Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Stuffed #4: Holders of Barclays Upgrade Vouchers who don’t have a large Avios pot

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Over the last week we’ve been looking at the losers from the changes to long haul Avios pricing launched 12 days ago.

It’s a long list – all Avios members outside the UK, US and EU, anyone with an ‘old style’ American Express 2-4-1 voucher, anyone with a Gold Upgrade Voucher (we will come to this later in the week) and anyone who took advantage of the various low tax loopholes.

The only winners we’ve identified so far are those who use a ‘new style’ Amex 2-4-1 voucher and who can afford to use the maximum number of Avios when redeeming it. These people save around 15% on the cost of a redemption. Holders of ‘old style’ vouchers win if they can afford the new Avios levels but are stuffed otherwise as they cannot revert back to the old pricing.

Today I want to look at the situation regarding Barclays Upgrade Vouchers. Let’s see if they are winners or losers.

There are three ways of earning a Barclays Upgrade Voucher:

This article looks at the core benefits of the Barclaycard Avios Plus credit card.

To learn more about the cards, read our Barclaycard Avios Mastercard credit card review here and our Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard credit card review here.

Each voucher allows a solo traveller to upgrade both legs of an Avios reward flight. Alternatively, a couple can upgrade one leg.

However, there is one thing you need to know.

The Barclays Upgrade Voucher is NOT an upgrade voucher.

In practice, it lets you book an Avios ticket and pay the Avios requirement of the next lowest class.

If you book a Club World business class Avios seat to New York, for example, you pay the World Traveller Plus Avios requirement but the Club World taxes and charges.

On short haul, Reward Flight Saver makes Barclays Upgrade Vouchers fairly useless

Before we look at the long haul changes, it is worth remembering that Barclays Upgrade Vouchers offer little value on short haul flights.

This is ENTIRELY due to how ba.com prices them up.

On short haul, the ‘most Avios, least cash’ option is never the best value choice. This is unfortunate, because you are forced to take it when using the upgrade voucher.

Here’s an example. To Amsterdam, a Club Europe redemption using a Barclays Upgrade Voucher costs 18,500 Avios (the usual cost of Economy) + £1. However, if you don’t use a voucher, you can choose the best value Club Europe option of 17,000 Avios + £50.

Using our ‘1p per Avios’ valuation, using the voucher means you are ‘paying’ £186 (18,500 Avios x 1p + £1). Not using the voucher ‘costs’ you £220 (17,000 Avios + £50). You’re only getting £34 of value from your voucher in this case.

The situation is different on long haul, because the Reward Flight Saver option is not the worse value option.

How is the Barclays Upgrade Voucher impacted by the long haul Avios changes?

The saving grace here is that the Barclays Upgrade Voucher was never valid for First Class travel. This means that it avoids the worst of the problems with the new Avios pricing scheme.

(You’ll see what I mean when you read the next article on Gold Upgrade Vouchers!)

The situation is very similar to what we discussed last week for holders of ‘old style’ American Express 2-4-1 companion vouchers.

It has always been the case that, when you redeem a Barclays Upgrade Voucher, you do NOT get to choose from a mix of Avios and cash levels.

You are presented with the ‘headline’ price, take it or leave it.

This is an issue now, because the ‘base’ price requires 45%-60% more Avios than it did.

Here is an example:

Avios devaluation

New York

The ‘headline’ price for a return off-peak Club World flight to New York is now 160,000 Avios plus exactly £350 if you live in the UK.

Before the changes were announced, it was 100,000 Avios + £853.

How does this price with the Barclays Upgrade Voucher? Let’s remember how the voucher works:

  • you pay the Avios required for the next cheapest class of travel
  • but you pay the taxes and charges of the class you actually travel in

Cost today of an off-peak New York Club World flight using a Barclays Upgrade Voucher:

85,000 Avios + £350 – ie:

Where does this number come from? 85,000 Avios is the cost of a return World Traveller Plus ticket to New York off peak.

What do you save using the voucher? 75,000 Avios (160,000 – 85,000)

What’s the implied cost if you value an Avios at 1p? £1,200 (85,000 x 1p + £350)

Cost two weeks ago of an off-peak New York Club World flight using a Barclays Upgrade Voucher:

52,000 Avios + £853

Where does this number come from? 52,000 Avios was the cost of a return World Traveller Plus ticket to New York off peak.

