was a stated benefit based on standard redemption. Isn’t it just likely that BAs incentivised call centre staff are being encouraged not to offer the standard rate?

  • Alex says:

    Not all agents will budge but reports on flyertalk seem to say that there is scope to get the old pricing. HUACA.

    • Kishan Majithia says:

      So the old pricing (ie £35 taxes for Europe) is still possible? And hence nothing has changed?

      • Mr. AC says:

        “Possible but requires wrangling and luck” etc. is not exactly something you want to describe a perk for a high-level frequent flyer status…

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