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Coronavirus refund policies: British Airways, Virgin Atlantic, easyJet, Hilton, Marriott

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Due to rapidly changing policies over coronavirus cancellations and travel waivers, we have decided to compile all the information we have in one up-to-date reference post. Hopefully this gives you an overview of your cancellation and refund rights with the major travel companies we cover on HfP.

As well as links to the offical guidance, we have included information from the anecdotal data left in our comments.  Thank you to everyone who has left feedback.

We will update this as changes occur.  It is currently correct as of 13th May.  If you have experienced something different to the policies described below please let us know in the comments or email rhys @ headforpoints.com

Coronavirus airline and hotel cancellation and refund policy summary

British Airways coronavirus refund, change and status policies

Read the British Airways COVID-19 travel advisory here.

Cash flights: all flights up until 31st December can be cancelled in exchange for a British Airways voucher which is valid on any route until 30th April 2022 (this extension applies to previously issued travel vouchers, too).

If your flight has been cancelled by British Airways you are entitled to a full cash refund instead.   The only way to do this now is to ring BA at 0800 727 800. Do NOT select any of the options. Your call will eventually go through and you will here the customary BA hold music. This process took me about 15 minutes the other day, although recent comments suggest the lines are currently very busy.

Your refund should include any seat selection fees and other additional payments.

Avios redemptions:  you are entitled to a full refund in the event that British Airways cancels your flight.  Follow the instructions above if you want a cash refund rather than a voucher for your taxes and charges.  If your flight is still operating and you cancel an Avios redemption of your own volition, you are entitled to a refund of all the Avios and taxes and charges paid, minus a £35 fee.

‘Avios + Money’ bookings (Avios bookings where cash was used to reduce the Avios required):  these work on the same basis as standard Avios redemptions. You are entitled to a refund of your Avios and cash regardless of whether British Airways has cancelled your flight or not.  A £35 per person cancellation fee applies if your flight is still operating.

‘Avios part-payment’ bookings (cash bookings where Avios was used to reduce the cash required):  British Airways is offering a voucher for tickets where the flight is still operating. The voucher is for the original cash price – ie. if your flight was £900 before you reduced the cost with Avios you will get a voucher for £900.  Cash refunds are available instead of a voucher if your flight has been cancelled but, as per the above, you will need to call to request this or try our workaround.

Flight & hotel/car or BA Holidays package:  if British Airways has cancelled any part of your holiday you are legally entitled to a full refund in cash.  If you choose to cancel of your own volition BA will retain your deposit.  There are strict UK laws surrounding package holidays but these have been relaxed slightly. You should still receive your cash within a reasonable time frame, however.  There will be no attempt to make you take a voucher.

American Express 2-4-1 vouchers:  all British Airways Amex 2-4-1 vouchers have been extended by 6 months.  This includes vouchers which have already been used – if you cancel, it will come back with an extension – and all forthcoming vouchers which will be issued by 30th June 2020.

Lloyds upgrade voucher:  you can apply for a six month extension if your Lloyds Avios Rewards credit card upgrade voucher is due to expire in March or April by calling Avios

Executive Club status extensions:  if your British Airways Executive Club membership year ends in April, May or June your tier point requirements to renew have been reduced by 30%.

British Airways A380

Virgin Atlantic coronavirus refund, change and status policies

Read the Virgin Atlantic COVID-19 travel advisory here.

Cash flights: All flights cancelled by Virgin Atlantic are eligible for cash refunds.  These cannot be claimed online and require a call.  Remember that there is no rush and that as long as your flight is cancelled you can claim your refund at a future date.  Virgin Atlantic has been reaching out to passengers with existing bookings to offer targeted rebooking incentives including bonus miles, upgrades and cash cards.

If your flight is still operating, Virgin Atlantic has implemented a flexible booking policy. Tickets booked between 12th March and 30th June for travel until 31st December 2020 can be rebooked free of charge for dates up to 31st May 2022, although you may have to pay a fare difference. Virgin will keep your ticket open for you to rebook at your convenience.

If you booked on or before 19th March there is no change fee AND no difference in fare as long as your travel prior to 30th November 2020. A fare difference may apply for rebookings between 1st December 2020 to 31st May 2022.

Virgin Flying Club miles redemptions:  You will pay £30 if you cancel your booking at least 24 hours before departure to receive a full refund of all miles, taxes and fees.  The fee is waived if your flight is no longer operating.  Virgin Flying Club redemptions booked between 6th March and 31st March are eligible for free changes although reward seats must be available on your new dates.

Virgin Flying Club status:  Virgin Atlantic has announced that it is extending Gold and Silver members’ status by six months. Companion, upgrade, credit card and Clubhouse vouchers have also been automatically extended by six months.

