Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Air France business class review – Boeing 777-300ER from Paris to Dubai

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

This is my review of Air France business class, flying a Boeing 777-300ER from Paris to Dubai.

Last month I headed down to the Middle East for half term with my family. Instead of flying British Airways from London, we decided to use Virgin Points and booked on their partner Air France. We travelled to Paris a day earlier via Eurostar and did some sightseeing before heading to Charles de Gaulle the next day.

The cost of the Paris detour was more than covered by the saving in taxes and charges. We paid £200 each for the one way trip, plus 50,000 Virgin Points, compared to £470 in taxes and charges had we gone with British Airways.

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

I covered the Air France booking process, when using Virgin Points, in this article.

My review of the Air France business class lounge in Paris is here.

You can learn more about Air France business class on their website here.

(A quick apology. As with the lounge review yesterday, I did this trip after damaging my iPhone camera and the pictures are not as sharp as they should be.)

Air France is, seat-wise, a mess

Air France likes to compete with Lufthansa to see how many different business class products it can fly at the same time.

The seat I review below is the seat used on the core business class routes.

A brand new business class, similar to the one I flew but with doors, has just been launched and will be refitted onto 12 of the oldest of the Boeing 777-300ER fleet. You can see this seat on the Air France website here.

These aircraft currently have angle-flat business class seats (remember those?). Luckily the A380 fleet, which was ordered with angle-flat seats in business class (duh!) was scrapped during the pandemic.

The bottom line is that:

  • you should get the seat I review below
  • if you are very lucky you will get a similar version with doors which is brand new
  • if you are unlucky you will get a ‘wedgie’ angled-flat seat, but this is more likely to be on secondary routes

Air France Boeing 777-300ER seating

Here are some PR pictures of the most common seat, which is the one we flew:

Air France business class review Boeing 777-300ER

and

Air France business class review Boeing 777-300ER

This is the Safran Seats ‘Cirrus’ seat, also used by Cathay Pacific and American Airlines amongst others.

In the flesh, it looks like this:

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

Here are a few general thoughts:

  • we were on a 4-class aircraft which has one row – yes, just four seats – of first class. In this variant, there is a 4-row business class cabin behind and then a far larger 11-row business class cabin. We were in the 4-row business class cabin (Row 5) which felt more private and also meant we were served first.
  • every seat is a good seat – the 1-2-1 layout means that solo travellers have privacy and even those in the middle seat will find their head (if not their feet) a long way from their neighbour
  • all seats are forward facing – perhaps a statement of the obvious, but not necessarily if you are a long-term British Airways Club World flyer
  • there is a lot of storage space – you have the cupboard with the striking red interior (see the top photo above) plus a large console table and your own baggage bin above the seat
  • your feet have quite a bit of space – whilst they are under the back of the seat in front, it is not a tight cubby hole (see picture above)
  • privacy from the side isn’t great – here’s a shot of my daughter taken from my seat
Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER
  • connectivity is good – there is a plug socket (which will take UK and European plugs) and a USB charger
  • wi-fi has been introduced since I last flew Air France, which was a huge improvement (it worked well for me – the cost for the full flight was €6 for messaging, €18 for light browsing, €30 for streaming)
  • the only people who may not like the seating are couples who want to chat, as even in the middle pair of seats you cannot see the face of the person next to you when sat fully back.
  • the seat appears not to have an arm rest on the aisle side but this is not the case.  There is one but it is sunk into the seat.  If you give it a push it pops out and can be raised up. The armrest must be down for take-off and landing.
  • the TV has to be folded back for take off and landing so you don’t get full ‘gate to gate’ entertainment
  • despite the seat now being a good number of years old, it was still in very good condition – the only real signs of wear were on the surface edges where the gilding was coming away

The seat has everything I like about a business class seat – storage, acceptable privacy and space.  I really couldn’t care less about not having a door, especially on a day flight.

As this was a day flight, I can’t comment on how good the bed is for sleeping.  I put it flat for a period to try it out and it felt fine for my 6’2′ frame but that’s not the same as trying to get eight hours sleep.

One criticism I had of the crew is that they did try to enforce sleep.  We left Paris at 1.45pm and landed in Dubai at 11.25pm, which was 8.25pm Paris time.  This is, by any standards, a day flight and yet the crew decided to dim the lights for an extended period. It wasn’t quite as bad as when I did this flight in 2018. On that trip the cabin flights were turned off entirely for two hours in what was, Paris time, late afternoon.

Air France business class amenity kit

Business class amenity kits generally fail to inspire these days, and the current Air France is no exception:

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

There was a toothbrush and toothpaste, a pen, flight socks, an eye mask and some earplugs.  The best bits were a miniature Clarins moisturiser and hand cream.

Air France business class food and drink

Before take-off I was given a glass of Pommery Brut Royal champagne.  This technically sells for £40 but is regularly discounted to £30.

