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Virgin Atlantic offering 0% FX fees to new credit card applicants – is it better than bonus miles?

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Virgin Atlantic has launched a new promotion if you take out one of its Reward credit cards.

This time, it is NOT offering additional bonus miles.  Instead, you will pay no FX fees on all foreign currency transactions you make before the end of November.

You will continue to earn miles on your foreign currency transactions.

You can find more information online here.

This offer is IN ADDITION TO the standard bonus of 5,000 miles on the free card and 15,000 miles on the paid card.

Is this deal worth it?

On the face of it, this may seem less interesting than an enhanced miles sign-up offer.  In reality, for some people who spend heavily outside the UK it could be more lucrative.

There is no ‘right answer’ here:

If you have a ‘no FX fees, no rewards’ credit card already, you will gain via this offer because you will now be earning miles on foreign currency transactions.  This is 0.75 miles per £1 on the free Reward card and 1.5 miles per £1 on the £160 Reward+ card.

If you do not have a ‘no FX fees, no rewards’ credit card, and are currently paying 3% FX fees on your overseas purchases, you will be substantially better off during this offer, because you will save 3% on all your FX spending.

Of course, whether this is better value than applying for the Virgin Atlantic cards during an ‘enhanced bonus miles’ promotion is a different question.  If you are only planning to spend £500 abroad between now and 30th November, this offer isn’t worth much.  If you were planning to spend £10,000 abroad, there is real value here.

You also need to bear in mind that, as this offer runs to 30th August, there is no chance of seeing a ‘bonus miles’ promotion coming back before September at the earliest.

Here is the small print for the offer, which is worth noting as you could easily come a cropper:

You only get 0% FX fees on purchases made in person, outside the UK.   If you buy an airline ticket in foreign currency, or pre-pay a hotel booking, you will not get it.  Any transaction flagged as ‘cardholder not present’ (meaning you do not use a PIN or physically make a contactless transaction) is excluded.

Whilst there is no FX loading on cash withdrawals from foreign ATMs, you will still pay the standard 5% cash advance fee

You will continue to earn miles on card purchases made abroad, but not on cash advances

You still receive the standard sign-up bonus of 5,000 miles on the free card and 15,000 miles on the paid card

You must apply for the cards by 30th August

The last day that your overseas transactions will have 0% FX fees is 30th November

The bottom line is, I think:

If you were planning to apply for the Virgin Atlantic credit cards anyway, this offer is better than nothing if you’re travelling soon

For anyone who spends heavily outside the UK, it could work out very nicely and possibly even better than a bonus miles offer

If you hold out for a bonus miles offer, you will be waiting until at least September – given this offer runs to 30th August – and you will be losing out on earning miles over the Summer (although, for modest spenders, waiting may make more sense)

You can find full details, and apply, on the Virgin Money website here.

The remainder of this article is our standard piece on how the Virgin Atlantic credit cards work.  You can ignore this if you’ve read it before.  I need to include it for the benefit of new HfP readers, however, as these cards are quite complex.

Here are the details:

The free card

The free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card is a Mastercard which earns 0.75 miles per £1 spent.  The representative APR is 22.9% variable.

New sign-ups to the Virgin Atlantic Reward Credit Card earn 5,000 miles for their first purchase made on the card in the first 90 days.

Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card

The paid card

The £160 Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card is a Mastercard which earns 1.5 miles per £1 spent.  The representative APR is 63.9% variable including the £160 fee based on a notional £1200 credit limit The interest rate on purchases is 22.9% variable.

If you take out the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card you earn 15,000 miles for your first purchase made within 90 days.

Virgin Reward Plus credit card extra bonus

The Reward+ card remains the better deal in my view.  Whilst the sign-up deals are roughly equal (5,000 miles for free vs 15,000 miles for £160), once you have the Reward+ card you are earning the superior 1.5 miles per £1 whenever you shop.  You also trigger the upgrade and companion vouchers more quickly.

Can I apply for the other card if I already have a Virgin Atlantic credit card?

