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Virgin Atlantic A330neo Upper Class review (new seat)

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This is our review of the new Upper Class suite on Virgin Atlantic’s A330-900neo aircraft.

Virgin Atlantic’s first A330neo, called ‘Billie Holiday’, arrived last week and is now in commercial service, operating all flights to Tampa and a couple of weekly trips to Boston.

I was on a special celebration flight. Media were joined by a variety of Virgin Atlantic competition winners and their plus ones as well as some of Virgin’s most frequent flyers. Our ticket was free and Virgin Atlantic also provided accommodation and entertainment in Tampa.

Introducing Virgin Atlantic’s A330neo ….

Virgin Atlantic is currently in the midst of a big fleet renewal program. Whilst it already operates a fleet of A330 aircraft, it will gradually phase these out in favour of 16 newer A330neo. By 2027, the entire Virgin Atlantic fleet will comprise latest-generation aircraft, including the A350 and Boeing 787.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

The A330neo is an updated version of the Airbus A330. The ‘neo’ stands for ‘new engine option’ – Airbus has teamed up with Rolls Royce to offer a brand new and more energy efficient jet engines based on the A350’s that need less fuel to fly the same distance.

Other improvements include new carbon fibre winglets and aerodynamic improvements that, in total, mean the A330neo is around 14% more fuel efficient than the original A330. It can also fly marginally further.

Inside the cabin the differences are less stark. The A330neo still uses the same aluminium tube from the A330, and no changes have been made to the size of the windows or the cabin pressurisation. This remains at 8,000ft vs the A350’s and 787’s 6,000ft, which has an impact on how your body reacts to the flight and how tired and fresh you feel afterwards.

That said, Airbus has redesigned its cabin fittings, including with larger overhead bins. Virgin Atlantic is also fitting a brand new business class seat, which is why Virgin flew me to Tampa!

First impressions of Virgin Atlantic’s A330-900

At most airports you will board the aircraft through door 2, which opens onto an updated and tweaked version of ‘The Loft’ social space that Virgin Atlantic first unveiled on the A350.

This has taken the place of Virgin’s traditional bar space, which you can still find on its older A330s and Boeing 787s. The 747, which had the bar in the Upper Class cabin, was retired in 2020 – you can read my farewell report of that aircraft here.

Virgin Atlantic A330neo Loft

A lot of people are still on the fence about Virgin Atlantic replacing the bar with the Loft, but I have to admit I like it. On many flights the bar is not properly staffed and so it turns into additional galley space for the crew. In my opinion the Loft is a better use of space and offers a more comfortable and friendly environment to sit in.

Virgin Atlantic has made a few changes to the Loft since the A350 which I think improves it. This includes a fridge and freezer, which are stocked throughout the flight with ice creams, soft drinks and cans of beer, cocktails and wine that you can help yourself to. It brings an element of the bar back but also means you are not constantly asking the crew for drinks, which means they are free to deal with the main cabin.

Other changes include the addition of fold-down armrests with flat surfaces for drinks and a slightly higher seating level, which means you are not constantly craning your neck if talking to someone else who is standing. It feels a lot more natural now to sit and chat with other passengers or crew.

Upper Class on Virgin Atlantic’s A330neo

Turn left from the Loft and you’ll find Virgin’s new Upper Class, which in this case accommodates 30 passengers in one cabin. There are just eight rows, so it still feels exclusive.

Virgin Atlantic A330neo retreat suite

The big attraction is Virgin Atlantic’s brand new Upper Class suites and the exclusive Retreat Suites (pictured above), which it calls its “most spacious yet”. Virgin Atlantic now has three distinct business class seats flying:

Unlike the first two, the new Upper Class suite on the A330neo is a staggered, rather than herringbone seat. That means all the seats are forward-facing, rather than angled, with alternating rows. You can see what I mean here:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

That means that there are multiple different versions of the seat, all with slightly different variations from each other. It is particularly noticeable in the window seats, where odd rows are ‘aisle side’ whilst even rows have you sat closer to the window.

The change also means that Virgin Atlantic is able to fit removable panels to ‘aisle side’ window seats. This helps it accommodate passengers with accessibility requirements or who need to be lifted into their seat, so that is a positive.

Other good news includes the fact that Virgin Atlantic has opted to keep all the overhead storage bins which means there is plenty of room. Many airlines these days have chosen to remove the two rows of bins down the centre of the aircraft, which creates a more open environment but can lead to a fight for locker space.