I had a second glass after take-off and it came with a pack of ‘Crepes Fourrees’. These are essentially crispy tubes stuffed with cheese – it was a novelty to me, but a pleasant change to the usual post take-off nibble.

Air France business class snack

Air France works with Anne-Sophie Pic on selected food items, a partnership which has beeen running for many years now.  Pic runs the acclaimed restaurant at the Four Seasons hotel at Tower Hill and back in 2019 (I can’t find more recent data) was the only female chef in the world with three Michelin stars.

With a 1.45pm departure time, there was no doubt that we would be getting a lunch menu.

First up was this appetizer of shrimp tartare and pea cream with lemon and ginger:

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

I was quite impressed with it – it was something different with a good mix of flavours. It came with a small baguette, butter and a side salad, and I ordered some more champagne.

I chose, as my main course, “poultry and poulette sauce with tonka bean, creamy polenta with mushrooms”. All four mains came from Anne-Sophie Pic and so come with sort of twist on standard airline food.

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

I admit that this doesn’t look too great in the photo, but it was very well put together by someone who understood how to mix flavours and textures that work well at altitude.

The other three options were:

  • beef cheek and coffee pot-au-feu, and a sweet onion consomme
  • pollock with seaweed, lovage sauce, spinach and fennel compote
  • conchiglie pasta, Swiss chard and lemon coulis, creamy lightly smoked ash-coated goat’s cheese, toasted pumpkin seeds

Nothing straightforward here! To be fair, my son – as picky as your standard 11 year old – had the same chicken dish as I did, thought the polenta was mashed potato and declared himself happy.

Dessert was listed as ‘vanilla cream puff by Philippe Urraca, morello cherry clafoutis tart, Opera cake’, to which you could add sorbet and desert wine if you wished (so I did!):

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

There was also a cheese course which I passed on.

Before landing there was a light snack, which was an improvement on what I received four years ago when I last took this flight. It was described as a ‘puff pastry bun with curd cheese, smoked salmon and vegetable julienne’, with a desert of ‘red berry coulis on plain thick yoghurt’ and a ‘crunchy vanilla cream puff’:

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

It certainly beat the British Airways long haul ‘afternoon tea’. If I’m honest, I preferred the simpler chicken goujon roll which I was served as a second meal on Virgin Atlantic when I flew to New York two weeks ago.

Air France IFE

Regular HfP readers will know that I am not an fan of IFE.  My idea of a good flight is to collect together all of the magazines that are sitting around my house unread and to plough through them in one multi-hour session!

For research purposes I did try out the IFE.  The English-language selection was weak – not surprising, given that I imagine a large percentage of Air France flights are between two non-English speaking countries – but the TV was a decent size given that it is fairly close to your face.

The most recent film I could find was ‘Elvis’, but it’s not exactly been a vintage few months in your local cinema either. As often happens, the TV series available are just a selection of random episodes, eg just three episodes of ‘Friends’. In fact, everything seemed to be capped at three episodes.

The TV is angled away from you when stowed, as you can see below, but pops out on a hinge when you want to watch.

The headphones were good with one quirk – they are hard-wired into the red storage cupboard next to the seat.  There was also a small screen on the remote control for anyone who wanted to watch on that instead:

Review Air France business class Boeing 777-300ER

Air France business class – the conclusion

I enjoyed my Air France business class flight, as I did when I last flew it four years ago.  The seat size and privacy, combined with the high quality food, made the seven hour flight time whizz by.

The seat continues to hold up well in a world of doors and half-doors, and I would have no problem flying this on a longer trip or overnight. The only issue with Air France is ensuring that your aircraft has this seat – or the brand new version with a door – and not the older angled lie-flat version. The A350 fleet is definitely OK, and with the A380 fleet gone the number of aircraft with the angled seats is much reduced.

Air France and KLM – I still need to try KLM long-haul business class – have been a great addition to Virgin Flying Club.  Even with Virgin Atlantic joining the SkyTeam alliance in January, I imagine that the existing joint venture partners – KLM, Air France and Delta – will still make up the bulk of redemptions.

Do read this HfP article before trying to book Air France or KLM redemptions on the Virgin Atlantic website, however.

You can find out more about Air France long haul business class on the Air France website here – oddly the site shows the old angled lie-flat seat.

The new Air France business class suite is showcased on this page.


How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (April 2024)

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 – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express comes with 40,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 40,000 Virgin Points.

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a 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

40,000 points sign-up bonus 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 Virgin Points

(Want to earn more Virgin Points?  Click here to see our recent articles on Virgin Atlantic and Flying Club and click here for our home page with the latest news on earning and spending other airline and hotel points.)

Comments (45)

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

  • Oliver says:

    WiFi Message Pass was free for our last few long haul flights on air France, even in economy. Not sure why it is 6 euro on this one. Even air France website said message pass is free access, I was fine to use whatsapp and other message apps

    • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

      Yes, I second this. I messaged away all flight long from SFO (when not asleep on the very comfy 777 seat)

  • Lady London says:

    I think BA would add an old, wilted spinach leaf alongside that ‘light snack’ Air France served you and call it lunch. Oh, and the yogurt would be a synthetic mass market concoction in a still-sealed plastic beaker when it was served.