What do you save using the voucher? 48,000 Avios (100,000 – 52,000)

What’s the implied cost if you value an Avios at 1p? £1,373 (52,000 x 1p + £853)

This is actually a good result IF you have 85,000 Avios in your account. Last month, using your Barclays Upgrade Voucher to fly to New York in Club World cost you 52,000 Avios + £853. Today, you need 85,000 Avios + £350. The latter is definitely better value BUT you need to have the points.

Barbados

Some routes come out of these changes better than others. Let’s look at Barbados instead.

The ‘headline’ price for a return off-peak Club World flight to Barbados is now 180,000 Avios plus exactly £450 if you live in the UK.

Before the changes were announced, it was 125,000 Avios + £718.

Cost today of an off-peak Barbados Club World flight using a Barclays Upgrade Voucher:

95,000 Avios + £450

Where does this number come from? 95,000 Avios is the cost of a return World Traveller Plus ticket to Barbados off peak.

What do you save using the voucher? 85,000 Avios (180,000 – 95,000)

What’s the implied cost if you value an Avios at 1p? £1,400 (95,000 x 1p + £450)

Cost two weeks ago of an off-peak Barbados Club World flight using a Barclays Upgrade Voucher:

65,000 Avios + £718

Where does this number come from? 65,000 Avios was the cost of a return World Traveller Plus ticket to Barbados off peak.

What do you save using the voucher? 60,000 Avios (125,000 – 65,000)

What’s the implied cost if you value an Avios at 1p? £1,368 (65,000 x 1p + £718)

For this route, it’s a clear loss. You now need 30,000 more Avios when using a Barclays Upgrade Voucher, and even if you have them, the reduction in taxes and charges – £268 – means it is a bad trade-off.

Avios devaluation

Let’s be clear – if you have a lot of Avios, these changes are positive on some routes

As the numbers above show, the Avios changes are actually GOOD NEWS on some routes if – and only if – you have a lot of Avios.

Last month, using your Barclays Upgrade Voucher to fly to New York in Club World cost you 52,000 Avios + £853. Today, you need 85,000 Avios + £350. That’s a good deal.

However, last month using your Barclays Upgrade Voucher to fly to Barbados in Club World cost you 65,000 Avios + £714. Today, you need 95,000 Avios + £450. This ISN’T much of a deal.

However, if you don’t have 85,000 or 95,000 Avios in your account, it is a moot point.

As I said last week in another article, British Airways believes that all Executive Club members are rolling in Avios. If they’re not, they can simply take out another US credit card and pick up a 100,000 points sign-up bonus overnight.

This is far, far from the case. Outside the United States – which means for the vast majority of Avios collectors – Avios are hard to pick up at scale.

How the majority of non-US Avios collectors work is that they pick up a few here, a few there. If they are lucky (and with a bit of credit card bonus churning) they can earn enough each year for a premium cabin redemption.

Imagine how Barclaycard Upgrade Voucher cardholders are going to feel when they realise that, overnight, the number of Avios required for the New York flight has gone up by 63%.

They don’t even know that the Avios requirement has gone up.

These changes would have been more acceptable if the HfP reader sitting on 52,000 Avios and a Barclays Upgrade Voucher had been given a few weeks notice to redeem a New York ticket at the old rate.

Surely you can just buy the extra Avios you need?

When I wrote a similar article last week on how old-style American Express 2-4-1 vouchers were impacted, some people replied that it didn’t matter because ‘you could just buy the extra Avios you need’.

This is true for some routes, like the New York example above, but it misses a key point.

In our example above to New York, the Avios requirement has gone up by 33,000 points. However, your ‘taxes and charges’ bill has dropped by £503. As it happens, you can buy 35,000 Avios for £575 at standard BA rates.

You are still worse off if you buy the additional Avios but admittedly only by £50 or so. However, that’s not the key issue. The issue is that the £575 cost of the Avios becomes a ‘sunk cost’. If you cancel your flight ticket, you’re not getting that £575 back.

Yes, you’ll get back the cost of the flight – 85,000 Avios + £350, less the £35 cancellation fee – but there’s no refund for the additional Avios you were forced to buy in order to have enough to make the booking in the first place.

On routes like Barbados, you CAN’T buy the extra Avios you need using your taxes saving. You need 30,000 more Avios for your ticket than you did two weeks ago, but the cost of buying those is £495. Your taxes and charges payment has only come down by £268.

Barclays will soon let you trade your voucher for an Avios lump sum

Barclays recently announced that, from 2023 (not clear when), it will be possible to accept an Avios lump sum payment instead of taking a Barclays Upgrade Voucher.

