Virgin Atlantic’s best redemption – reviewing Air China business class from London to Beijing
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This is our review of Air China business class between London and Beijing.
Last week Rob ran an article on the best Virgin Atlantic airline partner redemptions (click here). Hands down, the best value is Air China in Business Class from London to Beijing. It costs 63,000 Virgin Flying Club miles return in Business Class or 75,000 miles in First Class. Taxes are around £500 return and availability is excellent.
Given that you can get between 5,000 and 15,000 Virgin Flying Club miles for free with the new Virgin Mastercard credit cards – and earn up to 1.5 miles per £1 on your spending – this is a reward that is within reach for many.
But, Air China?
For many people that is an unknown quantity.
So, when reader Joel booked Air China business class between London and Beijing on its Boeing 777 aircraft and asked us if we were interested in a review, we were happy to bend our ‘no reader reviews’ policy. Over to Joel:
Review of Air China business class from London to Beijing
“I did not actually book this trip using Virgin miles, but instead paid cash during an Air China sale covered on HfP. You would obviously get the same experience if you booked with miles.
Air China operates a Boeing 777-300ER (ie Extended Range) for this flight which had a three cabin layout.
There are 42 Business Class seats. As usual you should do your homework before choosing a seat. The seats closest to the front and rear of the cabin do experience the brunt of the foot, restroom and crew traffic.
A and L seats are window seats with a neighbour, and do not have direct aisle access. You may have to do some climbing if your neighbour is asleep and in lie-flat mode. D, C, H and J seats have direct aisle access but are not by a window. If you are in a C or J seat your neighbour will be climbing over you whenever they get up.
I sat in 14D on both legs which had enough distance between the crew and meal preparation sections. Here it is:
and:
These are ‘cubby hole’ seats as you find with many modern business class configurations, albeit not on BA or Virgin:
The crew weren’t too keen on pictures (!) and this is the best I could sneak while boarding and then sat down.
With a 60-inch pitch and 22-inch width, the seat reclines the full 180 degrees. You don’t get any additional ‘bedding’ beyond a large blanket, designed to go under then around you.
I wasn’t sure about the colour and design choice for the upholstery (it being Air China I had expected reds) but it isn’t an eye sore and works well with the mood lighting. I found the cabin quite warm on the outward journey but the crew weren’t able to correct this and I seemed to be the only person saying it. It may have just been the body heat of everyone else sleeping.
The crew will hang your coat for you as there isn’t any vertical storage space with the seat. As expected, you have the overheard bin to yourself and some small storage behind your head off-centre.
Here is a broader shot of the cabin:
The Business Class cabin was full on the outbound journey and at approximately 50% on the return.
The mood lighting was appropriate for the times of day during the journey and the crew keep the lights quite dim during sleeping hours.
IFE
As you would expect there was a large selection of movies – over 100 – but mostly in Chinese.
There were also non-sequential episodes of American TV shows (season 3 episode 8, for example) so I stuck to a few movies (San Andreas and Jurassic World were the newest Western films!) and my iPad.
Due to the somewhat odd seat layout, you are not centred to the screen (which is off-centre to your right) but you won’t notice this once you’re focused on the show.
There is no wi-fi but each seat does have some form of power outlet even if just USB 5v.
Amenities
Air China provide L’Occitane bags in First and Business Class with the usual contents. This is a step up from what you would get in British Airways Club World:
While you get some rather snazzy slippers, no pyjamas are provided in Business Class.
Food
Each journey provided a Chinese or Western food option, with various bits of overlap between the two. In reality you only choose your main item and have no say on the others (or perhaps that was lost in translation). You usually get given all of the desserts which is rather wonderful! You are asked to choose all of your meals at the beginning of the flight, before or just after take-off, and then the menu is taken away.
Outbound
The outbound flight to Beijing leaves just after lunch (14:10) so you are offered a combined lunch and dinner.
First I had a Thai Chicken Brochette (apologies for the colours due to the mood lighting!):
Then a marinated prawns with Greek Salad, endive lettuce, chicory, feta cheese and tomato with a dill mustard dressing (that packs a punch!) and a warm soft and delicious bread roll.
The feta and olive tomato stuffed chicken breast (a tiny bit dry) with diced pumpkin (a little too soft) and creamy spinach was – as a whole – wonderful!
Desert was fruit and Haagen-Dazs ice cream.
Breakfast
I chose the Chinese breakfast (start as you mean to go on…) but the cous cous congee wasn’t something I particularly enjoyed. They aren’t kidding about the salted egg either!
The dumplings were wonderful. The pain au chocolate (perfectly warm and soft with gooey chocolate) was added to my dumpling plate as there was nowhere else for it to be set down.
Between the First and Business cabins is a self-service snack location if you get peckish.
Inbound
Flying back to London, the starter was smoked salmon and teriyaki chicken skewer:
Pre-bread was sautéed black fungus with spring onion (great, in small doses); five spicy smoked pomfret (not my taste!) and marinated celery with walnuts and black fungus (delicious). Delicious wuxi pork spare ribs with steam rice were served on the same tray.
Desert was dark chocolate truffle cake with some fruit:
As a light meal, served as a single tray were smoked marlin, prawns and vegetable salad with grapefruit dressing. I skipped the marlin!
The Kang Shi Fu Beef Noodles were fantastic and I’m very glad I stuck to the Chinese dish for this meal.
Service
The cabin crew were attentive and friendly but held back by the language barrier. On both flights only two of the cabin crew were comfortable engaging in English. The others were more hesitant but remained incredibly attentive to refilling glasses or cleaning items as this didn’t require much of a conversation.
The restrooms used by the Business Class cabin were kept clean and well-stocked throughout the flights.
Conclusion
Looking at other reviews online, most people tend to negatively judge Air China based on service. In my experience, over two flights, the crew did the best they could and all other aspects – besides verbal communication – were fully up to international standards.
Air China has a good business product and is an excellent Virgin Flying Club redemption option between the UK and Beijing.
Full details of the Virgin Flying Club / Air China partnership can be found on the Virgin Atlantic website here. As well as redeeming miles, you can also earn Virgin miles on this particular Air China route.
PS. Remember that you cannot use the 144-hour visa waiver if you only fly to Beijing and back. You would need to add a separate flight from Beijing to a third country and leave China within five days. If you are flying back to London you would need to apply for a Chinese Visa in advance.
How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (October 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 18,000 Virgin Points and the free card has a bonus of 3,000 Virgin Points):
Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard
18,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review
Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard
3,000 bonus points, no fee and 1 point for every £1 you spend 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 great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review
Small business owners should consider the two American Express Business cards. Points convert at 1:1 into Virgin Points.
SPECIAL OFFER: Until 22nd October 2024, the bonus on American Express Business Platinum is increased to up to 80,000 Membership Rewards points, worth 80,000 Virgin Points. You will receive 8 points per £1 spent for the first three months, on up to £10,000 of spending. Click here to read our full card review. Click here to apply.
SPECIAL OFFER: Until 22nd October 2024, the bonus on American Express Business Gold is increased to up to 40,000 Membership Rewards points, worth 40,000 Virgin Points. You will receive 4 points per £1 spent for the first three months, on up to £10,000 of spending. The card is FREE for your first year. Click here to read our full card review. Click here to apply.
American Express Business Platinum
Up to 80,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review
American Express Business Gold
Get up to 40,000 points as a sign-up offer 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.)
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