Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

What could the new British Airways First Class seat look like?

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

Over the weekend, Sean Doyle, CEO of British Airways, reconfirmed via The Sunday Times that the airline would be launching a new First Class cabin and that its existing fleet of 12 A380 aircraft would get it.

This isn’t new news. BA was talking about a next-generation First Class seat back in 2019, when it had just launched its Club Suite business class seat on the A350.

When I spoke to Alex Cruz about it at the time, he said “I’m sure we’ll come out with something significant” and that it would arrive on the Boeing 777X. At that point this was scheduled to arrive in 2022.

What could the new British Airways First Class seat look like?

That never happened, of course. A global pandemic got in the way and airlines paused all non-essential spending. Not that it mattered – Boeing was already dealing with headwinds on the 777X program and announcing delay after delay. The latest update is that British Airways is unlikely to see the first of its 777X until 2026 fleet at the earliest.

In the meantime, BA rolled out an updated version of its existing First Class seat with a door, in part because the introduction of Club Suite left the door-less First in an awkward spot. You can read a reader review of that product here.

What could the new British Airways First Class seat look like?

Was that the long-vaunted new First Class that Alex had teased back in 2019? Or was this merely a opportunistic update enabled by the full refurbishment of the 777 fleet? It wasn’t clear – until now.

In his recent interview with Sean Doyle in The Sunday Times, John Arlidge writes that “Hundreds of millions of pounds will be spent refitting BA’s 12 A380 double-decker superjumbos ….. It will have a new first class — perhaps on the upper deck for the first time — the popular new business-class Club Suite, also upstairs, and new premium economy and economy cabins.”

Although not a direct quote from Sean, we can be pretty sure this has been paraphrased from his words.

What sort of First Class does British Airways want to offer?

Before we look at what other airlines have been doing recently, it is worth asking what kind of First Class British Airways wants to offer.

First Class is, arguably, the cabin with the most diversity and range in terms of what can be done. It can range from a conventional business class seat with a bit more personal space and privacy to full-blown mini-suites such as those found on Emirates, Singapore Airlines and Etihad.

What could the new British Airways First Class seat look like?

Historically, BA’s First Class has been more of a mass-market offering. This comes down to a number of factors, including:

  • Cabin size: although it is starting to downsize, BA’s A380s and even some of its 777 and 747s featured First Class cabins with 12-14 seats. Most airlines install eight seats or fewer – Air France now only has four.
  • Seat size: BA’s current First Class seat is fundamentally a business class seat with more privacy and personal space, rather than an enclosed mini-suite found on some airlines
  • Service levels: unlike other airlines, BA doesn’t offer chauffeur drive, serve caviar or some of the other luxurious touches you’ll find on other airlines.

All of those factors meant that First Class on British Airways was typically a cheaper, more affordable offering than other First Class cabins, and is why you can often find return tickets in First for around £2,500 during sales.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing – it just means that BA’s First Class offering is pitched at a different market to other airlines. It’s in good company, with a number of airlines offering First Class cabins that aren’t as ludicrously luxurious as Etihad’s Apartment, Emirates’ new First Class on the Boeing 777s or Singapore Airlines’ impressive A380 suites.

British Airways will have to decide whether it continues with an improved but still mass-affluent cabin or whether it wants to move to an increasingly exclusive, uber-luxurious model spearheaded by the Middle Eastern airlines.

Let’s take a look at the benefits and drawbacks of both approaches:

Option 1: an improved but still ‘traditional’ First Class

This is, in my opinion, the more likely of the two scenarios. Although it’s not as flashy, I still think there are a lot of exciting opportunities here for British Airways to deliver a really solid First Class experience.

Let’s start with the seat. In this scenario, BA sticks with a business class style seat with improved personal space and privacy and a larger in-flight entertainment screen.

Probably the best example of a new seat in this category is ANA’s ‘THE Suite’, which it launched on Boeing 777-300ER services back in 2019. ANA installs this in a 1-2-1 configuration with eight seats in total:

ANA first class the suite

What you get is a full-width seat from head to toe. One key differentiator from business class seats is that there is no tessellation – or overlap – of passengers in the seat layout, with one passenger’s foot cubby making up the side console of the passenger in front. In this scenario the entire 34-inch, 86cm width is yours, from window to aisle.

