Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Get a 30% bonus on Tesco Clubcard to Virgin Flying Club conversions

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Tesco has launched a 30% bonus on transfers of Tesco Clubcard points to Virgin Atlantic’s Flying Club. This means that you will receive 325 miles per £1 of Clubcard vouchers you convert, rather than the standard 250.

I assume that this deal was planned before the announcement of the Avios devaluation on Wednesday.  The timing is excellent, however!

Full details are here on the Tesco website. The deals runs to March 31st 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.

What intrigues me is that this is better than the 20% bonus offered last Autumn.  Virgin offered a 30% bonus in January 2014 and September 2013 (and 50% in January 2013) but I thought the trend was permanently downwards.  Perhaps not.

British Airways will NOT be launching a conversion bonus this quarter. Instead, you can win a meal at The Savoy in London with one entry for every 500 Clubcard points you convert.

Should you jump to Virgin Flying Club now that British Airways is devaluing Avios?

Perhaps.  But DO NOT do it just because of the devaluation.

Virgin generally copies everything that British Airways does.  It is not a coincidence that their premium credit card offers 18,500 miles as a bonus when the British Airways Premium Plus offers 18,000.  The two tend to move in step.

It would make commercial logic for Virgin to do a similar devaluation over the next few months.  As long as it isn’t as bad as the BA devaluation, they will still come out smelling of roses.

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 UK half-term.

It is also worth noting that Virgin has been cutting its route network.  Any route which does not fly to North America or the Caribbean should be seen as under threat.  If they pulled high yielding Tokyo – which they did recently – then nothing is safe.

2. Cheaper taxes in Economy – but no longer fewer miles

Virgin Atlantic has lower taxes than BA on Economy redemptions. These are quite aggressive – New York is £120 cheaper than BA. Virgin also historically required fewer miles – New York is 35,000 in Economy vs 40,000 with Avios.  This has now reversed, however, due to the new off peak Avios redemptions.

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:

New York today, economy: Virgin £248 & 35,000 (British Airways: £336 & 40,000)

New York post April 28, economy:  Virgin £248 & 35,000 (British Airways off-peak:  £336 & 26,000)

New York today, business:  Virgin £488 & 80,000 (British Airways £508 & 80,000)

New York post April 28, business:  Virgin £488 & 80,000 (British Airways off-peak:  £508 & 100,000)

Las Vegas today, economy: Virgin £218 & 42,500 (British Airways: £362 & 50,000)

Las Vegas post April 28, economy:  Virgin £218 & 42,500 (British Airways off-peak:  £362 & 32,500)

Las Vegas today, business:  Virgin £499 & 100,000 (British Airways: £553 & 100,000)

Las Vegas post April 28, business:  Virgin £499 & 100,000 (British Airways off-peak:  £553 & 125,000)

A key point to note here is that – at off-peak times – the new British Airways economy rates are very aggressive.  26,000 Avios for a return flight to New York is very good.  If fuel surcharges come down then these will look very attractive, although at the moment you may prefer to use more Virgin miles and pay the lower surcharges.

3. Availability

I do not redeem on Virgin, so cannot comment on how easy or hard it is to get availability. In general, 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.  We don’t know enough about the new British Airways availability patterns to make a fair comparison.

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 30% 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 325 Virgin miles which is 487 Hilton points. At 0.3p, they are worth £1.46. 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 325 Virgin miles which is 325 IHG Rewards Club points. At 0.5p that, that is just £1.62 of value. Avoid, unless you are just topping up your account.

6. 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.

7. Easy to collect additional miles

It is 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 something to offer the person who redeems in Economy – lower taxes 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 this Summer.

At peak BA dates, you will also require fewer miles to fly Virgin in economy.  On off-peak BA dates it is not so clear cut.

For business class redemptions, it is also less clear cut. Smaller cabins, a smaller route network and fewer daily flights may make it trickier to find seats.  You will need fewer miles on Virgin after April 28th but how long will that last? And there is no British Airways American Express 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 4 taking multiple long-haul flights each year.

Virgin also has ‘route risk’ now.  Non-North America routes are being cut aggressively.  If you are planning to fly east rather than west, be aware that your route may not exist in a year.

You have until March 31st to decide whether to convert or not.


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 (77)

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

  • Chewbacca says:

    Me and Mrs Chewbacca have 21k virgin atlantic flying club miles earnt in Q4 2014 (only collect Avios at moment) Can we do anything with these. A quick look last year looked like could upgrade on a US flight and that’s about it. Routes seemed mainly to US out of London?

    Currently Tesco is sent to auto convert to Avios, can I get the bonus to convert to Virgin if I switch? We only have one clubcard account can we open another and get another conversion bonus?

    • Pol says:

      You can upgrade any Virgin flight, not just to the US (although Virgin’s network is limited) You don’t need another club card account if you are both named on the one account. I set the auto convert to my Virgin account, got the bonus miles within a week, turned it off, then using the same club card account set it to auto convert to my husband’s Virgin account and got the bonus miles for that too. I have never actually auto converted any miles as i immediately turned my husband’s account off auto convert as soon as his miles posted!

      upgrade table for Virgin.
      http://www.virgin-atlantic.com/gb/en/flying-club/spend-miles/reward-flights.html

      • Kai says:

        I remember that only full prices tickets are entitled to upgrade.

