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Etihad Guest announces a huge devaluation from 8th July

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Etihad Guest surprised me yesterday by announcing a devaluation, due to kick in from July 8th.

Given their aggressive behaviour in recent months in offering transfer bonuses, route bonuses and credit card sign-up bonuses, you might be forgiven for thinking that you had been sold a pup.

At least British Airways didn’t have a single Tesco or American Express transfer bonus in the 18 months before the Avios devaluation.  No-one could argue that they had been persuaded to convert under false pretences.

Etihad 350

Here is a summary of what Etihad is proposing:

Reduction of miles earned in cheaper fare classes, offset by higher miles earning on more expensive tickets.  This will only apply to new bookings made after July 8th.  The new rates are:

0.25 Etihad Guest Miles per mile flown in economy on fare classes T and E

0.75 Etihad Guest Miles per mile flown in economy on fare classes L and Q

1.15 Etihad Guest Miles per mile flown in Business on fare class Z

1.75 Etihad Guest Miles per mile flown in Business on fare class D

2.5 Etihad Guest Miles per mile flown in First on fare class R

Number of reward seats in business class increasing by 20%.  I don’t understand this – Etihad traditionally releases two seats per flight in business.  Will there now be 2.4 seats?!  If the airline had any commercial nous, they would start releasing four seats per flight.  At the moment, Etihad Guest miles are very unattractive to high-end travellers with family as it is impossible to redeem in business class unless the family is split up.

Redemptions are being repriced:

Economy redemptions do not change in price and will fall for flights over 6,000 miles.  A minimum of five economy seats will be released on every flight.

Business Class redemptions will increase in price except for flights over 6,000 miles where they will remain the same.  The scale of these increases is SUBSTANTIAL – London to Abu Dhabi increases by 50%.

First Class redemptions will increase to all destinations.  It is difficult to argue about the logic here.  The difference between Business Class (44,000 miles) and First Class (55,000 miles) one-way to Abu Dhabi was too small.  However, a 59% INCREASE between London and Abu Dhabi is huge. I have summarised the new rates between London and Abu Dhabi below.

Existing redemptions can be changed at will without triggering any price increase.

Upgrades will become more expensive and the cheapest tickets (T, E, Z) will not be upgradeable.  At present, only ‘T’ fares cannot be upgraded.

This is the best one though …. at a time of collapsing oil prices, Etihad Guest is INTRODUCING a fuel surcharge / carrier surcharge:  

It will cost $50 PER FLIGHT on economy redemptions, $100 PER FLIGHT on business class redemptions and $150 PER FLIGHT on First Class redemptions.  This is on top of the additional miles that will be required. 

Note that these are ‘per flight’ – a business class redemption to Bangkok from London via Abu Dhabi is four flights so the surcharge will be $400. 

What is impact of this on a typical redemption?

These are the new prices for redemption (return) between London and Abu Dhabi:

Today:

Economy:  62,044 miles

Business:  87,952 miles

First:  110,452 miles

After 8th July:

Economy:  62,044 miles plus $100 surcharge

Business:  131,928 miles plus $200 surcharge

First:  175,465 miles plus $300 surcharge

If you want to check the pricing on other routes, the online Mileage Calculator is here.

These are big increases.  There is no disguising it.  An increase of 50% in the miles required for a business class redemption – plus introducing a surcharge – is having a laugh.  The Avios devaluation only resulted in a 25% increase in Club World pricing if you flew off-peak.

Of course, you should look at these numbers in the context of Avios.  Given a choice between using 120,000 Avios + £550 of charges to fly Club World to Abu Dhabi or Dubai, versus 132,000 Etihad Guest miles + around £350 of charges to fly the A380 Business Class Studio it is still no contest.  Etihad Guest also gives you free chauffeur transfers at both ends as well.

Emirates Skywards now tops both of these schemes.  You will only need 90,000 miles plus around £600 of charges for a ‘Saver’ level business class return to Dubai.  If you pay the higher level of 125,000 miles you can effectively have any seat on any plane.