This is also similar to the ‘rebranded First Class’ Business Suite offered by Malaysia Airlines on its A350s:

Malaysia Airlines business suite

In both cases, the seats are in fully-enclosed shells. These do not feature ceiling-high walls but they do offer doors and a high level of privacy.

A more conventional seat design will necessitate a greater focus on service to distinguish itself from business class. This would require improved crew training and a continued focus on food and drinks service, branded amenity partnerships and an eye for detail.

Option 2: an ultra-luxurious, exclusive First Class suite

In the second scenario, BA goes all-out to create an ultra-luxury product to rival the best of the Middle Eastern and Asian airlines. For reasons I’m about to explain, I think this is unlikely.

Instead of a seat, each passenger gets their own mini-suite/cabin, with virtually floor-to-ceiling high walls and doors for unparalleled privacy. Think of the Emirates ‘Game Changer’ First Class Suite which Rob reviewed here:

Emirates 777 First class suite

…. or Singapore Airlines’ A380 Suites, which can be converted into a double bed if two passengers are travelling together:

Singapore Airlines A380 first class suite

Interestingly, we’ve also seen Lufthansa move in this direction for its new First Class suites coming early next year:

Lufthansa Allegris First class seat

Whilst these seats are impressive, they aren’t without their downsides:

  • The increased size of each individual suite means there are fewer available, restricting demand and creating a more exclusive (but also less attainable) experience. Emirates only has six suites on their 777 fleet whilst Singapore Airlines installs just six suites on the much larger A380, too. Lufthansa is planning to put just three suites on its aircraft.
  • As a result of their increased footprint, you can also expect them to be significantly more expensive versus a conventional First Class seat
  • Redemption opportunities are likely to be extremely limited: for example, Emirates used to only open redemptions three days in advance whilst Air France restricts First Class redemptions to Flying Blue Platinum members. Of course, some airlines with less impressive products also have redemption restrictions – SWISS only allows HON Circle and Senator (BA Gold Guest List and Gold equivalent) to redeem in First Class whilst Lufthansa blocks redemptions via partner airline programmes until 14 days before departure.

Whilst these suites are a boon for YouTubers and influencers, their limited availability and price means that far fewer passengers are able to experience them. British Airways would be likely to block Avios redemptions entirely or restrict them to top tier members, and even then you would be unlikely to see more than one seat per flight.

Of course, these suites would also need to be matched by equally luxurious amenities and service. Caviar, £200+ bottles of champagne and even £800+ bottles of Cognac (see Rob’s Emirates review) are often the benefits of these ultra-luxurious cabins.

You would also need to upgrade the ground experience. Airport chauffeuring, private lounge-to-plane transfers and stand-alone First Class terminals are common features. Making your way on foot from the Concorde Room to a flight at Terminal 5C won’t cut it.

Conclusion

There’s a lot to think about here. There are, of course, other alternatives. Air France’s current First Class cabin (it is about to introduce a new one) features conventional seats but with a full-height privacy curtain. Part of the appeal here is an outstanding ground experience for departures from Paris.

Qantas, meanwhile, has just unveiled its own next-generation First Class cabin: in this case, a separate seat-and-bed but without full-height walls for a more open cabin.

Qantas new First class seat

It will be interesting to see which path British Airways takes, although I suspect it will be the mass affluent, more conventional option. This makes more sense for BA’s high-volume transatlantic focus with average flight lengths between six and twelve hours.

(It is also worth remembering that BA has historically used large First cabins as a carrot to fly with the airline, with regular pre-covid promotions offering a free one way First Class upgrade to anyone booking a fully flexible return business class ticket.)

One thing I do hope to see is a greater focus on texture and detail than we saw on Club Suite which I think looks a bit drab and grey compared to some of its competitors. With any luck, BA will pull on the UK’s rich design heritage to create a seat that may not be bespoke but feels uniquely BA.

Either way, it will likely be another couple of years until we see what British Airways has been cooking up. With the arrival of the Boeing 777Xs delayed until at least 2026 and the refurbishment of the A380s likely to start in 2025 at the earliest, BA still has a few years to perfect its plans. In the meantime, you can read more about BA’s existing First Class in our guide here.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (October 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

Get 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

30,000 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

50,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large 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

10,000 points bonus – plus an extra 500 points for our readers Read our full review

There is also a British Airways American Express card for small businesses:

British Airways American Express Accelerating Business

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

Up to 80,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

Get up to 40,000 points as a sign-up offer 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 (92)

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

  • Harry T says:

    I think it’s very likely they will choose the cheapest possible option. BA has not been interested in a genuine first class product for a long time.