I was also pleased to see that all seats have individual air vents. I often find myself over-heating when sleeping on flights and find the additional airflow a life saver.

The new-new Upper Class Suite

I was sat in 3K, which meant I was an aisle side window seat:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

As we saw at the unveiling event, first impressions are that this seat is very Virgin Atlantic, with classic chocolate brown leather seats, woven fabrics, textured plastic panelling and gold accents. It looks very classy – even better with the sunrise shining through the windows!

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

Every Upper Class suite on the A330neo gets two windows each, which is a nice touch too.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

The seat itself is very comfortable. I was a little worried that the seat would feel narrow because the A330neo is a narrow aircraft, but to be honest I think it felt wider than Virgin’s Boeing 787 seat.

Storage has been improved from the A350 Upper Class suite. Next to your headrest is a small storage cupboard, similar to the one that British Airways has in its Club Suite:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

Inside you’ll find a mirror as well as your headphones. Small touches like the little label under the mirror which reads “Well, don’t you look lovely?” add a little Virgin touch:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

Underneath this is a raised area with wireless charging for mobile phones. This is tucked out of the way and means you don’t have to faff around with a spiders-web of cables in your seat, albeit that wireless charging is not as fast as a cabled connection.

I did find I had to shuffle my phone around to find the charging ‘spot’ but once I did it charged fine. A little ledge means that your phone won’t slide out during turbulence or take-off and landing.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

Beside this you also have a plethora of charging options, including two USB-A ports and a 60W USB-C port which should keep a laptop going. There’s also a universal mains socket for charging laptops and other, bigger gadgets.

The safety card, Vera inflight magazine and other literature are tucked away neatly in a little slot to the side and you also get extended seat controls here:

Virgin Atlantic A330neo seat controls

Straddling (almost) the entire length of the seat you’ll also find a large console table. I mostly used this for drinks, my amenity kit etc but you could also plonk a 15” laptop on it no problem.

Underneath this is a little more storage, in the form of a little cubby hole. This is accessible in bed mode as well so quite useful for tucking away anything you might want during the night but don’t want rolling around on the surface above.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

The tray table is also tucked away inside the console table. This has a clever mechanism that pops out from the side and offers a little cocktail table, or you can unfold it and have the full tray table out. A clever little crescent has been cut out as well so that it can fit closer to your body.

The mechanism feels sturdy and is also adjustable. My only criticism is that it does not push back far enough for you to get out of your seat during a meal service – there simply isn’t enough space. Parents may find this an issue if they need to get up to help their children whilst eating.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

You can also flip up the armrest on your right to find a small remote to control the screen, plus another mirror:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

In front of you’ll find a big 17.3″ 4K in-flight entertainment screen. This looks great and feels bigger than it is because it is actually quite close. It is fixed in place which means you have gate-to-gate entertainment, one of the biggest features I thought was missing from the A350 Upper Class Suite. It’s good to see it here. The software, which Virgin calls Vera, is very responsive and modern.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

For the first time, I was also able to connect my own Bluetooth headphones to the IFE which let me avoid a tangle of wires. I expected the pairing process to be an absolute nightmare – Bluetooth so often is – but I was shocked at how easy it was. It took literally 15 seconds. What a game changer!

The plane is also equipped with Viasat wifi and this was equally impressive. At one point, I was told 130 devices were connected but I was still able to browse fairly normally. I even ended up writing most of this review directly into the HfP system rather than into a Word document hosted locally.

On one side you’ll also find a discreet pop-out coat hook, another nice touch. I didn’t have a coat with me but a lot of the other passengers did and this worked a treat.

Is it a comfortable bed?

After getting up at 4:30am to catch the flight I had the perfect opportunity to test out the Upper Class suite in bed mode and try and get a couple of hours sleep. I’m pleased to report I found it very comfortable.

As on other aircraft Virgin Atlantic provides a sleep kit in the overhead lockers which includes a mattress pad and quilted duvet (a pillow is already at your seat). I always appreciate when airlines provide mattress pads as it adds just a little extra comfort and makes it feel a lot more hygienic. I was able to fit these myself no problem:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

Unlike the A350 Suite, this Upper Class seat also comes with a full width door. I like to use this when I’m trying to sleep so that I’m not accidentally bumped by other passengers or cabin crew:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

Like other modern business class seats, Virgin’s A330neo seat features the dreaded ‘foot coffin’. Sitting down I thought this looked tight, but in reality there is plenty of room, even accounting for my 10.5 size feet. Here I am, under the covers, with my feet well into the cubby hole. I probably have 15cm or so of space above:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

This is partly achieved by a seat that lowers when it goes into bed mode, which means you regain some of the space lost that would otherwise be lost. An ingenious solution – for an A330, there is plenty of leg room.