That said, if it turns out that I will be able to book four Etihad Guest seats in Business Class to get my family on holiday, I may even begrudgingly accept the changes.  At present, Etihad Guest is a fantastic scheme but not one I can use except for occasional solo trips.

If you don’t like the sound of these changes, I recommend that you book before July 8th if you are looking for a Business or First Class seat.

Further details can be found on the Etihad website here.

Remember that you can also redeem American Airlines miles for travel on Etihad – at least for now.  I would not put money on that deal still being in place in 12 months.  Redemptions via AA will cost substantially fewer miles (London to Abu Dhabi will be 60,000 AA miles in Business Class vs 132,000 Etihad Guest miles) and should not incur any carrier surcharges.


How to earn Etihad Guest miles from UK credit cards

How to earn Etihad Guest miles from UK credit cards (April 2024)

Etihad Guest does not have a UK credit card.  However, you can earn Etihad Guest miles by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards.

Cards earning Membership Rewards points include:

Membership Rewards points convert at 1:1 into Etihad Guest miles which is an attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 1 Etihad Guest mile. The Gold card earns double points (2 per £1) on all flights you charge to it.

Comments (85)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Douglas says:

    Is there any recommendations on what to do with 20k points? I’m not investing more points on them!

    • Rob says:

      Short-hauls around the Middle East. Alitalia is now a partner so you may be able to get to Italy. airberlin has no flights from the UK, oddly.

      • Phillip says:

        SAA redemptions are really cheap if you happen to find yourself in SA and need some internal flights!

  • Hingeless says:

    As I understand t class fairs currently earn 0%, so this is an improvement?

  • Jason says:

    If you book, for example on July 1st 2015, do you have to complete the journey by july 1st 2016?
    Or could you re-book foe Sep/oct 2016

    • Phillip says:

      On the 8 July 2015, reward flights will be available for booking up to approximately the first week of June 2016. That’s as far ahead as you’ll be able to book.

      • Phillip says:

        Obviously you’d want to book by the 7 July to utilise the old rates.

        • Jason says:

          thats how far you can book on July 7th, however I briefly read somewhere you can do one change, can that change take you past July 7th 2016?

  • James says:

    And another one bites the dust.

    • Phillip says:

      It’s Virgin’s turn! Although it sounds like Cathay is also planning its Asia Miles devaluation.

    • Rob says:

      I just got an email this morning saying that my Etihad credit card application has been approved 🙂

  • darrenf says:

    Suddenly I am very glad I didn’t book a mileage run under the 4x offer.

  • Oscarthegrouch says:

    I’m sorry, here it comes.

    I know sir raffles is beyond reproach, and that I owe him a great many things for some fabulous nuggets of information that he posts. It does have to be said that this blog, and the American ones have led directly to this massive devaluation.

    I guess all I can say is ‘told you so’. I begged you to stop going on about etihads generousity.

    Go ahead, shoot me down.

    • Rob says:

      Given that Etihad is a genuinely global airline, I doubt a few Brits shooting up and down to Abu Dhabi has made a lot of difference! I would point you towards triple / quadruple miles offers, continual 25% bonuses on credit card transfers and outsized credit card sign-up bonuses as a bigger sign of trouble!

      • Jason says:

        Let’s be honest, when your pricing, to dxb/AUH, is so out of kilter with your competition ie too cheap and it’s the best product out there, then this was always going to happen.
        It’s still very competitive, just harder to achieve 🙁

  • czechoslovakia says:

    Based north of Watford, therefore a “regions” person, can sympathise with you Rob, and fully understand how it feels to be kicked in the unmentionables by a FFP. Get burning those miles, chief.

  • James67 says:

    The extra seats being releasedare only on selected routes. I think they list them on their changes page. My guess is they prefer to limit to 2 seats to keep childrens numbers in premium cabins down. Any airlibe doing so is daft though, over the years the vast majority of inappropriate vehaviour I have experienced on board aircraft is by adults, not kids.

    Personally I feel mugged by Etihad. I tra sferred 38k spg points to them last weekend mainly on basis of the flexibility of their redemptions. My alternative to transfer them to AA would now clearly be significantly better despite their change and cancellation fees.

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