Details are very sketchy. It was implied that the lump sum will not be fixed and could be personalised based on your value to the bank, although it wasn’t spelt out this clearly.

It also wasn’t clear if this offer will be open to everyone or just people who get their voucher from a certain product (Premier only?) or perhaps even only those who hold Premier and a credit card and so would earn two vouchers. All will become clear as 2023 progresses.

Conclusion

I’m not trying to claim that these Avios changes have completely trashed the value in the Barclays Upgrade Vouchers. They haven’t.

In fact, if you’re ‘Avios rich and cash poor’ then you are better off on many – but certainly not all – routes.

The key idea behind all of these articles, however, is that most Avios collectors in the UK are NOT ‘Avios rich and cash poor’. You certainly can’t put many Barclays Premier customers in this category.

In the US, of course, where you can be a college student and pick up 100,000 Avios or its equivalent from a different credit card sign-up bonus every few months, it is a different story. These people have lots of Avios but little cash. BA has made a decision that the needs of US credit card holders are now the driving force behind how the Avios programme is structured.

PS. As I said last week, this is not hyperbole. The head of Air France KLM’s Flying Blue programme said the same thing at a conference I attended in September and repeated the claim in a podcast last week. To quote:

“for us, we’re really trying to improve our proposition …. to make it more attractive for Americans to earn miles both in our co-brand card with Bank of America, as well as to transfer miles from the US banking partners into Flying Blue and redeem via Flying Blue …. because like I said, that’s where the money is.”


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2024)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses!

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending £15,000 Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points. These points convert at 1:1 into Avios.

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

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Run your own business?

We recommend Capital on Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, along with a sign-up bonus worth 10,500 Avios.

Capital on Tap Business Rewards Visa

Huge 30,000 points bonus until 12th May 2024 Read our full review

You should also consider the British Airways Accelerating Business credit card. This is open to sole traders as well as limited companies and has a 30,000 Avios sign-up bonus.

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

There are also generous bonuses on the two American Express Business cards, with the points converting at 1:1 into Avios. These cards are open to sole traders as well as limited companies.

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 Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

Comments (157)

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

  • Sunil says:

    for points poor folks like me – Is there a product with avios tieup or points boost for the UK market to compete with US counterparts?

  • Lady London says:

    “British Airways believes that all Executive Club members are rolling in Avios”

    Amusing.

    But do we see this more as “BA relies on ‘breakage’ ie that a big chunk of the avios it issues, will never be redeemed”. One key reason amongst a few, being that large numbers of punters may earn avios, but even though the dreams sold by BA about places you could go with avios may.have motivated some factually BA must have always calculated that a large number of punters would never earn enough avios to get anywhere.

    BA’s just ratcheted that up a bit by pushing up avios needed for a flight. So a lot of people will now drop out the bottom of the BA avios-using sieve and never spend their avios…

    The fly in that ointment being Nectar…… for now?

    Are there any actual rumours that Barclays is miffed with BA at the avios devaluation reducing the value of Barclays’s offering? or has this somehow been made right for Barclays and, I suppose, Amex?

    Will we ever see an Easyjet Amex, perhaps including a variant for SME’s?

  • Tony says:

    I’m finding myself mentally checking out from all this now. It’s starting to feel like a huge effort to check you’re getting the best deal. I use my Avios for transatlantic travel, usually two times a year, and post covid, I’m 300K+ in Avois and vouchered up to the eyeballs at the moment with a combo of old style Amex, new style Amex, upgrade etc etc. It feels physiologically painful to let my old style 2 for 1 voucher lapse (currently expires 20th March) rather than use it “because its there”. But I think I might have to do that to clear the decks and start afresh with what I have remaining.

    Or maybe I need to just man up and figure it out!

    Urgh.

    • jj says:

      Short haul is your friend. The voucher provides decent savings for a European city break, a ski trip, or a few days lounging on an idyllic beach in the Greek islands.

  • Dave says:

    I’m going to spend the Avios i’ve got then jack it in. Not bothered about the vouchers now. Still not clear if I’ll get the 100k from Barclays and if it doesnt arrive then i’ll close my accounts with them and be finished with the whole thing.

    BA will realise at some point all the changes they are making are leading to their customers deserting them. When it looks attractive again i’ll rejoin.