Sleeping is comfortable, even for odd side-sleepers like me. I always pull my knees up and end up knocking the sides but it was less of an issue in this seat and in the end I managed to get a couple of hours sleep. I will see how it fares on a night flight on my return.

Food and drink on Virgin Atlantic

Whilst not a focus for this review, I do want to quickly whizz through the meal service on this flight. Bear in mind that this was not a ‘normal’ flight and more of a party flight – I was out of my seat for most of it!

Of course the cabin crew came round with the usual pre-departure drinks (orange juice, a Virgin mocktail or champagne) as well as after takeoff.

We were served lunch a couple of hours into the flight, although in reality I imagine this would normally be done much sooner as the scheduled Tampa flights depart just after lunch time. This media flight had been moved forward to 8am.

There were two options for every course, and I went for the chicken parfait starter:

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

I think this is the first time I’ve ever had pate on a flight and it was nice to get something slightly different than a cold smoked salmon starter that is all too common (if delicious) these days!

For my main course I opted for the miso and sesame crusted salmon which was equally good, full of umami flavours. The alternative was a chicken pie which I thought was a bit too heavy for me.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

For dessert the choice was between a chocolate gateau and brioche bread pudding. Undecided, I asked the crew to surprise me and they brought the bread pudding which was warm and delicious, if not the most photogenic.

Review: Upper Class business seat on Virgin Atlantic A330neo aircraft

A cheese board and port is also available, if you are still peckish. There was no official second meal service; instead, Virgin Atlantic offered a number of ‘dine on demand’ options including cream tea, a fish finger sandwich, chicken caeser club sandwich and a chickpeak and vegetable samosa. I wasn’t particularly hungry so I didn’t try these.

What are the best seats on Virgin Atlantic’s A330neo?

As you have probably realised by now, not all Upper Class seats on Virgin’s A330neos are equal. You can actually choose from a number of different variations.

I think there are some definite ‘top picks’. The most obvious is the new business-plus Retreat Suites, the front two middle seats. These offer additional leg room, storage space and a bigger inflight entertainment screen. These can currently be booked for an additional £200 from two weeks before departure.

If you don’t want to splash the cash, your next best options are definitely seats 1A and 1K. These are adjacent to the Retreat Suites and offer some of the benefits – including improved legroom and a larger ‘foot coffin’ for when you sleep as there is nobody sitting in front of you cutting into your space.

Other than that, I would always pick even-numbered windows seats which are closer to the window and therefore offer a bit more privacy than odd-numbered seats. The only downside is that anyone on the larger side will have to squeeze through the side console table and the seat in front to access it, so it is not for everyone.

Conclusion

I have to admit, I am impressed. Whilst the new Upper Class cabin wasn’t a complete surprise – I saw it unveiled in Shoreditch over the summer – seeing it installed inside an aircraft cabin made it real.

Kudos to the Virgin Atlantic product design team, who I think have delivered the best Upper Class seat now flying. Whilst some people dismissed it as a Virginified version of Delta One, which has been flying for five years now, it is a genuinely good seat and Virgin has managed to put its own stamp on it. It is comfortable and stylish, and it improves on some of the missing features from its other seats.

My only hope now is that Virgin Atlantic commits to retrofitting the seat onto the Boeing 787 fleet and finally retire the old, cramped and outdated Upper Class seat on that aircraft. It would be even better if they can squeeze it onto the A350, although I admit that’s unlikely given how recent that product is.

Head for Points made a financial contribution to the Woodland Trust as part of this trip. The Woodland Trust creates and manages forests in the UK in accordance with the Woodland Carbon Code.


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Comments (93)

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

  • Nick says:

    Sounds utterly amazing! When the only potential problem in the whole cabin or service is that you can’t get out without partially stowing the table, it must be one of the best business class services in the world. Can’t wait to try it!

  • Frankie says:

    Great review Rhys. What was the can of drink that was at everyone’s seat when boarding? I noticed that on a few other reviews as well such as godsavethepoints.

    • Gary says:

      It’s bottled water in an aluminium can. Quite difficult to open (especially for young children) but maybe more green…

  • Kieran says:

    Why are pro-Virgin articles on this site always written with a sense that the writer doesn’t want to be. “I have to admit…” being my case in point.

