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Workaround found. How to trigger an online British Airways flight refund using Google Chrome

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Our main article today is about BA’s unwillingness to let you claim an online cash refund for an Avios flight.

We have now found a way of triggering a cash refund – as opposed to a voucher – without calling British Airways (and waiting hours in the queue …..)

This next chunk of text is for getting a refund of your taxes on Avios bookings which have not yet been cancelled by BA. 

For a refund on a CASH or Avios BA flight booking which has been cancelled, scroll down this page and read the PS. at the bottom.

If you have a CASH BA flight booking which is NOT showing as cancelled, do NOT follow any of the advice on this page.  You are not yet able to get a cash refund.  You either need to accept the British Airways travel voucher offered or wait until your flight is cancelled and then follow the steps above.

To be clear:

Got an Avios booking which is not yet cancelled?  Read on

Got an Avios booking which is cancelled?  Go to the PS at the bottom

Got a cash booking which is cancelled?  Go to the PS at the bottom

Got a cash booking which is not yet cancelled?   Sorry, there is no way of getting a cash refund.  You need to accept the BA voucher or wait for your flight to be cancelled.

How can you stop British Airways forcing a flight voucher on you?

In summary ….. if you turn off JavaScript in Google Chrome then ba.com will take you to the full cancellation page.

Here’s proof it works:

How to trigger an online Avios flight refund using Google Chrome

This is how to do it, using the Google Chrome broswer.

Go into ‘Manage My Booking’ on ba.com and select ‘Cancellation options for this booking’.  You must be logged in and using the BA account of the person who booked, ie the person who is named on the confirmation email.

You are taken to the ‘consent’ screen:

How to trigger an online Avios flight refund using Google Chrome

Do NOT continue the process, as you will only be taken to the ‘Future Travel Voucher’ page which you don’t want.  In order to cancel, you need to first disable JavaScript in Chrome.  (If you are not using Chrome, you need to find out how your browser handles JavaScript.)

This is how you do it:

Click the ‘three dots’ in the top right corner of Chrome

Scroll down to ‘Settings’ and click – this opens a new ‘Settings’ page

Click ‘Privacy & Security’ in the left menu – this brings the ‘Privacy & Security’ section to the top

Click ‘Site Settings’ in the ‘Privacy & Security’ section

Scroll down to the ‘Permissions’ section and click ‘JavaScript’

Turn off JavaScript by toggling the ‘Allowed’ button

Do NOT close the window as you need to turn it back on later.  Switch back to the window where you have the ba.com ‘Consent’ page open.  Tick the ‘Please tick here’ box and click ‘Continue’.

You will now be on the standard cash cancellation screen.

Turn JavaScript back on.

You can cancel your booking for a full cash refund of your taxes, and with your Avios returned.

But don’t forget ….

You will be still be paying the £35 per person cancellation fee on a long-haul booking.  If you want to avoid this, you need to wait until BA cancels your flight automatically, assuming it does not operate.

If you paid for seat selection, you LOSE this money if you cancel.  You may prefer to take the travel voucher as I believe the seat selection value is retained, either as part of the voucher or as a credit for free seat selection when you rebook.

PS.  How to get a refund for a CASH British Airways booking

If you are looking to refund a CASH booking which has already been cancelled, this is an alternative set of steps:

1) Go into Manage My Booking on ba.com and select the flight shown as cancelled

2) Go into your browser’s settings and disable JavaScript – for Chrome, follow the instructions I outlined earlier in this article for cancelling an Avios booking

3) Go back to ‘Manage My Booking’ and click on the ‘Cancel and Refund’ button which is just under the cancellation notice

4) Confirm that you now see the correct cash refund form and not the voucher refund form

5) Turn JavaScript back on in your browser settings

6) Click on the “Yes” radio button to select that you are a person in the booking

7) When nothing happens press “Enter” on your keyboard. (this works in Firefox and Chrome). The page refreshes and shows an error at the top of the page “email address invalid”

8) Click on the “Yes” radio button again

9) Complete and submit the form

You will see this screen:

British Airways cancellation

For absolute clarity, do NOT cancel a CASH flight if you have not received an email from British Airways saying that your flight is cancelled.  If your flight is still showing as operating, cancelling means you lose EVERYTHING except a nominal amount in taxes.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2025)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses!

