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British Airways wi-fi pricing revealed as in-flight trials begin

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If you read Head for Points on a regular basis you will know that British Airways is gearing up for the roll-out of wi-fi on its long-haul fleet very soon.  It is also coming to short-haul but with a different system.

What most people don’t know is that the system is already installed on many long-haul BA planes.  BA is not turning it on at the moment, presumably because it wants the majority of the fleet to be ready on Day 1.

Making a big song and dance about it, only for passengers to find out that they only have a small chance of being on a suitable plane, would be another PR mess.

British Airways 787

The BA long-haul wi-fi should be pretty good.  By holding back for a few years, it is now able to use ‘next generation’ technology which should allow connection speeds substantially better than you have experienced on other carriers.

To make sure that the system is running smoothly when installed, British Airways is currently testing wi-fi on random long-haul services.  There is no way of knowing that you are on one until the cabin crew announces it.

What will it cost?

Quite a lot.  In fact, more than I expected.

There are two levels of service.   If you want to stream video or do anything else which requires a lot of bandwidth, you will need to dig deep.  Here are the prices for ‘Connect Plus’ as BA calls it:

1 hour – £7.99

4 hours – £17.99

Entire flight – £23.99

Peak download speeds are stated as 20 Mbps with a peak upload speed of 2 Mbps.  On average users are told to expect between 25% and 50% of this speed.

Given typical UK residential speeds for anyone not on cable broadband this won’t be much worse than being at home.  A quick test on our Virgin Media cabled broadband wi-fi gave me 50+ Mbps but our backup Relish system, which works over the mobile spectrum, was only running at 5 Mbps.

If you want to do simple browsing, such as e-mail, it is cheaper – but still far from a bargain:

1 hour – £4.99

4 hours – £10.99

Entire flight – £14.99

The reason I am surprised by the pricing is that in-flight wi-fi is usually priced highly to artificially limit demand.  You can only get a decent speed if the majority of passengers do not try to use it.

Theoretically, the British Airways system can support more users at higher speeds than we have seen before.  BA does not need to price it at a level which will put off 90% of passengers, but it seems they are.

It appears, based on the trials, that all passengers have to pay irrespective of travel class. 

Notwithstanding the pricing, this is an important development for British Airways and one which I hope succeeds.  For every passenger who refuses to fly BA due to the seating or food quality, there is probably another who refuses purely on the basis that they cannot work in the air.


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Comments (120)

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

  • JamesB says:

    By the time they get round to introducing it we may no longer be allowed to take Wi-Fi enabled devices on board. What then, a £99 special offer for a kindle + Wi-Fi rental?

  • Mr 1A says:

    I was fortunate to receive an upgrade to QR F on a recent GDG-DOH leg and wifi on the A380 was complimentary.

    • Flyoff says:

      My family and I received an upgrade on QR to first on DOH-BKK. We received vouchers for free WIFI. I think BA should follow their lead for first passengers.

      • Ronster says:

        I agree when travelling in F, the wifi should have no charge.

        R

    • Rob says:

      That’s true. Didn’t mention it as Qatar only has long haul F on, what, 10 aircraft?

  • Stu R says:

    I won’t be connecting to any wifi on a plane – it’s the one time I get to sit back, relax, forget the woes of the world, watch the clouds out of the window, and occasionally watch a movie. Down with this obsession with wifi everywhere!

    • Nick says:

      +1

      I couldn’t agree more! As Paul also states above, it’s one of the few times you can actually switch off from emails and other business related issues. I know that I’ll be getting stressed now when I hear the pointless idiots sending their pointless communications, like, “I’m on the plane now”, “I’m having my lunch now”, I’m watching XYZ movie now”!

      • callum says:

        It’s not our fault you chose to get a high-pressure job that requires constant communication!

  • Jonny says:

    Two wifi questions:

    1. Will BA offer each pax a choice of virtual country? (e.g. I’d want my connection routed via the UK so BBC iPlayer works; an American customer might prefer the USA).

    2. Will they block/allow IP calling services – especially during ‘quiet hours’. I’m thinking of pax speaking loudly at night, on quiet aircraft like A380. Or worse, still using FaceTime on speakerphone. Trains already have quiet carriages – which staff find difficult to enforce.

    • Jon says:

      I sincerely hope they at least do (2). Can you imagine the likely rise in air-rage incidents / altercations if people start treating the aircraft as if it’s their personal office, in the way some do hotel lounges.

      • Alan says:

        Totally agree – was in Hilton Tallinn a couple of months ago. Lovely lounge, was empty when we went there apart from one other person – an American who does website design and was talking to his client back home – talking at full volume despite having headphones on. We were the far end of the pretty spacious lounge and his voice just boomed across. Whenever I’ve had to video or teleconference in to a meeting I’ve always done so from the privacy of my room, I find the lack of insight/manners from some folk quite impressive!

  • AndyGWP says:

    Couldnt the pricing be part of the pilot? (Assessing demand and trying not to overload the product in its early days??)

  • AndyGWP says:

    I only travel for pleasure, and often this can be on my own, so I find wifi quite useful but only use it to keep in touch with friends and family.

    AA have a great plan that costs $3 and gives messaging (only) for the length of the flight. I also liked the “15 minutes” free on the last Qatar flight I took.

    Hopefully after the pilot, new pricing and plans will be introduced with a similar vain.

  • Will P says:

    Surely they should consider this being complimentary for First passengers. I’m not sure paying £3000-4000 for a semi-peak return the extra is too palatable.

  • N says:

    No mention of the N-word anywhere in this article?

    *cough*Norwegian*cough*

    • James A says:

      Where it is free (not sure about long haul,but certainly short haul)

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