Virgin Atlantic coronavirus refund and change policies

easyJet coronavirus refund, change and status policies

Cash flights: As of 30th March, easyJet has grounded its entire fleet.  Any flight cancelled by easyJet is eligible for a full cash refund. Some people have had success in emailing flightrefund@easyjet.com for a refund. You should include the booking reference, departure date and preferred language in the subject line in the following format: Booking Reference/Departure Date/EN. If this does not work, you will have to call 0330 365 5000.

You CAN request a voucher for a cancelled flight via Manage Bookings.  These vouchers are valid for six months from the date of issue – the rules are vague but it seems that you only need to book, and not fly, within six months.

easyJet is waiving its change fees for flights allowing you to rebook on different dates and/or routes if you wish.  This is possible irrespective of whether your flight is cancelled.  You must pay any differences in the fare.

Any ticket booked with easyJet at the moment for future travel will be covered by the ‘free changes’ waiver although fare differences must still be paid.

It is reportedly exceptionally difficult to reach easyJet by telephone.  One reader who speaks Italian contacted the Italian call centre, for a UK booking, and had his call answered virtually immediately and his refund processed.

It is not clear if easyJet Plus members will have their annual membership extended.

Hilton coronavirus refund, change and status policies

Read the Hilton COVID-19 travel advisory here.

All existing bookings are fully refundable, for cash, on stays until 30th June, irrespective of the original room rules.

New bookings made until 30th June will be fully refundable irrespective of how far in the future your stay occurs.

Hilton Honors status:  Hilton is automatically extending member status for an additional year, to 31st March 2022.  In addition, any member who was due to lose status on 1st April has had it extended to 31st March 2021.

Points expiry has been put on pause until 31st December 2020.

Hilton coronavirus refund and change policies

IHG coronavirus refund, change and status policies

Read the IHG COVID-19 travel advisory here.

All existing bookings made by 6th April for stays until 30th June 2020 have had their cancellation fees waived.  There is NO cancellation or change policy for bookings beyond 30th June 2020.

However a new discounted ‘Book Now, Pay Later’ rate has been introduced that allows free cancellation up to 24 hours before arrival.  You can no longer book prepaid rooms.

‘Best Flexible Rates’ now have free cancellation until 6pm on the day of arrival.

IHG Rewards Club status: IHG Rewards Club status has automatically been extended by 12 months, carrying over until early 2022.

IHG Rewards Club elite status points requirements for 2021 have been reduced by 25% for all members.

Spire Elite members will receive an additional ‘choice benefit’ of 25,000 points or Platinum Elite status for a friend.

In an email, IHG has confirmed it would be extending Ambassador status by three months for those who pay for it although this is yet to appear on accounts.

Credit card free night vouchers expiring after 1st March 2020 have been extended until 31st December. All certificates earned in 2020 will be valid for 18 months.

IHG coronavirus refund, change and status policies

Marriott coronavirus refund, change and status policies

Read the Marriott COVID-19 travel advisory here.

All existing bookings are changeable or cancellable for no charge up to 24 hours before arrival until 30th June 2020.  For clarity, this includes bookings for stays AFTER 30th June but the cancellation or change must be made before 30th June.

Hotels are allowed to refuse to honor this policy if your stay is “with special event restrictions or peak demand weeks”

New bookings made before 30th June, for stays at any point in the future, will be changeable or cancellable free of charge up to 24 hours prior to arrival.

Design Hotels and Homes & Villas by Marriott are excluded from these policies.

Marriott Bonvoy status:  Status earned in 2019 will be extended until February 2022.  It has paused points expiration until February 2022 and extended the expiration of suite night awards by one year (to December 2021).

Free night awards from credit cards, annual choice benefit, promotions or travel packages due to expire in 2020 have been extended until 31st January 2021.

Comments (373)

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

  • fastbowker says:

    I called BA on Saturday 11th April. Got through in a few minutes. Flight refund was processed efficiently and credited to my BA Amex card on Easter Monday 13th Aoril.
    I was very impressed all round by that.

  • Sarah B says:

    Hi – HELP! I have flights booked for 4 of us Singapore beginning of July. We booked cash for WTP seats then a few months later used Avios to upgrade to Club world for outbound and inbound flights (also paid to reserve seats).. I just tried to do your online workaround but at the part where your guide said it would check I had consent, it only asked if I was a passenger on booking. I ticked yes but nothing happened and the only other option was to “return to manage booking”. We are hoping to move trip to April 2021 but thought it might be easier to get cash / Avios refund now as things are so uncertain. any advice grateful (Also if we get the Avios refunded, we could use our AMEX 2-4-1 vouchers and save money)..thanks !

  • Natalie says:

    I managed to get through (in the end) to cancel VAA Upper Reward seats x 3 for May (MBJ and GND). Got the miles back instantly but told that I have to wait for up to 90 days for the refund of taxes which must be in the order of £1,500. I am really unimpressed. Feels like they are banking our cash.