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

Get 5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

30,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending £15,000 Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points. These points convert at 1:1 into Avios.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 30,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

Run your own business?

We recommend Capital on Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, and the standard card is FREE. Capital on Tap cards also have no FX fees.

Capital on Tap Visa

NO annual fee, NO FX fees and points worth 1 Avios per £1 Read our full review

Capital on Tap Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits Read our full review

There is also a British Airways American Express card for small businesses:

British Airways American Express Accelerating Business

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

There are also generous bonuses on the two American Express Business cards, with the points converting at 1:1 into Avios. These cards are open to sole traders as well as limited companies.

American Express Business Platinum

50,000 points when you sign-up 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 Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

Comments (1117)

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

  • Steve O'Hara says:

    I’ve flights booked for April for a trip to Cyprus. BA have cancelled my Belfast London, London Cyprus and Cyprus London flights but for some reason have not yet cancelled the London Belfast flight. I’m worried if I go to trigger to cancel the flights for the refund that they won’t refund the full lot of avios, tax etc and the 241 voucher properly seeing as the last leg hasn’t been cancelled by BA yet. Or do we think it’s safe enough to do now?

  • mike says:

    I was booked to fly LCY to IOM on good Friday and received the following text today (13.8 days before departure): has my flight been cancelled to the extent I have the legal right to a refund or since the flight number is the same will they say it is the same flight?
    BA3286 on 10 Apr 2020 LCY-IOM is cancelled. You are rebooked on BA3286 10 Apr 2020 LHR 1430 IOM 1550. Please accept flight on ba.com/mmb Ref: ****** or call +442032500145. Travelling to or from a different point may incur additional expenses BA will not cover.

    • Shoestring says:

      no – same flight number, just different London airport – LCY, LHR and Gatwick are all the same London airport as far as BA is concerned

    • Lady London says:

      Has the timing changed? By how much? Sooner or later?

  • baecgc says:

    Hi all….I have two avios bookings with partner airlines in May. Given that I am not desperate for the avios (and the £ value for two tickets is only just over £70 so no real cash refund due), is there something I am missing as to why I shouldn’t just wait and see if the partner airline cancels them?

    • Lady London says:

      Yes wait.
      Curious as to why you used avoid for such low value flights though. Are avoid cheap for you to obtain or do you have a huge stash?

      • baecgc says:

        Thanks!
        CX is expensive in cash for the premium cabins. But from HKG there are very little taxes so still is a good deal.

        • baecgc says:

          …actually CX is pretty expensive in all cabins when paying cash.

  • ROY MACKIE says:

    BA has just cancelled the internal flight from NCL to LHR which makes the LHR to MIA leg of the vacation useless. They also switch us to an American Airlines flight for the LHR to MIA flight but not the MIA to LHR return flight. It’s almost like there trying to panic customers into taking the evoucher
    Given that the FCO is unlikely to lift the USA travel restriction by April 21, 2020 anyway we’re left with bitter taste in the mouth

    • Lady London says:

      With respect, if you’d been reading even the most recent comments on any day on any article on here, you’d know that just that one change within your booking entitles you to choose between
      – get a full refund
      -request change to same ticket on a later date of your choosing. No price difference payable.

      To get a new date you’ll have to call them and yes they will try to say you should waste your time getting through to them again 72h before your cancelled flight that they’ve now notified you is not happening. Stupid I know. However to get same itinerary in peak summer period (if flying) or second half of December…think about it.

      If you want to refund you can call or follow the instructions in the articles marked Featured on this site.

      • ROY MACKIE says:

        Hi,
        I can’t take revised dates as I have booked villas in Florida and their owners will not offer refunds. To be fair, one owner did offer to re-book but we cannot take them up on their offer.
        So we’re trying to engage with our Travel Insurance company whose first offer was to help out if our CC company couldn’t get us a refund.

