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British Airways increases Avios Subscription prices – act now for cheaper rates

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Last October, Avios introduced an interesting new product in the form of Avios subscriptions.

By signing up to Avios Subscription, you can receive regular increments of Avios into your Executive Club account on a monthly basis. Rolling monthly packages are available, as are (cheaper) annual pre-paid plans.

The value proposition was very strong – as low as 0.89p when you signed up to an annual commitment. To put this in context, we never saw Avios sold for as little as this even during pandemic-era promotions.

The pricing is now increasing, with Avios warning customers that subscription prices are changing on 1st May.

The cost of one-off non-subscription Avios purchases are also changing.

ba.com even has a handy countdown to show you how much time is left under the existing, cheaper pricing:

How does Avios Subscription work?

There are four different plans to pick from, giving you a range of Avios earning opportunities.

You can select from a monthly payment or an annual payment. However, even if you select the annual, up-front payment, your Avios boost will still be posted to your account monthly. You have a choice of four annual plans:

  • Voyager: 20,000 Avios (1,667 Avios per month)
  • Traveller: 50,000 Avios (4,167 Avios per month)
  • Explorer: 100,000 Avios (8,334 Avios per month)
  • Adventurer: 200,000 Avios (16,667 Avios per month)

No, the naming doesn’t make much sense to me either, given that ‘Voyager’ sounds more intense than ‘Traveller’!

The rolling monthly subscriptions are available in the same increments, but you are charged a higher monthly fee. The annual plans are discounted to the extent that you effectively get two months free.

You can buy a maximum of 200,000 Avios with Avios Subscription.

How are prices changing from 1st May?

Until now, the Avios subscription offering has been very good value. It allowed you to buy Avios at a rate of 0.89p per point via the annual Adventurer offer – better than the 0.92p per point rate offered during the hugely popular 75% bonus promotion back in 2020.

Unfortunately all good things come to an end. Whilst the offer isn’t completely dead, it is now more marginal and you are taking a bigger gamble by tying your cash up in points.

In the worst case, prices are increasing by 40%. At best, you are looking at an 11% increase.

From 1 MayOld pricing% IncreasePrice per Avios
Voyager Monthly£26£1937%1.56p
Traveller Monthly£55£4522%1.32p
Explorer Monthly£105£8918%1.25p
Adventurer Monthly£199£17911%1.19p
Voyager Yearly£259£18540%1.29p
Traveller Yearly£549£45521%1.10p
Explorer Yearly£1,049£89917%1.05p
Adventurer Yearly£1,989£1,78911%0.99p

Prices for the smaller subscriptions are increasing disproportionately, whilst the Adventurer packages are increasing by ‘just’ 11%.

Your fall back position has also got worse

When Avios Subscription launched, you would still get 0.8p per Avios if you converted them to Nectar points.

This gave you a valuable backstop. If you committed to Avios Subscription at 0.89p, your worse case scenario was cashing out to Nectar at 0.8p. Your downside was limited and your upside was decent.

Since the Nectar devaluation, 1 Avios is now only worth 0.66p of Nectar points. The Avios Subscription dynamic is now a lot of different. If you decide to walk away from Avios your ‘cashing out’ route via Nectar will now see you taking a sharp loss on the 0.99p subscription price, whilst your upside is reduced by the increased cost per point.

Standard ‘buy Avios’ prices are also increasing

It’s not just subscription costs that are being increased.

One-off ‘Buy Avios’ purchases will also change on 1st May with an average increase of 10%:

From 1 MayOld pricing% IncreasePrice per Avios
2,000 Avios£49£474%2.45p
10,000 Avios£195£17511%1.95p
50,000 Avios£899£81510%1.80p
100,000 Avios£1,779£1,61510%1.78p
200,000 Avios£3,539£3,21510%1.76p

Buying Avios outside of bonus promotions has rarely (if ever) offered good value, so you need to take the above values with a pinch of salt.

Broadly speaking, subscription prices are increasing and now more closely match the cost of one-off purchases reducing the value of subscribing to an annual plan.

There is still value to be had, however. At the top end, you are paying £1,989 for 200,000 Avios under an annual Adventurer subscription vs £3,539 for a one-off purchase. You are looking at 0.99p versus 1.76p.

It’s good news if you’re heading to court though ….

Many of our readers have taken British Airways to CEDR arbitration or Money Claim Online over Avios related issues. This usually involves failure to pay out downgrade compensation on Avios bookings.

Because neither CEDR or Money Claim Online can award anything except cash, you are always awarded the cash equivalent of the Avios you are claiming.

This used to be based on 1.6p (BA’s headine sale price) but from 1st May you will be able to ask for 1.76p per Avios.

Avios subscription prices increasing

What is an Avios worth?

Ah, the eternal Head for Points question. For a detailed description of what an Avios is worth, you can read Rob’s breakdown here.

As a quick summary, Rob keeps a spreadsheet of all the Avios he has redeemed for the last nine years, and he has got 1.2p of value per Avios based on his valuation of the flights he took. Rob’s valuation is arguably low as he bases it on how cheaply he thinks he could have got the same trip if he’d booked in a sale or taken an indirect flight on a different airline, and adds in no value for the flexibility offered by Avios tickets.

If you can buy Avios at a rate of 0.99p, you should still be getting value overall, and Rob’s valuations are always on the conservative side. If you are strategic in your redemptions you should come out on top if you buy Avios at 0.99p.

Those pesky terms and conditions

If you commit to an annual payment plan, you commit to the whole year – you cannot cancel your subscription during the year and get a pro-rated refund

If you sign up to the monthly payment plan, you are committed to at least three months.

