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20% bonus on Tesco Clubcard transfers to Virgin Flying Club – a good deal?

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Tesco has launched a 20% bonus on transfers of Tesco Clubcard points to Virgin Atlantic’s Flying Club. This means that you will receive 300 miles per £1 of Clubcard vouchers you convert, rather than the standard 250.

Full details are here on the Tesco website. The deals runs to September 5th, and the miles generally appear 1-2 days after initiating the transfer.

Virgin is also repeating its offer of 1,000 bonus Virgin miles for opting-in for auto-conversion of your Clubcard points each quarter to Virgin.

(Nothing stops you agreeing to this and then cancelling after one quarter! If you have a dormant Clubcard account, you should set that up to auto-convert to Virgin Flying Club – based on last year, you will still receive the bonus miles even though nothing is being sent over. You cannot earn this bonus if you have previously had an auto-convert bonus.)

This bonus is worse than the 30% bonus offered in January 2014 and September 2013, and substantially worse than the 50% offered in January 2013.  It is another sign of a pick-up in the economy, with Virgin less desperate for the cash from Tesco. I also would not bet on British Airways launching any sort of bonus.

Here is a reminder of some of the key features of Virgin Flying Club if you were considering doing a transfer:

1. Diversification

British Airways can fly you to pretty much anywhere that Virgin Atlantic can. However, that doesn’t mean they can get you Avios seats when you want them. Having a balance in another programme gives you more chance of getting seats on the dates you want them.

Both BA and Virgin allow one-way redemptions, so with a Virgin balance you could mix and match a trip as availability allows. Virgin also partners with Delta in the US and a number of other airlines.

However, Virgin and BA are both UK-focussed airlines, so you are likely to face an identical squeeze around UK school holidays. You may want to expand into Star Alliance and redeem on, say, Lufthansa if you want a better chance of seats at – say – UK half-term.

2. Fewer miles, cheaper taxes in Economy

Virgin has lower taxes than BA on Economy redemptions. These are quite aggressive – New York is £120 cheaper than BA. Virgin also requires fewer miles – New York is 35,000 in Economy vs 40,000 with Avios. However, Upper Class flights generally match BA in the miles and taxes required.

(BA also lets you redeem on carriers such as airberlin and Aer Lingus who charge minimal taxes, far less than even Virgin does.  See our ‘Avios Redemption University‘ articles to learn more about this.)

Virgin also runs occasional but fairly regular redemption sales, with big discounts on the miles needed for economy class redemptions.

Here is a sample of charges compared to BA (these figures were correct at the start of the year):

New York £240 (British Airways: £359) 35,000 miles (40,000 Avios)

Barbados £237 (British Airways: £328) 45,000 miles (50,000 Avios)

Las Vegas £213 (British Airways: £356) 42,500 miles (50,000 Avios)

Johannesburg £362 (British Airways: £400) 50,000 miles (50,000 Avios)

Dubai £243 (British Airways: £335) 38,500 miles (40,000 miles)

3. Availability

I do not redeem on Virgin, so cannot comment on how easy or hard it is to get availability. In general, though, Upper Class cabins have fewer seats than BA Club World cabins, with subsequent squeezes on availability. Is it easy to get 4 Upper Class seats on Virgin for a family? I don’t know. Not that BA availability is good for much on a lot of routes at the moment either ….

You can check availability on the Virgin website without having enough miles in your account to do the redemption. You should spend some time researching your favourite routes before deciding whether to commit miles to Flying Club.

4. No 2-4-1 Amex voucher, but an upgrade voucher

There is no equivalent of the BA Amex 2-4-1 voucher. The Virgin credit card does give a 2-4-1 voucher but ONLY ON FLEXIBLE CASH TICKETS. You can, however, get a voucher with the Virgin credit card to upgrade Economy redemptions to Premium Economy for no extra miles. The two Virgin credit cards are reviewed here and here. Their home page is here.