It seems not.  Virgin Money has recently added this clause to the application form:

“I am not an existing Virgin Atlantic Credit Card customer and I have not closed another credit card issued by Virgin Money in the last 6 months.”

It is frustrating that Virgin Money is not offering an upgrade route for people on the free card who are now willing to pay the annual fee in return for the higher earning rate.

How do the upgrade and companion vouchers work?

Each year you can earn a special extra reward.  Your reward is triggered IMMEDIATELY upon hitting the spending target.  The target is £20,000 in a card year for the free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card and £10,000 in a card year for the £160 Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card.

Unlike the British Airways American Express cards, the rewards vary depending on your tier in the Virgin Flying Club scheme.  If you have elite status, you get a better reward.

This is what you can pick from:

All Flying Club members

A 2-4-1 voucher, valid for two years, for a Virgin Flying Club redemption in Economy, or

A return upgrade to Premium when you book an Economy reward flight (requires reward availability in Premium)

Flying Club members with Silver status

A 2-4-1 voucher, valid for two years, for a Virgin Flying Club redemption in Premium or Economy, or

A Virgin Clubhouse lounge pass for Heathrow or Gatwick (requires a same-day Virgin Atlantic flight), or

A return upgrade to Premium when you book an Economy reward flight (requires reward availability in Premium)

Flying Club members with Gold status

A 2-4-1 voucher, valid for two years, for a Virgin Flying Club redemption in Upper Class, Premium or Economy

TWO Virgin Clubhouse lounge passes for Heathrow or Gatwick (require same-day Virgin Atlantic flights)

A return upgrade to Premium when you book an Economy reward flight (requires reward availability in Premium)

Taxes and charges are due on ‘free’ 241 seats in the same way as the British Airways American Express 241 vouchers.  Vouchers are valid for two years and you must fly the outbound leg of your trip before the expiry date.

Some tips on applying

Do NOT use the ‘pre-approval checker’ on the Virgin Money website.  It is a joke.  It is designed for Virgin Money’s mass-market cards and is likely to reject you for being too wealthy and so unlikely to pay interest.  Apply directly.

If your full application is rejected, this can often be overturned if you appeal in writing. Write to Virgin Atlantic Credit Cards, PO Box 10609, Wigston, LE18 9HA with a couple of paragraphs expressing your dismay, referencing your Virgin Atlantic status and/or that you had the old MBNA credit cards, and outlining your income and lack of non-mortgage debts.  They will reconsider and you will normally end up being successful.

You can apply for either of the new Virgin Atlantic credit cards via this link.

Disclaimer: Head for Points is a journalistic website. Nothing here should be construed as financial advice, and it is your own responsibility to ensure that any product is right for your circumstances. Recommendations are based primarily on the ability to earn miles and points. The site discusses products offered by lenders but is not a lender itself. Robert Burgess, trading as Head for Points, is regulated and authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority to act as an independent credit broker.


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 (60)

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

  • Craig says:

    Speculatively I went for the paid card, I should end up with around 45k points and a 241 voucher. I have no status with Virgin so what would be the sweet spot for a redemption. Very open question I know, I’m just looking for some inspiration.

    • stevenhp1987 says:

      Using the voucher to upgrade from economy to premium. Requires space in premium.

      Makes it (off-peak) 18k points to Tel Aviv, 20k points to USA North East Coast / Caribbean / India, 25k to HK / Africa / Florida / Atlanta and 30k to USA West coast in premium for one + taxes + surcharge.

      Of those? I guess 20k points to New York / Carribean resort or 30k to Seattle for one in premium.

      Might potentially be some use for the voucher if there is no sale, but sometimes the sale prices can be quite cheap (~ £600) in premium to USA East Coast which make the voucher a bit of a joke!

      Travelling with more than one person? You need multiple vouchers…

  • Liz says:

    OT If you hit the £10 spend with the Barclaycard Hilton CC now does that give you Gold status until March 2021 – not just March 2020?

    • Liz says:

      Sorry that should say £10k spend

      • Anna says:

        Lol! I asked this recently and was assured that you get the status for the rest of the current year and all the following one, so March 2021.

