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BIG NEWS: Virgin Atlantic to join the SkyTeam alliance – but does it change much?

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After many, many years of resisting alliance membership – first Star Alliance when Singapore Airlines owned 49% of the airline, and more latterly SkyTeam when Delta Air Lines bought 49% – Virgin Atlantic has bitten the bullet.

Virgin Atlantic will join the SkyTeam alliance in January 2023.

Rob and I joined the Virgin Atlantic management team and SkyTeam staff at The Gherkin this morning to hear the news. We didn’t know why we’d been invited and, if I’m honest, this wasn’t on our shortlist of potential reasons!

Let’s get the key facts out of the way first.

Virgin Atlantic will join SkyTeam in late January 2023. This is a far quicker accession process than usual, because the airline already uses a lot of Delta’s IT systems and has been doing additional upgrades in the background for the past year.

From late January 2023:

  • you will be able to earn and redeem Virgin Points on all SkyTeam member airlines
  • elite members of Virgin Flying Club will get lounge access, priority baggage, priority boarding and fast track security benefits when flying with any of the SkyTeam airlines
  • elite members of other SkyTeam airlines will get the same benefits when flying with Virgin Atlantic
  • long term, you can expect other changes such as expanded codeshare arrangements, terminal consolidation at key airports etc

Who are the other members of the SkyTeam alliance?

There are 18 members if you exclude Aeroflot, which is currently suspended. These are:

  • Aerolineas Argentinas
  • Aeromexico
  • Air Europa
  • Air France
  • China Airlines
  • China Eastern
  • Czech Airlines
  • Delta Air Lines
  • Garuda Indonesia
  • ITA Airways
  • Kenya Airways
  • KLM
  • Korean Air
  • Middle East Airlines
  • Saudia
  • TAROM
  • Vietnam Airlines
  • XiamenAir

I think, for reasons I will outline below, elite members of the airlines above will be more excited about this news than Virgin Flying Club elites.

I’m excited. Can I get a status match from British Airways to Virgin Atlantic?

Yes. Virgin Atlantic runs a matching programme if you book a premium cabin ticket with them and provide proof of British Airways status. Click here to claim your match.

Alternatively, take a look at the statusmatcher.com website and see if other SkyTeam airlines will match your British Airways status without requiring you to book a flight.

Virgin Skyteam press conference

What about Italy’s ITA? Is it still doing a SkyTeam status match from British Airways?

Yes – but for just three more days! Click here.

If:

  • you hold British Airways elite status AND
  • you buy a ticket for an ITA Airways flight (no idea how cheap a throwaway ticket would be)

…. ITA will match your BA status, along with that of many other major airlines.

Whilst this is not written on the ITA website, historically ITA has given top tier Elite Plus membership even if you only have a British Airways Executive Club Silver card. This means that you get SkyTeam lounge access.

ITA now shows as a SkyTeam member on the alliance website, having taken over from Alitalia, so hopefully the issues over getting into lounges which existed earlier in 2022 have now gone.

Will the Virgin Atlantic Clubhouse be overrun / will I get access with my free ITA status match card?

Probably not. Shai Weiss, the Virgin Atlantic CEO, was asked this question today and he basically said ‘No’, without actually using that word.

You should expect the Clubhouse to be carved out from standard SkyTeam lounge rules – as is already the case for Delta and Flying Blue elite members – and SkyTeam elite members in Economy to be sent elsewhere.

How will my Virgin Atlantic status match to SkyTeam?

Silver members of Virgin Flying Club will receive ‘Elite’ status in SkyTeam. This does not come with lounge access.

Gold members of Virgin Flying Club will receive ‘Elite Plus’ status in SkyTeam. This will get you lounge access across the alliance.

Does this news really change much?

Let’s be honest. My wife and I have around 1 million Virgin Points between us, so you’d expect me to be heavily invested in this issue. My initial reaction, however, was ‘meh’.

I suspect that 90% of the value I will get from being in SkyTeam already arrived when the existing joint venture with Delta Air Lines, Air France and KLM launched. You can already earn and redeem Virgin Points on these three airlines, and get reciprocal status benefits.

(I’m using these benefits too. I have a KLM business trip next week booked on Virgin Points, and next month my family are off to the Middle East in Air France business class, again using Virgin Points.)

There is certainly nothing wrong with airlines such as Korean, XiamenAir, TAROM, Czech etc, but for the majority of HfP readers they are never going to be a key part of their earning or burning mileage plans.

It’s obviously good news that you’ll get status benefits if you do find yourself on one of these carriers. However, in my 30 years of international flying I doubt I’ve taken more than five flights across the other 15 SkyTeam members outside of Delta, KLM and Air France.

I suspect that the most attractive new option for HfP readers will be Vietnam Airlines, which we reviewed here, followed by Garuda Indonesia and Korean Air.

We might lose something too.

If Virgin Atlantic loses its existing non-SkyTeam partners such as Air New Zealand, Singapore Airlines, Virgin Australia and Japan’s ANA, your redemption options may even be a little worse. Don’t expect short term changes due to existing contracts, but there is no certainly that these agreements will be renewed.

It is hard to see how ANA redemptions to Asia can remain so cheap when SkyTeam redemptions to Asia on Korean, Garuda Indonesia or Vietnam Airlines will be priced far higher.

