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How I (almost) recreated British Airways Club Europe business class on Vueling for £64

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I was in Gatwick’s South Terminal last Thursday reviewing the new My Lounge lounge as you may have seen on Monday.  I was on my way to Barcelona to do a review for Marriott which will run in a day or so.

Flying early in the morning from Gatwick South meant flying Vueling, BA’s low-cost Spanish sister airline, as the BA flights departed too late for my schedule.

Last year we tried to review Vueling’s Excellence business class service.  I say ‘tried’ because Anika’s flight was moved to a charter aircraft and she was downgraded.  Since then, Vueling has dropped Excellence and I wanted to see what had replaced it.

Vueling review

Last Summer I did a popular piece on trying to recreate the British Airways Club Europe experience on easyJet.  This seemed a good opportunity to try the same thing with Vueling.

What does it cost to recreate British Airways Club Europe on Vueling?

In the end, it came out at £64 for the one way trip to Barcelona.  You really can’t complain about that.

The base fare was just €32 (£29).  This came with a 10kg hand baggage allowance which was all I needed.  Unlike, say, Ryanair, at no point was my hand baggage weighed and at no point was I expected to fit it inside a measuring gauge.  The whole experience was very grown up.

I’m getting ahead of myself.  This is how I planned my ‘Club Europe lite’ trip.

The £64 cost broke down as:

€32 (£29) base fare – I will earn some Avios back in my Vueling Club account based on 4 Avios per €1, although this will be after some taxes are deducted

€18 (£16) additional payment for a Row 1 seat, which included Group 1 boarding

£15 payment for access to My Lounge at Gatwick South, which comes with use of the Priority Security lane – and I got 400 Virgin Flying Club miles back via this promotion 

€4 (£4) for a coffee and piece of cake on board – to be fair, I would have needed to spend €10 to get nearer to a Club Europe meal experience

This replicates, almost perfectly, the British Airways Club Europe package with the following exceptions:

DOWNSIDE – Vueling sells the middle seat (and it was sold on my flight); no wardrobes; no checked baggage allowance

UPSIDE – far wider food selection on Vueling than BA; seat selection is included in the prices I quoted; Row 1 is not restricted to elites (as long as you pay up) as it is on BA; boarding is via air bridges at Gatwick and Barcelona (unlike some low cost carriers)

Let’s look at how each part of the package performed in practice:

Priority security

Here is a handy tip.  Premium Security – bookable here – costs £5 per person at Gatwick South.  However, for £15 I booked myself access to the new My Lounge (reviewed here) via this Virgin Atlantic deal and this comes with premium security for free.

If you have a Priority Pass or other lounge access card, you can use the No 1 Lounge at Gatwick South.  This lounge is usually full at peak times, so you should reserve your No 1 Lounge visit for £5.  This £5 reservation payment also gets you access to Premium Security.

At 7.30am on a Thursday, Premium Security was TOTALLY empty.

The lounge

I wrote about My Lounge Gatwick South in my review yesterday.

It clearly isn’t the same scale as the British Airways lounges in Gatwick South which we reviewed here, which are arguably better than those at Heathrow but it did the job.

Subject to capacity I could also have used my Priority Pass (free with my Amex Platinum charge card) at No 1 Lounge Gatwick South, reviewed here.

Speedy Boarding

On British Airways I would have boarded in Group 1 as a Club Europe passenger.

Vueling also let me board in Group 1 as I paid €17.99 for a Row 1 seat.  Only about 5-6 people had Group 1 boarding.  This was VERY well policed by the Vueling staff who were throwing out people trying to sneak through.

On landing I was first off the plane and, as Vueling used a jet bridge, I was the first person at passport control.

Seating

Take a look at my Vueling leg room which is totally on a par, if not better, that BA Club Europe in the bulkhead.  You should also remember that you generally need to be BA Gold to book Row 1 in Club Europe whilst Vueling offers it to anyone who is willing to pay.

Vueling review Gatwick to Barcelona

You can’t complain about that.  I was in 1C.  On British Airways I target 1C or 1D.

Unlike some easyJet and BA aircraft, there was a bulkhead in front of Row 1.  It had a window in it, which was a novelty:

Vueling review Gatwick to Barcelona

The difference between BA and Vueling is that 1B was filled.  There was no fighting over the armrest, however, as the petite woman in 1B was leaning on her partner in 1A.  Due to the curve in the fuselage, 1A looked a bit tight although you obviously got a window.  I was very happy in 1C.

Here’s my handy tip:

All six seats in Row 1 were sold.  However, only one of the six seats in Row 2 was sold.   This is also an ‘extra leg room’ row but I think you pay less than €17.99.

Take a look – it is a decent amount of space:

Vueling review Gatwick to Barcelona

Food and drink

The upside of Vueling is that you get a far wider variety of food and drink than you would get on British Airways Club Europe.  It is not as good, but there is more choice.

There were no easyJet-style bacon sandwiches for breakfast from the Spanish, not surprisingly.  Options included a €4.50 ‘mini sandwich’, €6.50 for a club sandwich (€9.50 as a meal deal), €4 for coffee and a snack (Kit-Kat, piece of cake, waffle etc) etc.  The most interesting options were a meat-based tapas box and a pulled pork sandwich, both at €7.50, but I’d already had two breakfasts by this point – one in the Hilton Gatwick’s lounge and one in My Lounge.

For comparison, pictured below is the Club Europe meal I got from British Airways on my return flight.  In typical BA fashion, I was offered a choice of a salad or a different salad – and both were served with a side salad.  I’m not joking:

British Airways Club Europe meal from Barcelona

It was tasty though, so you’d need to buy one of the more premium Vueling options to get close to this quality.