    With all the recent changes and different redemption prices its made it way too complicated to understand where the value is and i really can’t be bothered to try and figure it out

    • Mark says:

      Your prerogative of course, but for anyone who is able to earn sufficient Avios to use the vouchers on long haul business class, even paying 1p/avios, and would otherwise buy a cash business class fare it is difficult to see at the moment how you would beat it with any cash fare available now or likely to be available in near future. That’s even if you stick with the ‘old’ pricing on a new style 2for1. Granted if you don’t, or can’t (e.g. with a Barclays voucher), you need more Avios, but if you are earning in sufficient quantities it makes more sense if anything, even if you can only do it on a less frequent basis.

      As I see it the value is still there, but as a result of higher taxes and fees and cash prices flights are generally now more expensive.

  • Cormac says:

    Useful article thanks.

    O/T but does anyone else struggle with the branded names BA has given to their different classes? I’m a long time reader but still have to Google the difference between Club World vs World Traveller Plus vs Euro Traveller etc.

    Maybe it’s just me but I find it makes everything BA related a little harder to digest…
    unless there is a reason for using it over the industry standard terminology that I’m missing?

    • john says:

      Club World is now becoming Club Suite of course!

      • Mark says:

        Not quite. The cabin is still branded Club World. Club Suite specifically refers to the seat, to differentiate from the Club World Sleeper Seat.

    • Richie says:

      ‘traveller’ is economy,
      ‘plus’ is premium economy,
      ‘club’ is business class,
      ‘suite’ is with a door.

    • Richie says:

      Try and get your head around the differences between BA’s B772s, B773s.

    • Mark says:

      BA is not unique in branding things this way of course. Virgin has Upper Class, Delta has Delta One, United has Polaris etc.

    • Roy says:

      First time I flew BA after they starting doing this, I spent about five minutes wandering around the airport looking for the economy class check-in because because I assumed that “World Traveller” was some kind of elite status or premium class that I didn’t have.

      I had bought the ticket through an OTA so I’m pretty sure I never saw the phrase “World Traveller” during the purchase process – the ticket was just sold to me as “Economy class”.

  • Littlefish says:

    This all just make me even less keen to ‘opt in’ for the Barclays Voucher and their avios links (having previously passed and remained with Barclays Blue).
    Whatever avios I can scrape together will go to the Amex 2f1, so even less possibility of getting enough for the Barclays voucher and their second class availability and other limitations.
    The Amex 2f1 is hanging on by a thread as collecting the new higher levels of avios exposes us more to the next (unannounced) devaluation.

  • FatherOfFour says:

    I can see why some are fed up with this. I’m in this for the long-haul, if you’ll excuse the pun, or I’d have cashed (some) out to Nectar last month.

    In my position, I have a more limited range of options than most- finding availability for 6 of us long-haul is a challenge (not impossible) but also doesn’t lend itself to use of vouchers…. affording the Avios is another!

    So, we’re taking a break from premium vouchers earning cards and paying the more modest annual fee to collect greater MR points/£ via the gold card instead, with the free Barclays as Amex “infill”

    It will be about 10 years before my wife and I do another CW Long Haul – I expect our Avios to have severely deflated in value by then, but we’ll look to get another 2-4-1 nearer that time if we go with that plan.

    We were looking at burning some on Qantas business class domestics for the family of 6, but I think Jetstar/VA cash would be just as competitive, with little added value in dragging 4 under 12’s around a lounge and complaining about nice food!

    I think that an economy redemption in school holidays may offer us best value if we decide we really do need to burn instead of saving them.

    • Freddy says:

      Where have you gone for availability for 6. I’ve all but given up with looking for 5

      • FatherOfFour says:

        Saw 6 x Bus on QF several times when speculatively searching via BA.com
        Often the less popular flight times of course

    • QFFlyer says:

      As someone who uses QF domestic lounges a lot, I don’t think there’ll be much complainng about “nice food”. International lounges (well, First anyway) are a different matter, but the domestic lounges, even domestic J (not to be confused with Qantas Clubs, which are for paid cardholders and Y pax with Sapphire status) aren’t amazing food wise. With the exception of PER, which has a pizza bar.

  • Nancy Oliver says:

    Thank you for the informative but exhausting information regarding these avios BA changes. I am live in the UK, but also have a US address and passport. Do you have suggestions for sites to look for US credit cards which give me good sign up bonuses? I currently get American airline miles. But BA more useful for me.
    Thank you

    • Mikeact says:

      Apart from all the numerous ads the Banks run, I’m surprised you haven’t been overrun with emails. I still have a US connection and I still get the big offers. Or go and look on FlyerTalk.

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