Conclusion

This is obviously huge news ….. a story literally 20 years in the making.

And yet, and yet ….. perhaps, following the earlier launch of the Delta / Air France / KLM joint venture, it doesn’t mean as much as it otherwise would.

What is more interesting is arguably what this says about the value of airline alliances today.

If you treat ITA as a rebranded Alitalia, Virgin Atlantic is the first new member of SkyTeam for eight years. Garuda Indonesia was the most recent new member in 2014.

Even the worst pandemic in a century didn’t push Emirates, Etihad and the other major hold-outs into the arms of an alliance. oneworld gets excited about hoovering up small carriers such as Oman Air and Royal Air Maroc.

We had all begun to think that alliances were over, and that joint ventures were the way forward. This is certainly what Emirates and Etihad believe.

Either Virgin Atlantic has smelled something in the air which the rest of us have missed, or it is arriving at the party just as everyone else is heading home. Let’s see.


How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (April 2025)

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 18,000 Virgin Points and the free card has a bonus of 3,000 Virgin Points):

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

18,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

3,000 bonus points, no fee and 1 point for every £1 you spend 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 – 30,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with 50,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 50,000 Virgin Points.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large 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

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American Express Business Gold

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Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Virgin Points

Comments (149)

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

  • Vasco says:

    SkyTeam doesn’t really care about out of alliance partnerships the way Star Alliance does. In Flying Blue, for instance, I can earn and redeem for Copa (*A), and Malaysia, JAL, and Qantas (all OW). This includes earning status points.

    • Rhys says:

      Virgin were downplaying the effect on existing partnerships, but it’s always hard to know what the future holds!

      • meta says:

        It might work the other way. ANA might not want to be associated with a SkyTeam member! They were happy to cancel Virgin redemptions without informing passengers properly and not willing to rebook them…

  • zapato1060 says:

    The fact that the ANA first class redemption is the best use of Virgin or any other points in world could be a thing of past 🙁 🙁

  • Neal says:

    A nice benefit is the addition of China Eastern as a redemption partner. Opens up redemption opportunities on their vast domestic network, where prices can be high especially on key routes.

    • Rhys says:

      Could be a while until you get to enjoy that benefit!

    • Lady London says:

      International, yes.
      Internal flights? In the phone industry people used to fly internal via an international destination on a few airlines I can recall, including in China, rather than take a direct internal flight for safety reasons (they said)

  • Richie says:

    I thought about Vietnam Airlines before I read Rob’s comment. HfPers with a stash of Virgin miles who haven’t been to Vietnam really do need to consider a trip to Vietnam.

  • captaindave says:

    Re :

    You can already earn and redeem Virgin Points on these three airlines, and get reciprocal status benefits.

    Does this work in the real world ? As i still havnt been able to add Virgin Flying Club No to a KLM booking, so wont earn any points as it stands…

    • AL says:

      It does, but admittedly the integration between AF/KL and the DL systems (for DL/VS) is poor. You can earn retrospectively by emailing partner.points@fly.virgin.com with your PNR, ticket number, name, flight number, origin, destination, FC number and dates.

      There was also a need, at times, for DL to re-enforce the reciprocal benefits under the JV for access to, say, KL lounge at AMS, but with the move to ST, that might simplify things.

  • Brian78 says:

    Massive!

  • BJ says:

    “Rhys and I joined the Virgin Atlantic management team and SkyTeam representatives at The Gherkin this morning to hear the news. We didn’t know why we’d been invited and, if I’m honest, this wasn’t on our shortlist of potential reasons!”

    Very odd, what would possibly be more likely with Virgin + SkyTeam? Seems like your shortlist might be more interesting and infornative than the big news itself 🙂 Care to share?

    • Rob says:

      1.IPO
      2.New fleet order to replace 787
      3.Refurb plans
      4.Some sustainability rubbish

      • Doommonger says:

        It really could have been anything, meeting there must have had you in a pickle mind you.

        Doomster

      • x2000traveller says:

        Did you mean that you weren’t aware that the SkyTeamers (sneakers and all..) were coming as well?
        Your shortlist sounds like a good take on VS’s issues but, if SkyTeam was there as well, the options were surely narrower ie either VS was joining or was massively falling out (in which case they wouldn’t have a joint event, Watson!)
        As you say, not such massive change for UK based flyers but likely to be much more interesting to those in China and the Far East. Surely a sign that DL and VS are heading towards complete integration…

    • Rhys says:

      Given that Virgin has been orbiting SkyTeam for yonks without joining we assumed it was firmly off the cards!

  • supergraeme says:

    Any chance the IT will work? I recently tried to book a Delta flight using FC miles but Belize City wasn’t an airport in the list so I had to call up (Delta fly BZE-ATL so it should have been).

    • Rhys says:

      SkyTeam are working on a ‘digital spine’ that they hope will better connect member airlines….

      You certainly won’t be able to book redemptions online from the get go. Trying to get two disparate systems to work together is a big job and in many cases not worth it, especially for the smaller airlines. Cheaper and easier to let call centres handle those.

      • Graeme says:

        Thanks Rhys – fingers crossed.

        The Belize thing irritated me because they had loads of Delta routes on there but not the one I needed. They fly to several places from Belize.

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

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