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BA brings back free water and snacks in Economy – permanently

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Good news: British Airways is making genuine improvements to its short haul catering.

It turns out that the news that British Airways would be dropping Marks & Spencer products is part of a larger service improvement in Euro Traveller (short haul economy).

There will be three changes to short haul Economy catering, due to kick in around 20th January:

British Airways Eurotraveller Tom Kerridge spiced cauliflower tortilla wrap

Complimentary water and snacks to stay

For almost a year now, British Airways has been offering Economy passengers free water with crisps, biscuits or popcorn on short haul services.

The pre-corona ‘Buy on Board’ menu offered nothing for free, except for a free cup of hot water – but you had to bring your own teabag.

British Airways thinks these changes are worth keeping and is making them permanent.

It will cost British Airways very little to offer water and crisps but many passengers are likely to appreciate the gesture. Offering complimentary water and snacks will help to differentiate British Airways from other low cost carriers and – dare I say it – mark it out as a slightly-more-premium carrier.

The irony is that British Airways is improving its short haul proposition just as Lufthansa, Swiss and Austrian are moving to the Buy on Board model that British Airways has had for the last five years. I’m not sure than anyone went as far as BA in removing all free items except for hot water.

Goodbye ‘Buy on Board’, hello ‘Buy Before You Fly’

You will have more options if a bottle of water and some crisps aren’t enough for you. Instead of ‘Buy on Board’, British Airways is introducing ‘Buy Before You Fly’ aka meal pre-ordering.

When ‘Buy on Board’ launched, British Airways positioned it as an improvement in customer choice, with a range of different options depending on what you fancied.

The implementation was a mess, however. The contractor, Tourvest, was forced to take stock risk. This meant that it was responsible for the cost of unsold food at the end of the day. Tourvest did the rational thing, in the circumstances, and only stocked the bare minimum of fresh items. Three sandwiches for a 100+ cabin was not unusual.

British Airways speedbird cafe

‘Buy on Board’ WAS an improvement in terms of choice, although it left those unwilling to buy anything high and dry. It also tied up cabin crew: taking orders, processing payments and preparing and delivering meals is significantly more time-consuming than handing out water and crisps. On shorter flights you were lucky to get your food before the aircraft started its descent.

(Of course, Ryanair and easyJet crews manage to successfully serve a far bigger menu to cabins with more seats than British Airways. The failure may have been in implementation, with half the crew tied up serving Club Europe leaving the much larger Euro Traveller cabin comparatively under-staffed.)

‘Buy Before You Fly’ combines the best of both systems. You can now choose to pre-order an item from the new ‘Speedbird Cafe’ up to twelve hours before departure.

This means you can guarantee something more substantial without having to gamble on whether BA will have sold out of what you want or not.

Buy Before You Fly’ will also extend to BA’s High Life Shop. You will be able to pre-order retail items such as perfume, sunglasses etc and have them delivered to your seat.

Food and drink will now be pre-order ONLY

The only downside to ‘Buy Before You Fly’ is that it is pre-order only. You won’t be able to buy any additional food in-flight. BA has told us they will listen to customer feedback and may change things in the future.

It isn’t clear if hot drinks must also be pre-ordered. BA told us that all ‘other food and drink items’ must be pre-ordered and pre-paid. It is also isn’t clear what happens if you order two coffees, two gin and tonics etc – are they all brought at once?

It appears that ordering will NOT be integrated into the BA app. Orders will be placed via highlifeshop.com. The logical thing would be to integrate it with the app and let people choose food, with the option to pay with Avios, whilst checking in.

British Airways Tom Kerridge

Tom Kerridge takes over from M&S

When British Airways announced it was ditching Marks & Spencer for ‘Buy on Board’, The Sun suggested that Greggs had submitted a proposal to take over. We also speculated that there could be a link with whichever supermarket will replace Tesco as an Avios partner.

It looks like we were both wrong, because British Airways has tapped Tom Kerridge on the shoulder to create a brand-new menu for Euro Traveller.

BA has a long-term partnership with Tom. In 2019, he created a special menu to celebrate the airline’s centenary year. The Steak and Ale Pie even won ‘Best Onboard Snack’ at the Onboard Hospitality Awards last year.

There is a short video of Tom here talking through the menu if you click through.