    I’m beginning to regret moving my Virgin points to Hilton now.

    • Catalan says:

      Not true. BA catering by Do&Co are definitely up there with the best.
      I wish people would be original in their comments and refrain from the ‘copy and paste’ negative hype.

      • Alex G says:

        I’ve always enjoyed the food on BA. My biggest complaint is they always serve the second meal 90 minutes before landing, and its always a bit of a rush. The time between meals is fine for an 8 hour flight, but too long if its 11 hours or more. I was hungry and had a headache the last time I flew back from Japan on BA. Meal service on BA seems to be arranged for the convenience of the cabin crew, not the passengers.

        Meals on BA are not always time appropriate. Afternoon tea flying to the West Coast USA is on the light side (you used to get a decent sized pizza as the second meal in AA Economy Class). And being served breakfast before landing in Hong Kong at 5pm local time is ridiculous.

      • His Holyness says:

        I’ve had plenty of crap food from Do&Co. These companies do what you pay them to do.

        • 1ATL says:

          +1
          The options Do&Co produce are only going to be as good as the budget provided. Until BA throw some additional £££ in this direction, the output is going to be mediocre to underwhelming…. and yes Fillet steak can be served in Business and it doesn’t have to be served like an overcooked insole either, although unlikely ever to be on BA.

      • JDB says:

        BA First food and Club Europe is, in our experience, unfairly maligned, but Club World food and drink is atrocious. Oddly, I think the best Do&Co food we have had in recent years on BA First was when they were serving everything in boxes during covid. What usually goes wrong with airline food is attempting to be too fancy when the preparation and storage simply doesn’t work. They may offer a good presentation which is important for one’s perception, but ultimately it’s a ready meal. The days of carving a perfectly cooked rack of lamb or fillet of beef on board are long gone.

  • slidey says:

    I flew on this last week, but the other direction and overnight. The seat was fine for sleeping, the footwell wasnt cramped and there was a reasonable amount of room, there was enough storage space to put stuff in and I was able to watch shows on my tablet while lying down but placing it on the storage platform to the side. As it was overnight, the food was a bit weaker, which seems to be the same with all airlines on overnights.

    The only slight weirdness was how the headphones are literally nailed in to the storage box and it has perhaps the smallest toilets Ive ever encountered, between the two business cabins where there was only enough room to step inside and close the door lol.

    • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

      Somehow I managed to change into pyjamas, and then back out of them, in those small toilets. Very much a stepping into trousers process. However the smallest toilets I ever encountered on a plane is the Delta A330. One toilet is inside a lockable gate leading to the cockpit. When a flight crew member wants to use the loo, the gate closes and locks, granting them access to that toilet. The other J toilet is also beside the cockpit. Both painfully small, with sink water splashing all over the floor regardless of what you do. It’s the only time I’ve ever genuinely started to worry in a plane toilet that I might not be able to get the door back open to get out.

  • Alex G says:

    I like the cabin lights off on a day flight. You still have your personal reading light, but it’s better to watch the IFE with the lights off. And I usually nap for a couple of hours on any long haul flight.

    Your body clock may have been on Paris time, but other pax may have been connecting from different time zones.

    • Steve says:

      In which case, should the food offerings be a breakfast, lunch, or evening meal, again to suit the numerous time zones people may be on? Of course not. It’s a day flight. One of my biggest bugbears is crew trying to turn day in to night. I’m convinced they do this to have an easier trip.

      • Londonsteve says:

        They absolutely do it to comatose the passengers and get in some galley rest and chat time. I’ve been told in so many words by cabin crew (not on duty at the time). Another trick involves turning up the termperature to something a tad too warm that makes people sleepy, especially after eating. Otherwise, day flights being what they are, the passengers will keep them on their toes during the entire flight. I suspect this is disproportionately directed at the p**s artists who want constant refills because it’s free, not because they really fancy another drink. The dark, the heat and the booze together conspire to send them to sleep.

  • Bob says:

    Flew this down to JNB from CDG couple weeks ago, very comfortable seat for sleeping . Also sat in row 5 of the mini cabin, definitely quieter and more private than the larger cabin behind.

  • Jenny says:

    I don’t understand this thing about dimming the lights on daytime flights. I flew to Montreal last week with BA on a daytime flight and they did it then too. It’s really not great if you want to work on the plane, and for me personally, it makes my jet lag worse and more difficult for me to get in sync with my new time zone.

  • Jan de W says:

    And there was I, Rob, thinking it was just me being odd and taking piles of unread newspapers and magazines onto long haul flights!!! Nice one!!

  • memesweeper says:

    I took the later flight with AF a few weeks ago to Dubai (like Rob, a Virgin redemption). It was the angle-flat seats, 2-3-2 layout. Nonetheless a good flight: pleasant service and excellent food.

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.