        • Pol says:

          Not only full price tickets. The very cheapest tickets can not be upgraded but there are lots of fare buckets that can be.
          Y, B, R, L, U and M economy fares and W and S premium economy.
          A double upgrade from M to G seems to be the most popular across FF forums.

  • Johnny says:

    This was my question – I have changed over my auto convert from BA to Virgin – but was not sure if I would get the bonus 30% on points earned over the coming weeks. If not will just convert back!

    • Pol says:

      You only get the bonus when the actual vouchers convert at Qend so no you wouldn’t earn the bonus on upcoming points. You can just turn auto convert off when the miles post, no need to ever actually convert anything.

      • Chewbacca says:

        Pol do you mean switching the autoconver within Tesco will trigger the 1000 points into Virgin account and that any presently earned Tesco points don’t need to be switched over at next quarter? So you can switch back do other half’s points then switch off or back to Avios and transfer as normal next quarter end?

        Just been looking at Virgin flights to New York when you select money and miles it seems to give money and like 1000 points is there a pro rata option where you can dump all the miles and pay cash for the balance? How would that work when booking where miles are in our virgin accounts do you put in account number?

        • Pol says:

          That’s how it worked for me. I switched on auto convert about a month ago (I had £35 of vouchers in my account from that quarter) it posted the 1000 miles but didn’t convert the vouchers I already had. I then switched the auto convert to my husband’s account, the miles posted but the vouchers again didn’t convert. I then switched it off my husband’s account and the vouchers from this quarter just came as vouchers so didn’t auto convert either. In all I managed to get 2000 miles without any tesco vouchers/points converting at all.

        • Pol says:

          For the Miles and money, It just gives you a set amount off for a small number of miles, There’s no part pay option like with avois. You can buy the extra miles for a full redemption though, which I guess is what avois points and cash fares are really doing.
          I just priced up 2 returns for my brother and his wife to New York in the summer holidays out economy return upper, he was 52,000 miles short for a straight redemption but buying the extra 52,000 miles and paying the taxes came to £649 each plus the 40,000 miles he already had.

          • Pol says:

            I always phone to book, unlike BA virgin don’t charge a phone booking fee and I’ve always found their flying clubs reps extremley knowledgable. I spent about an hour on the phone to them pricing up the above mentioned brothers flight. They went through every possible option with me, upgrading, combi fares, buying extra miles etc. Just make sure you phone the flying club number NOT general reservations.
            0344 412 2414
            You can book miles plus money, one way, return and open jaw (including mixed class) online just sign into your flying club account first. (for open jaw click on the more options bit under where you input your destination.

  • Gordon says:

    Managed to book 4 virgin upper class seats this july to orlando and have reserved the first two rows in the nose. The kids cant wait to sit at the bar 🙂

  • Anon says:

    The ABZ – MAN link with Flybe is OK, but not cheap.

    Agreed EC Virgin sale redemption at 25k miles + Amex PE upgrade voucher is the one to aim for, £380 rtn to MCO, bargain!

  • Matthew says:

    Virgin will also put award seats on hold for you upto 3 days which is very useful whilst waiting for points to post from Tesco or MR for example. You can only do this on the phone though,

  • erico1875 says:

    Are all the miles quoted for partners RTN amounts or OW prices
    Looking at GULF AIR. Economy ,London to Bahrain is only 24k miles and then onto India for another 18k. (total 42K) compared to BA 50K.

  • Alan says:

    I’m guessing this bonus applies to each transfer made during the period. I’ve got a couple of £50 Clubcard vouchers expiring later this year so might make a small redemption out of each on to recycle the funds and take a bit of an advantage of this promo.

    • Simon says:

      I can’t see anything that it is limited to only one transfer, in the past with Virgin I’ve done lots of transfers during a bonus period as opposed to one big transfer to try to avoid any security checks by Tesco and all the transfers have got the bonus.

  • PJK says:

    Has anyone tried transferring from multiple Clubcard accounts to the same Virgin (or Avios) account? We have 1 Tesco CC account each but only 1 Virgin and I was wondering whether there’s a problem or a risk with combining totals in this way.

    Most CC points are in 1 account anyway so I’ve transferred that one but if I can get another 10,000 miles out of the lesser Tesco account, that would be great!

    • avidsaver says:

      It’s my understanding and it’s also on the Tesco CC (Virgin Atlantic) web page that CC Vouchers registered at the same address can be pooled.
      “Vouchers may be pooled but only by members with accounts registered with Clubcard at the same postal address. Vouchers must be in date and not sold, damaged, defaced, copied, altered or redeemed.”
      Make sure you pay them to the Virgin Account via your original CC Account to your Virgin Atlantic Flyer Club Number.

      • avidsaver says:

        NB You need to manually enter the lesser account numbers via your cc account.

        • Janeyferr says:

          I’ve done this before, as mother owed me some Clubcard points.

          Just sign in to you own account, add the Virgin boost to your basket, then on the “payment” page enter the code from the parent/child/partner/hamster’s Clubcard voucher instead of selecting one of your own to pay with.

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