British Airways Eurotraveller Tom Kerridge steak and ale pie
The prize winning steak and ale pie

The dishes Tom Kerridge has designed for Euro Traveller focus on “British provenance”. Here is a sample menu with prices which British Airways has provided us:

  • The Ham Hock & Smoked Cheddar Sandwich – £4.10
  • The Spiced Cauliflower Tortilla Wrap (Vegan) – £4.20
  • The Chicken & Bacon Brioche Baguette – £4.50
  • The Brie Ploughman’s Sandwich (Vegetarian) – £4.20
  • Steak & Ale Pie – £4.50 (or with a can of beer for £8)

Interestingly, the food will not be made in-house by BA’s new long haul caterers Do&Co. It is being produced by Tom Kerridge’s existing commercial partners, with whom he is known to exercise tight control.

You’ll also be able to order other snacks and soft, hot and alcoholic drinks. For example, the José Pizarro tapas selection which was on the M&S Buy On Board menu will still be available for £5.95, or £10.95 with a glass of wine.

Afternoon Tea with a scone, clotted cream and jam is £5, or £10 with prosecco. BA is still not including any tea with its Afternoon Tea.

BrewDog is back

The BrewDog beer partnership is back too.

There will be a brand new IPA called JetStream, replacing the Speedbird 100 Centenary IPA.

Conclusion

It was probably in 2017 when British Airways reached its nadir in terms of cost and service cuts. Rob won ‘Editor of the Year’ at the 2017 Business Travel Journalism Awards in response to his coverage of the changes.

The removal of flowers from the First Class bathrooms became a totem. It was a visual reminder whenever you went to the loo of what had gone, given that the holder remained.

In the years since British Airways has slowly been adding things back. We have seen the re-introduction of a second hot meal on long haul economy fights, the move to premium airline caterers Do&Co and improved catering and soft product in World Traveller Plus. We have also seen Club Suite, of course, although that was a long term project.

The permanent introduction of ‘Buy Before You Fly’ is a genuine improvement with every passenger getting water and a snack with the option of purchasing something from an improved menu.

Pre-ordering removes uncertainty from airline catering, and you will now be able to guarantee a meal that you want before you fly. It also eliminates unnecessary food waste. The failure to integrate this into the BA app to allow people to order food whilst checking in is odd, however.

The changes are due to roll out from 20th January. This is not a fixed date given the current disruption airlines face.

PS. British Airways is still planning to restart a normalised meal service in Club Europe and long haul flights on the 20th. This will see the re-introduction of glassware and crockery and a return to “proper” rather than boxed meals.


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Comments (139)

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

  • Kieran Fox says:

    Pre-order food, fine, I can maybe begin to understand that. Drinks? That’s crazy and will surely put people off if they know they can’t get a beer on board when going on their city break (unless they pre-order, but c’mon….)

    • Andrew says:

      And surely everyone just takes a can of beer from the lounge anyway?

    • C says:

      Agree. Also a major revenue loss, as most beverage purchases will be impulse buying. I would almost never PLAN to pay for a mediocre coffee / beer / tea / etc on board, but things tend to change after the myriad of stresses and delays at the airport and in transit, a busy day of meetings, etc.

    • Nick says:

      Agree. Seems strange and will I suspect less to lost revenue on drinks. Ok if I am flying in the morning, I can be reasonably sure I will want a coffee and pre-order. If I am coming back from somewhere at 6pm, I may or may not fancy a G&T. It’s probably going to be an impulse purchase based on my mood at the time. Not sure how I feel about pre-ordering my G&T at 6am.

      • Rhys says:

        You can pre-order it at any time up to 12 hours prior to departure. You don’t have to be up exactly 12 hours before!

        • C says:

          But that’s the point – I rarely PLAN to want a beverage on board, knowing I can get a much better coffee from Pret, Nero, etc, or a drink in the lounge. But it doesn’t take much for that time to slip away, meaning I need to buy on board or do without. If I have to Pre-order, I’ll just do without. Think also of the headlines in the Mail, Telegraph, etc. I think BoB beverages and pre-order food is a good mix (even better, make tea and coffee, or even all soft drinks, free as well — but I can settle for BoB).

        • qrfan says:

          It’s 24 hours on anything flying into London, which is most likely where you’d be lacking a decent food in a lounge (or running short on time). Who ON EARTH orders a SANDWICH 24 hours in advance, let along A CUP OF TEA. This approach is ridiculous. With book-with-confidence stil live, my sandwich order is now less flexible than my flight ticket??