5. Fallback option of transferring to Hilton HHonors or IHG Rewards Club

Rare among airline schemes, Virgin lets you transfer miles out into Hilton HHonors (2:3) or IHG Rewards Club (the Holiday Inn etc scheme) at 1:1. There is a minimum transfer of 10,000 Virgin miles. If you found yourself struggling to use your Virgin miles, you could also move them across.

A 20% transfer bonus does NOT make such transfers a great deal, however.

I value Hilton HHonors points at 0.3p. A £1 Tesco voucher gets you 300 Virgin miles which is 450 Hilton points. At 0.3p, they are worth £1.35. Terrible, less than 1.5x the face value of your Clubcard points.

Similarly, I value IHG Rewards Club points at 0.5p. A £1 Tesco voucher gets you 300 Virgin miles which is 300 IHG Rewards Club points. At 0.5p that, that is just £1.50 of value. Avoid, unless you are just topping up your account.

6. Finally … a much improved cancellation policy

It used to be that if you had to cancel at 7+ days out, you lost 25% of your miles. If you cancelled within 7 days, you lost ALL your miles. BA, on the other hand, lets you cancel up to 24 hours before the flight with no penalty at all.

As I wrote here, Virgin changed its rules last year.  They now have a cancellation policy in line with British Airways.

7. The Heathrow Clubhouse

The Virgin lounge at Heathrow, for Upper Class passengers, is widely regarded as one of the best airport lounges in the world. Get a haircut, have a massage, eat a proper meal, chill out in the audio or TV rooms or do one of many other (admittedly ‘boys toys’ type) activities. Well worth trying once in your life.

Note that, whilst full fare cash tickets in Upper Class also get a free chauffeur to and from the airport, reward tickets do NOT get this.

8. Easy to collect additional miles

It is now as easy to collect Flying Club miles as it is Avios. You can transfer from Tesco, Amex Membership Rewards and Heathrow Rewards, as well as all the major hotel schemes. As I wrote here, some major hotel chains do not give Avios but do offer Flying Club miles.

There is a shopping portal similar to the Avios estore. There are also decent promotions, eg 5,000 miles for opening an ISA.

Conclusion

Flying Club has a lot of offer the person who redeems in Economy. Lower taxes, fewer miles required and the ability to upgrade to Premium Economy for free via the credit card voucher.

You even get the option of selected long haul departures from Manchester, which BA abandoned long ago.  There will even be a handful of flights from Glasgow and Belfast next Summer.

For business class redemptions, it is less clear cut. Smaller cabins, a smaller route network and fewer daily flights may make it trickier to find seats, whilst taxes and miles required tend to mirror BA. And there is no Amex 241 voucher, which for a couple effectively makes a ‘once a year’ redeemer require twice the miles. (It has a proportionately lower impact on a family of four taking multiple long-haul flights each year.)

You have until September 5th to decide whether to do a transfer ……


How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (April 2024)

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, the Reward+ card has a bonus of 15,000 Virgin Points):

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

15,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

A generous earning rate for a free card at 0.75 points per £1 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.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with 40,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 40,000 Virgin Points.

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Small business owners should consider the two American Express Business cards. Points convert at 1:1 into Virgin Points.

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year 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 (65)

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

  • Billy says:

    I used miles to upgrade to Upper last year, and availed of Virgin’s excellent drive through check in.

    I booked my approximate arrival time at LHR, and from my standard taxi called en route with make, model and reg for taxi.

    Arrived at the drive through area, door was opened, I got out and was handed my boarding pass, someone carried my luggage through to the scales and I then headed to VS’s private security lane.

    And then to the Clubhouse for haircut, breakfast and cocktails.

    Best use of Clubcard points ever!