After a year, the subscription will auto-renew so you will need to proactively cancel the subscription if you don’t want to continue.

You can buy a maximum of 200,000 Avios in any one calendar year via Avios Subscription. This is in addition to the 200,000 Avios allowance through ‘Buy Avios’.

Full terms and conditions can be found here.

In conclusion ….

The new Avios Subscription plans are no longer the slam dunk they used to be, but you may still find some value in them as a regular way of topping up your balance.

The good news is that you still have a few days to lock in subscriptions at the old pricing. If you subscribe before 1st May, your subscription will stay the same price until the end of your subscription period, letting you lock in for up to a year.

You can sign up to Avios Subscription or find out more here.


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 (99)

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

  • Paul says:

    A few days to lock in a subscription ahead of another devaluation or yet higher rip off fees.

    • Thywillbedone says:

      The only thing coming down is rain …

    • Jack says:

      there will not be another devaluation buying avios has never really been a sensible thing to do

  • Alex G says:

    Reward Flight Saver pricing on long haul means there is real value to be had from buying Avios.

    Prior to long haul RFS, 2 J tickets to NYC were costing 100000 Avios (off peak) plus about £1700 with an Amex 241 voucher.

    The new RFS pricing gives you an option of 160000 Avios plus £700.

    60000 Avios bought through the annual subscription cost £536.70, but save you £1000. So you are getting 1.67p of value for each avios if you pay the highest avios / lowest £ price.

    You don’t get the different pricing options with the Barclays vouchers, you have to use more Avios. You may need to buy them.

    • Londonsteve says:

      Very good point, well made. As ever with loyalty miles, they’re not worth sitting on, buy them because you’ve got a plan to use them and you’ve priced up what you’ll need over the next 12 months. If they devalue them during those 12 months before you’ve pressed ‘book’, that’s just bad luck.

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    I never thought this scheme was good for anyone other than BA/IAG Loyalty and these changes just reinforce that view.

    But if people want to lend BA / IAGL money then go ahead.

    I think very few people will do any sort of calculation on the eventual value they receive when they use their avios and so will lose out twice.

  • newel says:

    Can anyone confirm if you use your BAPP to pay for the subscription if you get 3x avios per £? I’ve had it in a drawer to avoid triggering the 241 too early but would probably choose to use it here to get the 3x points bonus if it applies

    • Andy says:

      Yes

      • Nancy says:

        Don’t lie. The 3x rate applies only to BA charges. The subscription is not a BA payment.

    • collarbone666 says:

      Afraid not, just the usual 1.5 points.

    • Jonathon says:

      No you don’t. It shows up as Avios Group and not BA as a purchase. Normal 1.5.

    • FCP says:

      Sold by “Avios Group Ltd” not BA

      • Nick says:

        A reminder that this is nothing at all to do with BA. It’s offered, processed and managed entirely by AGL. The Amex bonus is only for payments on BA’s merchant code, not any taken through other parts of IAG.

      • AndyC says:

        …advertised by BA (on BA website and sold by Avios Group…

  • Me says:

    Does anyone know how to cancel a subscription? Theres no button in the login area and I don’t want to pay the higher fees

    • Barraclough says:

      I have the same question as I won’t be renewing when my present annual subscription ends later this year.

  • Imran says:

    If you are using your Avios on long haul business class and struggle to accumulate 200,000 avios you need for a flight and use a companion voucher, you get brilliant value.

    For a return flight in Business class to Singapore, I got 2.99p value per avios, when compared to roughly equivalent same flight cash costs.

    That’s still three times more value per avios than the new 0.99p Adventurer rate.

    Cash Fair for 2: £7,486
    Avios Fare for 2, including companion voucher: 203,000 avios + £1,410 taxes (£705×2).
    Cash saving: £6076
    Avios value: 2.99p

    Actual cost for two £3,526 (203,000 avios + £1,410 for two people using Companion voucher, and valuing my avios at 1.042p, the price I bought them at.
    Cost per person: £1,763 each (£651 per person more than Economy)
    Business cash cost: £7,486
    Economy cash cost: £2,112

    • Harry T says:

      These values per point are very arbitrary and self gratifying, unless you would genuinely pay the cash fare, I’m afraid.

    • RJ says:

      Don’t forget the £250 annual fee for the card, on top of the spend pumped through it to earn the voucher…

  • Chris says:

    Well since I’m disappointed with my Amex points I jumped on the Avios wagon. Tbh the price increases aren’t great. However, if what Alex G is saying is right then that’s not too shabby. And as a new Avios collector (at least until I can buy 2 First class tickets on it) I’ll be continuing my old locked in subscription.

  • Pol says:

    I signed up for the monthly subscription last week. Will my cost increase next week? If not how long will it stay at the old price?

    • Alex Sm says:

      Not very long, I guess

      • WaynedP says:

        Simply read the article carefully (Dei facientes adiuvant). The conclusion states:
        “The good news is that you still have a few days to lock in subscriptions at the old pricing. If you subscribe before 1st May, your subscription will stay the same price until the end of your subscription period, letting you lock in for up to a year.”

        To spell it out, the answer to your question is “No, your cost won’t increase next week as long as you sign up before 1 May 2023”.

        If you don’t want to rely on a third-party article, simply screenshot the BA Avios Subscription page referenced in the article. At the top left of the page it clearly states:
        “Planning on subscribing? If you do it before 1 May 00:01 BST, the price will stay the same throughout your subscription.”

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