    • Panda Mick says:

      I am amazed that this site still favours BA over Virgin. Yeah, BA fly to more destinations, but, deep down, nobody freely chooses BA, do they? 🙂

      “I fly BA because of their amazeballs customer service” is not something you’d ever hear on here, is it? But something you’d definitely hear if it was Virgin.

      I wonder where the bar is before people start to admit that BA really are an expensive Ryanair?

      • Rob says:

        With a Gold card, at least, BA short haul is hugely civilised. Get your taxi to drop you at the First Wing, through security and in the lounge in 5-10 mins with some champagne, free seat selection including having the seat next to you blocked, no baggage fees – not quite Ryanair.

        • KevinS says:

          How many people have a gold card?

          • Rob says:

            On here, probably 20%. Not hugely tricky given the double tier points and reduced thresholds available this year, plus the fact that at least 50% of Avios redemptions in H1 were crediting as cash flights, earning Avios and TP. Why do you think my daughter is BA Silver?

          • KevinS says:

            So hardly anyone then when it comes to the general public

          • Rob says:

            BA has probably 20% of the capacity in the South East of England for most of its short haul routes. It only needs to hoover up 20% of the potential passengers. It can’t fly more of them even it it wants to, given Heathrow capacity controls. It can fill its aircraft with the well heeled residents of West London and the Thames Valley, for whom Heathrow is the nearest airport, many of whom have status (as you can see from the size of the priority boarding queue). It’s not actually competing with Ryanair or Wizz or easy as these fly from other airports which are not convenient for its core customer base and in any event offer no status benefits.

          • Christina says:

            “So hardly anyone then when it comes to the general public”
            – that’s a positive.

        • JK says:

          Last few times for me, including Mon last week, first wing security took 35 mins for me. Queue went back to the conformance gates and curled back on itself. Other than that I agree it can be quite civilised. Ryanair isn’t that bad these days though and often more legroom.

  • Andrew J says:

    What an improvement on that atrocious cramped A350 seat – the sidesaddle table set up is almost comical. This new suite looks excellent and I look forward to trying it soon (and booking the 787 in the meantime to avoid the A350 seat).

    • Paul says:

      it’s not that bad.. recently flew their A350 seat and found it great. A little bit boxed in but nothing that bad.

    • Rob says:

      I flew the A350 for the first time on Wednesday and tend to agree.

    • dougzz99 says:

      If Virgin introduce a UC new seat, and then have to retrofit different tables, then on their next aircraft purchase they have another new UC seat it does suggest they need to spend a little more on the practicalities of the seat, versus the messages above the mirror. Then again they probably don’t, in my experience the defenders of Virgin are almost cult like.

    • Rhys says:

      I would say the 787 seat is worse than the A350 seat!

      • Andrew J says:

        At least the table is in front of you on the 787! I think I do have a soft spot for the original Upper Class Suite – brings back happy memories of my first business class flying. I also like the really wide bed at the shoulder area and the dedicated mattress on the back of the seat, and that you can keep the seat reclined during takeoff and landing.

    • Jonathan says:

      The best VS UC seat is really personal preference when it ultimately boils down to it, as we can see above none of us can really agree on the best seat, the A330 neo is a bit tough to call, since hardly anyone here will’ve tried it out yet

  • Neil says:

    Good review but I find your inability to use plurals irritating. Several of these aircraft are not A330’s but A330s. No apostrophe.

    • AJA says:

      I find the phrase “I was sat in 3K” irritating. I know it is colloquially acceptable and its usage is gaining ground but I would delete the word “was” and just say “I sat in 3k”

      Other than that great review by Rhys. The seat looks good as does the food.

      • LostInAsia says:

        Yes.

        “I was sat in 3K” is as bad as “I was talked on the phone”.

        I sat in, or I was sitting in, or I was seated in.

        Almost as bad as “double down” and “gotten”.

      • Bagoly says:

        I’m fussy about language, but I think “I was sat in 3K” is correct – the “sat” is passive, since Rhys didn’t choose the seat; Virgin did.
        “Seated” also works.

        • wolf says:

          I agree with Bagoly, “was sat” is entirely correct and has a different meaning than just “sat”.

          Neil, Rhys’ use of apostrophes is correct too. Possessive, not plural. The former is referring to the A350’s engine and the latter to the A350’s cabin pressurisation.