    • Andrew J says:

      Agreed. Although to be fair, compared to other carriers it’s priced accordingly – often on a few hundred more than J and easilyish obtainable on Avios.

  • Gordon says:

    Boeing are going to send the 777X to Emirates and other UAE airlines for proving flights around 2024 after many set backs. So looks like BA will have a wait on their hands….

    • Andrew J says:

      And Qatar are looking at that timetable too.

    • Rhys says:

      BA likely to get it in 2026, if you read what I wrote 😉

      • Gordon says:

        I did read the article, But I had a date in mind beyond 2026 when I posted that 😉

  • Qrfan says:

    For at least another 2 or 3 years BA are going to be flying club world seats on aircraft that are already falling apart. Out of order toilets, lockers that don’t close, seats that don’t recline properly etc. That’s the real story. In 2026 you’ll likely still have to worry about seat maps and equipment to avoid the old seat. Remarkable. Also, what about a bar? Even the high density Emirates 2 class planes have one!

    • Catalan says:

      @Qrfan. Those high density Emirates 777s have a 2-3-2 seat configuration in business class. They are newly installed too! Then again if you’re unlucky enough to get a middle seat you could always drown your sorrows at the bar.

  • Jake says:

    I think one aspect not mentioned or discussed in full about the second option is the halo effect of a “wow” first class and amenities.

    Emirates is a prime example of this. Ask your average airline customer and I’m sure they will say EK is the most luxurious and premium airline to fly with yet in business they still fly 2-3-2 with a pretty poor seat on certain planes. Granted the hub location of Dubai will help with this halo effect. The residence on Etihad is also a hugely powerful marketing tool

    A over the top first class could do wonders for BAs image

    • Chris W says:

      There’s little motivation for BA to invest in an aspirational/halo first class. They fill their planes just fine without being an airline people are desperate to fly.

      • Jake says:

        Potentially right now but this product could be with them until 2040.

    • jjoohhnn says:

      Their economy and premium economy product is better than BA too though. Just the business class that lacks!

    • Ali B says:

      Emirates and Ethihad are basically irrelevant to BA, as they don’t fly direct anywhere from the UK aside from Dubai and Abu Dhabi respectively. Absolutely no need to try and compete with them for bling effect but I guess that will be disappointing to the influencers (twits) and instagrammers (apprentice twits)

      • Rob says:

        So let’s get this straight … Emirates runs 11 flights per day from London (9 x A380, 2 x 777) carrying over 5,000 long haul passengers between them, and you feel that has no impact on British Airways?!

        You even earn Avios and BA tier points on Emirates as long as you book under the Qantas codeshare.

        It’s not a coincidence that BA is opening new routes to places like Cincinatti instead of returning to Bangkok, KL, Muscat, Abu Dhabi, Osaka etc where the Middle East carriers set the pace.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          Exactly BA has abandoned going east because they can’t match the product on offer by the ME3/4 not sure their Qatar codeshare pricing is even very keen.

      • Rob says:

        Emirates and Etihad are SO relevant and dominant that you’ve been tricked into thinking they are not – because BA aren’t even trying to compete on a lot of routes east.

  • G says:

    Not defending BA here but a stronger soft product is often more sustainable – and cheaper – business wise than investing in an over the top hard product

    • Hak says:

      This. They need to focus on service and better food etc imo. The Emirates of the world are style over substance.

      • Rob says:

        Unless by ‘substance’ you mean the ‘substance’ you are given for food, drink and amenities, which is uniformly excellent.

  • SammyJ says:

    As you touched on, I think the most important aspect BA need to focus on is the longe-to-seat experience. I’ve only flown in First once (Avios, obviously!), and had a lovely time in the Concorde room, only to have to follow the never-ending escalators like everyone else and stand for over an hour in a corridor at an overcrowded moshpit of a gate. The boarding experience with Wizzair at Luton a week before was genuinely more luxurious than that in F at LHR that day. As a seasoned Economy traveller I’d been looking forward to something – anything – that set it apart, but even Group 1 did little as half the flight also appeared to have Group 1. Our seats would have cost £22k each when I booked (and never dropped below £15k during the 11mths I was monitoring them). The onboard experience was great, but if they want that sort of cash from their most elite, they need to focus on the basic passenger experience before they start faffing with cabin doors or bigger tellies.