  • Richie says:

    Cue the 100s of post ”when will tesco have a ba bonus”…

  • Chris says:

    Just back from LAX on Upper Class last night. It really is an excellent product, just being able to get away from your seat for a while to go sit at the bar makes all the difference. It doesn’t really feel like travelling. Mrs got a pre flight manicure in the clubhouse as well while i sat and watched sky sports with a martini…. Win-Win

    • Rob says:

      The bar (more specifically, the sofa-style seating in the bar) on Emirates works well. I can go and sit there with the kids whilst they play with their ipads and it is not massively different on being on the sofa at home!

  • andystock says:

    Virgin – no short haul European network to use your points on.

    • squills says:

      Yep that’s why I’ve been sitting on 100K points for the last 16 years 😉

      Had to keep them alive by hook or by crook, it wasn’t easy at first but since the shopping portal opened has become really simple.

      I’m just hoping there’ll be a way to convert them to Avios or else that they open up a decent partnership in Europe etc, otherwise it’ll be 2 OAPs taking a trip to somewhere exotic in about another 15 years!

      • ECR says:

        I think you can covert Virgin Flying Club points to Avios indirectly. You covert to Virgin to Hilton HHonors points and then from Hilton HHonors to Avios. The rate though is very poor.

        • Rob says:

          Correct. Not worth it AT ALL. Better to get your VS miles up to enough to book a one way then book the return on Avios!

          Or just move them to Hilton or IHG Rewards Club and use for hotels.

      • signol says:

        Keeping them alive is easy and cheap. Buy an advance ticket for anywhere on Virgin Trains, eg. Rugby to MK for about £3 with a railcard discount (it doesn’t matter if you don’t have one unless you actually intend to use it)

  • Volker says:

    If I was a Virgin traveller, I would definitely go for the offer. I am not. I stick with BA/Avios instead, leaving my Clubcard vouchers in that famous drawer while waiting for a conversion bonus. Now the inevitable has happened and my Clubcard account got hacked (like so many others) – all vouchers waiting for conversion gone. Yes, I do get them back (in November according to Tesco, unless I phone them up and make things urgent). There won’t be any conversion bonuses in the near future, unless, maybe, Scotland becomes independent and the (rest-)British economy goes downhill…

  • Cosmo74 says:

    I’m currently looking at award flights to the Caribbean in early 2015 – despite their smaller cabins, Virgin have far greater availability than BA, so at first glance at least it would appear that Virgin are more generous with their awards than BA, who frankly are being completely stingy right now.

    • Pat Butcher says:

      Is there an easier way to check availability than use virgins website?

      • Cosmo74 says:

        Not that I’ve found I’m afraid. Once you’ve got in the calendar view you can easily see the availability for that route on a month by month basis, but I’ve not come across anything like Tim’s redemption finder App which makes searching nice and easy.

        • Andy says:

          There was a gut that developed exactly that, a program that showed every redemption availability on every route with VA, but for some reason after a couple of months it got pulled. I think he sited that he wasn’t making any money on it.
          It was a brilliant little application, showed availability in a mater of seconds

  • Leo says:

    @Ruffles, we respect your right to repost archive articles when relevant, I just think there should be an update about BA’s reward-bookings cancellation policy which, I think, has changed…

    • Rob says:

      BA’s cancellation policy has not changed, they have simply upped the fee to £35. (If you are BA Gold, admittedly, that is £35 increase.)

      I was not trying to imply that BA and Virgin have identical cancellation policies. The Virgin one was so bad before that is was a positive reason to avoid Flying Club, this is no longer the case and that was the point I wanted to make.

  • Felix Flyer says:

    Can anyone give an indication of what availability is like for a family of 3 in Upper Class or economy to North America in the summer holidays? Also I am the only Flying Club account holder in my family. Would I still be able to book for my wife and son? Thanks for any advice as I’m just trying to see if I should convert a fair proportion of my clubcard points or not.

    • Rob says:

      You can check yourself looking 11 months ahead – just sign up a Virgin account and search for reward availability.

      No problem booking for multiple people from your account – you can even book for someone else even if you are not travelling with them (as with BA).

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

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