Drink-wise, I was looking at €2.60 for a Nescafe instant cappuccino, €2.60 for tea, €2.60 for soft drinks, €3.60 for a can of San Miguel Especial, €5.60 for a quarter bottle of wine, €6 for 20cl of cava, €6 for spirits or €10 for a gin and tonic.

Conclusion

For under £65, I got:

  • Premium Security at Gatwick South
  • airport lounge access
  • a flight ticket to Barcelona with 10kg hand baggage allowance
  • Group 1 boarding
  • a front row seat
  • ….. and a coffee and a piece of cake

Arguably you should add another £7-£8 for a bottle of prosecco and one of the posher food options if you want to recreate Club Europe catering.

I earned back 400 Virgin Flying Club from my lounge booking and probably 50 Avios from Vueling.  Spookily for Vueling, the flight was on time too.

The next day I flew back on British Airways Club Europe in the same seat, 1C.  It was an Avios redemption which cost 15,000 Avios plus £25.  I had an empty middle seat and my meal was decent as you can see above.  It was obviously better than my DIY Vueling ‘business class’ package, but I would happily do Vueling again if I could get the same seat.

As I wrote when I did my easyJet piece last year, the low cost carrier experience does not need to be low quality if you, erm, spend more money so that it isn’t so low cost any longer …. but £64 is not exactly expensive for everything I got.


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Comments (116)

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

  • vlcnc says:

    You were lucky nothing went wrong… and that is where the fun begins… :/

  • Peter K says:

    One thing not mentioned, but that is because Rob didn’t have checked luggage, is that BA let you check in your luggage the night before for a morning flight. That is a whole lot of stress you can avoid and worth a lot compared to LCC’s.

  • Paul says:

    Give Rob a break – interesting article and breakdown comparison – just no need to be so pedantic from some of the commentators. If it is not a reflection of your own circumstances then just keep your thoughts to yourself as for some of us on here who don’t fly Vueling often it is a useful reference piece.

    • BSI1978 says:

      + 1

    • Lee says:

      +1

    • IanMac says:

      +1

    • C77 says:

      I’m sure Rob is able to respond in the various threads if he so wishes and that he understands as the editor and author that some feedback will be complimentary and some will be more constructive and offer an alternative viewpoint that may or may not have already been considered. That it not a personal attack towards him as an individual as some seem to think is the case.

    • Alan says:

      I’m feeling guilty, just flew Club Europe OSL-LHR and didn’t have anything to eat or drink! :O. I did check a bag though 😉

      • C77 says:

        So we’ll call that Club lite shall we and call it a draw against Norwegian? 😊

        • Alan says:

          Haha Norwegian actually beat it for legroom! Boarding better with BA, arrival better with Norwegian. Common factor there is perhaps OSL! By comparison at LHR they had no one to operate the jetty for 10 min then fast track security shut!

  • Prins Polo says:

    Ideas for other articles:

    – How to recreate Lufthansa shorthaul business class on Wizzair
    – How to recreate KLM shorthaul business class on Ryanair

    … and more 😉

  • Alex says:

    1C? I thought everyone, including golds, avoided that seat, known as the “get hit in the head by everyone’s backpack as they walk past” seat 😀

    Interesting point of view though, you can do an Easyjet or Vueling experience on the cheap and still get most of the service that goes with CE (as long as you’re not boozing, and let’s be honest, we all do it for the bubbly 😉 )

    • Judge says:

      Depends if your wife likes 1A!

    • Alan says:

      I liked 1C for the legroom, rather than 1A where your legs are up against the bulkhead and you can’t have anything at your feet – I prefer 2nd row as a result.

      • Lady London says:

        2nd Row is going to be smarter because apparently the CAA is making all the airlines put a bulkhead in front of Row 1 – at least on shorthaul aircraft. So Row 1 legrooom is gone.

      • Lady London says:

        1C is also known as the trolley-bash-;legs seat – as it wheels out from the galley and is turned -bash! to line up into the aisle 🙂

  • Adam says:

    Could you have booked 2 seats for yourself to ensure the middle seat remained empty, giving you an even closer CE experience?

  • Jody says:

    O/T – lounges at Birmingham airport. We are flying in Feb to Singapore, and would like to go in a lounge beforehand. Economy flights unfortunately, no status, not plat card holders etc etc, so looking at paying. Best discount code I get mean it would be £37.78 for 2 of us to get into the Aspire lounge, or £45 for 2 to get into the No1 lounge. I do have Amex gold, so could pay on the door for access, but I believe it has gone up to £20 a time, plus if it’s full you can’t get in, so may as well pay for one of the above.

    So, do I go Aspire or No1? And does anyone know of any better discounts I might be able to use?

    • Tom says:

      In my view both lounges are appalling. A bit of my soul always dies when I go to either of them.

      There is a brand new Clubrooms lounge that I haven’t been to (and possibly won’t since it isn’t available on Priority Pass) but might be worth a look if you can find a decent price.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        I dont think either of them are really that bad to spend an hour before a flight compared to he main terminal.

        No. 1 is better than Aspire ofcourse, clubrooms is probably a nicer experience

  • Alex Sm says:

    >> “In typical BA fashion, I was offered a choice of a salad or a different salad – and both were served with a side salad. I’m not joking”

    haha, very true

    On a BA flight to Kiev a few years ago (when BA still served food on short haul) my colleagues and were offered a meal with three different kind of bread in it (a sandwich, a roll and a biscuit). I know that (the) Ukraine is still stereotypically viewed as a ‘bread basket’ in the UK but I didn’t know that it was so extreme!

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