    • mradey says:

      Order a six pack for 1A, sit back and relax.

  • Andrew says:

    Like the Brewdog – the Pickering’s gin is back too – but with a slightly different label to the “BA 100” bottle.

  • marcw says:

    Good luck during IRROPS, last min change of equipment, upgrades/downgrades, earlier/later flight.

    No airline does this on its own. It’s gonna be a massive disaster.

    Hold my beer.

    • Blenz101 says:

      Worst case you still get water and a free snack. This is only short haul.

      I’m sure they will have the template email apologising that food was not available, maybe some free Avios and a mechanism for quickly refunding sorted.

      So long as drinks don’t need to be preorder only I think this is a win.

  • Graeme says:

    I was mistaken for Tom Kerridge in the Concorde Room a couple of years ago. The staff had been hovering around us for some time being incredibly attentive and we had no idea why, then one of them said to me “I love your recipes”. It took a while for it to dawn on me why, then I remembered that a) one of my mates is adamant I look like Tom Kerridge and b) I probably look a bit like handsome TV chef Tom Kerridge.

  • Niklas Smith says:

    “I’m not sure than anyone went as far as BA in removing all free items except for hot water.”

    Well, back around the time of the credit crunch (I think) Scandinavian Airlines stopped serving free tea and coffee in short-haul economy. (SAS have a long tradition of serving free tea and coffee, the SAS coffee pot is a style icon.) Since coffee is a staple for most Scandinavians there were howls of protest…

    If I remember correctly at least plain water was still free on request.

    In 2012 they backpedalled and reintroduced free tea and coffee in an effort to differentiate from low-cost competitors: https://centreforaviation.com/analysis/reports/sas-aims-to-capture-a-larger-share-of-the-thriving-scandinavian-leisure-market-81160

  • Hardy says:

    I don’t get why this is such a shit show over all. Pre order food and drink is freaking crazy! It’s funny no one looks at how airlines like Southwest do it. They do it all, paid drinks, free non alcoholic ones, free snacks, and they have more full flights than BA and an incredibly loyal and satisfied customer base. Why does every one try to re-invent the wheel??
    Not sure why no one has tried to buy before you fly and pick up at gate in addition to buy on plane. Or something smarted in LHR!

  • Nick G says:

    Bit hard to predict what you may or may not want to eat or drink in 12 hrs time….personally I would be quite happy if BA or others stuck another £10/15 on the price of a seat just to get a meal and drink of my choice like the good old days!

    • old codger says:

      You’ve never organised the team’s xmas lunch in the pub before! One place I worked at, the pub claimed it was going to be so busy we had to pre-order our rounds of drinks and say what time we wanted them to be delivered! We didn’t go back to them, but that was more to do with them microwaving the meals before bringing them out. The pre-ordered drinks was fine – we just got drunk faster!

      • ChrisW says:

        I had this rule for a work team lunch once (food at least). Had to pre-order and pre-pay everyone’s. The booking was for 1pm and we were told ‘the food will be on the table at 1:15 whether you are there or not’.

        1:30 came and went with no food in sight.

  • Sam G says:

    I see two issues with this

    1) IRROPs – what happens when I miss my connection and they put me on the next shuttle to Edinburgh. Quite sure they won’t be running around transferring my pie over. As they won’t be selling anything on board the pie will go on the original flight and then be binned presumably. What about my refund?

    2) can’t get a second g&t or an impromptu bag of haribo. Seems a bit weird can’t think of any other airline that is doing pre-order only

    AirAsia delivers the pre ordered first and then runs the cart down with a smaller selection and the drinks/ambient. The downside to this is it’s sometimes tricky to get a drink at the same time. But some version of this would be most sensible. If you focused on pre ordered bundles that included a drink perhaps.

    • ankomonkey says:

      There will be prospectors ordering a few of everything and them re-selling them onboard at a (further) inflated price. Bag of Haribo? That’ll be £6.

      • sloth says:

        that’s what I used to do on the school bus all those years ago…

        • ankomonkey says:

          🙂

        • The real John says:

          Ha. We ordered pizzas at £4 each and sold them for £1 a slice. Made around £2000 before the canteen complained they were losing money. Donated the profits to charity.

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