          • JDB says:

            ‘I was sat’ is grammatically incorrect in standard English in this usage for various reasons. The increasing colloquial use of ‘sat’ and ‘stood’ has not yet made it correct. It should be either ‘I was sitting’ because it is the continuous past tense or ‘I was seated’ because there was a single act. For the continuous past tense try ‘I was eating’ vs ‘I was ate’ or a raft of other verbs that will tell you it is incorrect. Equally, it is correct, for instance, to say ‘I have sat in the same seat every day’. In recent days here there has been much use of the expression ‘I am sat on x Avios’ which stretches the error even further.

          • Bagoly says:

            @JDB. “I was eaten” is grammatically correct!
            Although the passive in that case changes the meaning significantly:-)

            “Stood” is illuminating, since it matches both “sat” and “seated” meaning one has to change the structure to distinguish meaning:
            Single action: “I was stood next to the wall by the guard before he frisked me”
            Continuing state: “I had been stood next to the wall by the guard and had to stay there all day.”
            I suggest that the former has come to be standard for continuous action too: “I was stood next to the wall all day”.

            Single action: “I was firmly sat on the stool and then my arms were raised”
            Continuing state: “I was seated on the stool for the whole day”
            Again the former has come to cover the latter, not least because to get to the continuing state, the single action must have occurred.
            So one could argue that Rhys’s usage is referring specifically to the initial action in the seat-allocation system, rather than his situation during the flight, but the disagreement is about application rather than grammar.

            It is interesting to consider the compound forms of the verb, E.g. “we seated him down” is something I have never seen.
            It is even possible that that is the older usage, and “seated” is the (nineteenth century?) “modernism”?

          • Bagoly says:

            @wolf – don’t forget the s at the end of Rhys’s !
            He is not plural Rhy 🙂
            Whatever his pronoun!

            P.S. “A330’s” rather than “A350s” suggests Rhys had already corrected after Neil’s comment.

          • JDB says:

            @Bagoly – I’m very impressed by your command of the language and all its nuances! It is sadly quite rare these days which is a shame when we have such an incredibly rich language with a much larger vocabulary than most, having purloined words from others over the centuries. I try to impress on my children that while it’s fine to use colloquialisms in every day speech, you need to know what is correct for exams, CVs, job applications, cover letters or even the much talked about ‘letters before action’ to BA. To be taken seriously, proper spelling and grammar really matter.

          • KevinS says:

            “To be taken seriously, proper spelling and grammar really matter.”

            Yes. When I’m recruiting, if someone can’t spell or write correctly then their application goes straight in the bin.

          • Neil says:

            To quote ‘up with Rolls Royce to offer a brand new and more energy efficient jet engines based on the A350’s that need less fuel to fly the same distance.’

            That’s plural not possessive so back to school for both of you

        • AJA says:

          In that case I’d prefer to say “I was allocated Seat 3K”

  • AL says:

    Let’s hope the A330neo suites don’t get as tatty looking as the A351 equivalents. Some of the seats I’ve had, and photos of others’ I’ve seen, are scratched no end. In all, looking forward to seeing this in reality – will be routing my next VS via Tampa to try it out!

    • Rhys says:

      Virgin have started changing some of the materials on those seats in order to introduce more durability, so I think they’ve learned from their mistakes!

  • Andrew (@andrewseftel) says:

    Potentially stupid question: as far as I can tell the A330neo-900 seems to be remarkably similar to the A350-900. Why would Virgin want these rather than the shorter 350 variant? Is it just a cost thing? I assume – all things being equal – that the passenger experience would be better on the 350 with the cabin pressure etc.

    • Rui N says:

      A330 is quite a bit smaller, so easier to fill up. Also MUCH cheaper to buy.

      • Andrew (@andrewseftel) says:

        I don’t know how authoritative it is, but Wikipedia lists the max seating as 460 on the 339 and 440 on the 359. ~10% more cargo space on the 359 though.

    • Paul says:

      yes, disappointing they went with A330. At the end of the day it’s an old aircraft with new engines, nothing special. I’d much rather fly on a 787 or A350.

      • lumma says:

        I’d rather fly economy on an A330 than an A350 with 2-4-2 seating Vs 3-3-3 seating

        • GM says:

          Not a huge fan of Premium on the A350 because of the 2-4-2: would actually prefer the older A330/787 with 3-3-3 despite the old IFE etc too

    • ADS says:

      I suspect the problems that Norwegian had with the 787 and 737 Max means that airlines will want some amount of diversity in their fleets … until they forget what happened to Norwegian … and then it happens again in 20 years time !

  • JW says:

    What’s the plan for the a330 leo fleet (-300s)? Are they getting phased out as the neos come in or will they be around long enough they might see newer seats?

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