    • Andrew J says:

      And a way to offer more elevated ground services in a manageable way to those genuinely paying a high price for the ticket would be to only offer it to those on full fare revenue tickets – like some airlines do with their chauffeur services. So if you do pay your quoted £22k for a ticket you can expect a lounge to gate car service a la Air France, but if you’re on a few hundred quid and some Avios ticket you can walk like everyone else.

    • Chris W says:

      Why were you “standing for over an hour in a corridor”? This is not a normal passenger experience at Heathrow in any class.

      • SammyJ says:

        Because they called the flight boarding, and we headed over to C gates expecting to be first on. Except they then decided it wasn’t ready for boarding, and finally boarded about 10 mins after the scheduled departure time. All the gates were rammed, all the seats were full, it was total chaos. That’s not the first time I’ve had that experience either, although on a £400 economy fare it’s not such a big deal.

        As for only offering the full First experience to those who pay for it… fair enough, it’s an option and it would be better than the current situation, but they make the seats hard enough to get in the first place, I’m not sure that classifying passengers that way would be the best policy.

    • David says:

      Couldnt agree more. I flew first to Chicago from T5 at the end of June which involved a late departure from a bus gate. It was complete;y chaotice and an absolute disgrace for those at the back of the plane ley alone those of us in First. Tatty cabin, mediocre food and wine on a B777 swapped out for the A380 (which was over three hours late on the return back to Heathrow). Staff were lovely but not a premium experience. I was using up a Covid voucher but I think it will be my last BA flight for some time.

      My original plans for 2020 was to reach GGL (I had been gold for about 10 years). I am now down to Silver and will probably drop to Bronze next year, but I dont really care. I am now free to choose who I want to fly with (I fly to Sydney 2-3 times per year to see my son) and am enjoying the freedom to fly on airlines such as SQ and EK.

    • Rich says:

      You could always purchase the Windsor Suite experience, get your own lounge and be chauffeured to your plane with not an escalator in sight. Pricey though.

  • AJA says:

    I would prefer BA to go with an enhanced business class style seat with more space and better service.

    But more importantly to do so on more routes to the far east or those such as TLV that had First but no longer does.

    The reality is that going east BA is effectively forcing passengers to fly any other carrier. The only routes to the east on BA are SIN, SYD, HKG, PVG and TYO (don’t think the latter two currently have any 1st seats)

    I can see why they don’t as they have the agreements with Qatar, JAL and Malaysian and you do have other OW options but I think many people would like BA to re-start routes they used to fly. Of course that is very unlikely while flying over Russia is a no-go. But it feels like the airline is literally going in the wrong direction.

    • David S says:

      +1. The bug bear for me is that it severely limits use of 241 vouchers going East. Like a large chunk of the U.K., I have no interest in going to the USA right now 💵💵

      • Rhys says:

        What large chunk of the UK? Transatlantic travel is basically back to where it was pre-covid!

        • LittleNick says:

          Probably means a large chunk would rather go east than west.

          • gibbo says:

            kind of – I’d simply prefer the option to go east or west. Like many on here – i’m done with BA – never on time, always late, crappy old planes and usually not great service. Odd exception on the latter point. I will continue to get silver every year through work as we’re made to choose BA for TATL flights.

            I’ve burned my two premium 241 vouchers and all my avios to go to San Fran next Easter with the family. From there will see what options and where in the world we go to next. Its quite exciting and liberating.

  • Tony says:

    Spend millions on a poor quality seat…saving money! And still have the whole First experience destroyed by noisy crew chat, slamming of cupboards, noisy galley, inexperienced crew who haven’t a clue about the product….nothing changes!!

    • Mikeact says:

      +1

    • Gordon says:

      Yeah, This was mentioned a few times on the comments on Sundays article “BA throws Alex Cruz under a bus (again)”.
      Nothing will change as long as BA still sell their F & J seats. BA have a long list of fixes to attend to, Retraining cabin crew in the art of keeping quiet is just one of them.

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.