      • BJ says:

        Should be 2021 but some have reported hassle getting the status at all.

      • ankomonkey says:

        You have until 31/12/19 to complete the £10k spend, so you get the status until March 2021, otherwise it would only be for 3 months (March 2020) and you would drop down to Silver until you complete the £10k spend again in 2020.

  • JohnE says:

    Both my wife & I recently took out a Virgin Atlantic+ Cards & my advice to others looking to do so is simply — DON’T.
    We have both had cause to raise complaints where my wife, through her own sign in, can access my account only BUT cannot get into her own account. The response fron Virgin Customer Services has been totaly inept – 5 weeks later & the confidentiality breach still ongoing.
    That caused me to look around the internet & the number of people who have reviewed Virgin Money as awful / poor on the various review sites is frightening. Furthermore Virgin Money have now witheld their own Directors names as I suspect they are overwhelmed by complaints — many of which are a result of being charged an extra years annual fee after the card has been cancelled. BEWARE – deal or no deal!!

    • Rob says:

      Hopefully this will improve. Otherwise who else will fund HeadForCards.com?

      • TGLoyalty says:

        hopefully something else or it will be nomorehead.com

        Ridiculous comment.

    • Andy says:

      Virgin Money charged me the equivalent of 900% interest when it should have been 12.9%. Their messaging facility is beyond useless. I had to call up and only after querying why the interest charged was totally out of proportion did they say they will erase the charge. I’ve raised a complaint and I’m minded to close the card simply for their incompetence.

  • BJ says:

    Slightly OT: Has anybody received their 1000 Virgin miles from Tesco autoconvert yet?

    • Shoestring says:

      not here x2

    • Ben says:

      I haven’t either, but nothing auto converted either …

    • BJ says:

      I thought as much, seems like there might be a spanner in the works this time if we want to turn it off and on again. If it is going to be paid alongside transfers I probably have another problem as I have less than 150 clubcard points this quarter.

    • Leigh says:

      Just received the 1000 points today. “09/07/19 Tesco Clubcard auto tip 1000”

    • Ben says:

      Yes, gone in today. Auto-convert turned off!

    • Simon says:

      Yes — today

      • Shoestring says:

        yes, got it x2 today – wasn’t there yesterday!

  • Harvey says:

    I have a Virgin+. My wife just received one separately and tried to add me as additional card holder. Got refused! Any advice?

    • Craig says:

      I had the same followed a day later by a request for more information then an approval. The IT is slightly clunky.

  • Louise says:

    My year is coming up for the rewards + card, and weirdly they have charged next years fee a month early!
    I will be cancelling, unlike Amex they don’t let you cancel the card if there is a balance still on it, so just waiting for my payment to clear to ring up again!

    • Neil Donoghue says:

      I was in the same boat! After speaking to a supervisor, she cancelled my card despite the payment waiting to clear.

      I had to argue for 20 minutes just to get my £160 back. I can’t understand they are charging folks a month early.

      • Peter K says:

        Probably hoping that people will just keep the card another year if they see the fee has gone out.

    • Charlieface says:

      I think that’s against the FCA rules. They should allow you to cancel the card and keep the existing payment terms.

  • AndyGWP says:

    Does anyone have experience of downgrading from the Rewards+ to the Rewards (Free) card?

    • Rob says:

      Can’t be done now, looking at reader emails. Your application for the free one will be blocked as you are already a cardholder.

      • AndyGWP says:

        Ah, I meant more along the lines of phoning them and just asking to change card really

        • AndyGWP says:

          Presume it needs to be treated like a new application tho. Shame 🙁

  • eli Gold says:

    being a longstanding Avios BA fan, I know the system almost inside out (they specially made it so complicated and intricate that it’s impossible to understand it completely).
    being based in Israel, Virgin was never of much interest, but they will commence flights from Tel Aviv in September and I have started collecting on a high with the Reward + card.
    I would really love a Flying club university style series to teach me the ropes of Virgin earning and redeeming.
    Any chance?

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