    • Jonathan Arrowood says:

      How did you get through? What number? I have tried them all hundreds of times!

      • Rob says:

        Send them a text message. Works fine, did it last weekend. Took 2-3 days for a reply, admittedly, but once I got the reply it was all done in 3 texts within 10 minutes.

  • Campbell says:

    I had March 2 flights booked in Club World to Doha using Avios and an AMEX companion voucher which were cancelled by BA. Unfortunately, my wife went though the process to rebook/claim a refund online and when directed to the voucher page, she went ahead and submitted it unaware of the limitations of these vouchers or the workaround to get a cash option. As soon as we realised this had been done, we submitted a claim for a cash refund and also called BA explaining that we already had a voucher to use before the end of March 2020 (for a Club World LHR-BOS flight I chose to cancel under the Book with Confidence offer so knew it would be a voucher) and there was no way we would be able to use that and the vouchers tied into a 2-4-1 ticket. I was instructed to submit a complaint online and it would be sorted but BA customer services are absolutely refusing to refund the taxes paid for the Doha flights now that the vouchers have been issued. BA have roughly £3.5k of our money between the Doha and BOS flights and we have vouchers which we’ll almost certainly be unable to use within the short time frame between flights resuming and the vouchers running out before the end of March 2021. I had felt that BA were acting reasonably in the beginning of this crisis and know they are facing a difficult time but it’s a lot of money for me just to ‘donate’ to BA! I am REALLY unimpressed.

    • Lady London says:

      It’s clear there is a case against British Airways for violations on a systematic intentional basis of passengers rights under EC261/2004.

      I’m not sure of the legal words but the manner in which passengers seeking refunds have been deliberately trapped into a process which exists to deny them their right to a cash refund should probably have charges like fraud and deception as well.

      Rob has said perhaps a CEDR action could be taken in some months time. But what is clear to me is that passengers have not been given a process that seeks their explicit consent to have a voucher instead of the cash they are entitled to.

      It will only take one case to be won against British Airways for these actions. As soon as one case is eon this can open the floodgate for literally millions, probably tens of millions, even hundreds of millions of cases. Each giving the same guilty verdict with a fine of 8? figures, reinstatement of cash to each of British Airways’s victims, compensation to each passenger in addition, and the threat of a repeat for any incidence in the future.

      The problem is who’s gonna be second one to sue. Because this case can be won easy.

      The reason is that the first one to sue with a case that can’t be distinguished from the other tens of million identical cases, who therefore has a case that, if BA loses , would force the same success for every other case that is the same because the first case has been won, that case will never even get near the High Court because BA will settle it very generously out of court and with a gag agreement.

      Moneyclaim dot gov dot UK will get it won easily in Small Claims Court but that is not binding for other cases. So it has to go one level up to the High Court and BA will buy it off.

      That’s why the second person to sue is important. It will take someone strong enough to say this case is in the public interest so I am declining settlement and want it heard. How likely is that to happen? @Triprep may have a view.

      So the short answer is Yes you have been wronged by BA. You were deceived and your rights that include your right to a cash refund, were not pointed out to you by BA as the law requires. You were not given an opportunity not to consent to a voucher. Therefore you did not
      provide a valid consent not to have cash. You do not have to keep the voucher because of the way it was foisted on you. However you will have to fight BA for it or perhaps tell your credit card what happened and request your right to a cash refund from them under Section 75.

  • Clive Field says:

    Over the past few weeks, your life will have undoubtedly been affected by the unprecedented global health crisis caused by COVID-19. We at Flying Blue want to offer our best wishes and hopes for you and your loved ones during these troubling times.

    We understand that as a loyal Flying Blue member, it has significantly impacted your ability to travel for business, leisure or to visit family and friends. Due to the global travel restrictions, your flying may have greatly reduced and therefore you may find it challenging to maintain your current level. In these trying times, we want to remove any uncertainty you may have about your Flying Blue Elite level.

    To do so, we will maintain your current Elite level for another 12 months from the end of your current qualification period. For more details, please click here. As the situation evolves, we remain dedicated to communicating the latest information to you as soon as possible.

    In the meantime, we hope you and your family stay safe and healthy, and we are looking forward to welcoming you on board again very soon.

    Yours sincerely,

  • Sean says:

    Another shout out to BA Refund helper on flyertalk (Avios bookings only). Been waiting over 3 weeks for refund of avios and 241. Sent a PM last night – avios and 241 back in account by 10.30 this morning.

  • TimM says:

    I had an email from easyJet this morning indicating that a cash refund has been processed back to my card for the cancelled 27th March flights to Venice – requested around 6 weeks ago. The refund has not yet arrived but that appears to be progress.

  • Emma says:

    My May flights have just been cancelled. It’s a cash booking. Do I have to phone for a refund as the site suggests or is there a workaround for cash bookings?

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

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