  • AJA says:

    Is it just me but clicking on the new link in the article takes me to a page where BA is just offering vouchers? It doesnt have anywhere to ask for a cash refund other than specifically saying to contqct BA if you do.

    I am glad I don’t have any cash bookings but I do still have an Avios booking outside the window for cancellation. If the flight doesn’t happen and I expect it won’t I want my Avios back and the cash I paid for taxes and fees. I do not want a voucher for future travel as that still requires future Avios reward availability so there’s no advantage to take the voucher.

    • Travel Yoda says:

      From my experience you need to login to your ba account then open a new window and click the link to access

      • Michael says:

        BA account login is unavailable!! Wonder why?

        • Travel Yoda says:

          I’ve logged in and out of both my and other family members to cancel & refund this morning. No issue

    • Lady London says:

      AJA you can also use the reroute on later date that suits you option. It’s your choice. No price uplift payable. They’ll either rebook you on your chosen date making an avoid seat available to do this or you might even discover they’ve had to put you into a revenue earning class in order to meet your date. This gives you protection against price changes as you are not required to pay any difference or switching costs. If you want to do same itinerary anytime within, I think, 11.5months of your purchase date go for it. You don’t have to take a refund and you do NOT have to take a voucher. All under EC/EU261

      • AJA says:

        Thanks for the advice LadyLondon but I thought the rebook option was only for a flight in the period of -3 days or +14 days from original departure. I don’t think that will work. Right now I am just waiting for BA to cancel my flight before I do anything.

  • GW says:

    I made a cash booking to NYC in WTP for July (all done via the BA website as a return booking) where my outbound flight is on American Airlines and my return flight is on BA. I then upgraded my return flight to CW using Avios (plus the extra fees/taxes in cash).

    Am I right in assuming that if American cancel my outbound flight or BA cancel the return flight, then that will trigger the cancellation of the entire booking and all monies paid plus all Avios points used will be refunded ?

    Thanks,
    Gavin.

    • GW says:

      Ignore this….I’ve just posted it in the new chat article which seems the more accurate place to post it.

    • Lady London says:

      It doesn’t trigger by itself. You have to ask as soon as they make the change in their side.

  • PC says:

    I followed the above instructions today (28 March 2020) and am always directed to the voucher form. The flight I’m trying to cancel was booked with Avios and a partner pass that was cancelled and offering to change to flights from LCY to LHR.

    Is the trick in this article still working for anyone?

    • Joe Smith says:

      I can’t get it to work (Sat 28th 10am gmt). Looks like BA have altered the pages, no consent screen appears.

    • Michael says:

      Well, BA has shown again its true colours; expect they worked through the night to close this loophole. Cynical bastards. We will remember, when they need the business and we have paid their staff wages and their executive salaries from our taxes.

      • Travel Yoda says:

        I managed this morning 28th. Had to login to account open new window and then click link.

        • Michael says:

          There seems to be some pressure on BA building in the Press to change the website. Unfortunately, I have seen no past or present evidence that BA gives a proverbial about its reputation or adverse publicity, but maybe, just maybe, its bosses will get the message. Perhaps Senor Cruz would like to appear on UK TV and explain? Unlike many, we are not looking at big refunds – £135 for two flights – but we would probably have flown BA from London to Pittsburgh and back later this year (if BA still flies that route and if it exists and if the situation allows it) as BA is the only carrier to fly direct. We have close family there, working in US healthcare. So we’d have been ok with a voucher. But now, I will look for a flight with a transfer and another carrier whose bosses practise what they preach.

          • Lady London says:

            I really hope
            – BA gets no aid and only any business or tax concessions that are open to everyone
            – Virgin gets serious help due to it being in the public interest to ensure there is competition to the dominant player BA in light of BA abuses
            – 12 slots taken off BA at Heathrow without compensation and awarded to 3 competitors favouring Virgin

            Not much hope I know

  • Cat R says:

    Same here, they’ve obviously closed the loophole. Last weekend I got the consent screen but it’s now gone.

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