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Should a family of three swap who holds their BA Premium Plus Amex card each year?

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In June 2022, British Airways made a major change to the British Airways American Express 2-4-1 companion voucher.

You could now book a seat for one person for 50% of the usual Avios required. The 2-4-1 voucher no longer required two people to be travelling.

You can see the full list of card features in our British Airways Premium Plus American Express review here and our free British Airways American Express review here.

British Airyways American Express 2-4-1 companion voucher has been improved

How does this work in practice?

It is as simple as you would expect:

  • Go to the Avios booking page on ba.com
  • Tick the box to say that you want to use your companion voucher (which we may now need to rename!)
  • Search for availability for one person

This is what you will see:

British Airyways American Express 2-4-1 companion voucher has been improved

There is now a message saying that you have activated the solo traveller 50% discount.

Whilst the message references the Premium Plus card, the 50% discount also applies to Economy bookings made using a new-style free British Airways American Express 2-4-1 voucher.

Everyone wins …. except for families of three

There was a gaping hole built into this new policy though:

  • Solo traveller – a big winner, they now have a use for a 2-4-1 voucher, getting them a 50% Avios discount on a single ticket
  • Party of two – they have always been fine, since it’s a 2-4-1 voucher!
  • Party of four – they have alway been fine if two x 2-4-1 vouchers were used, even if both vouchers were in the same name. ba.com is set up to allow a group of four to book using two x 2-4-1 vouchers held by the same person.
  • Party of three – hmmm …..

If you are a group of three people and you have two 2-4-1 companion vouchers HELD IN THE SAME NAME then you are stuck.

ba.com (or indeed the BA call centre) does not allow you to make a booking where two people travel on the first 2-4-1 and the third person gets a 50% Avios discount using the second 2-4-1.

You can’t make two separate bookings because the BA Amex cardholder must travel on each booking.

Even if you have two x 2-4-1 vouchers (in the same name), you can’t use both at once for a group of three people.

The best you can do is book two people (usually the cardholder and the child, to avoid the child being on a separate booking) using the 2-4-1 voucher. The third person must book a standalone Avios ticket at full rate.

British Airyways American Express 2-4-1 companion voucher has been improved

There are three ways around this problem

What is a family of three to do, apart from having another child?

There are three solutions:

Option 1 (for average spenders):

The obvious choice is for the two parents to alternate who holds the British Airways Premium Plus American Express card, with the other person cancelling.

As soon as the 2-4-1 voucher is earned on one card after spending £10,000, the card could be cancelled. The second person can then apply and start working towards their own 2-4-1 voucher after spending £10,000.

This means that you will eventually end up with 2-4-1 vouchers in two different names.

You can then book for a family of three:

  • one x 2-4-1 voucher in Parent A’s name is used for Parent A and the child
  • one x 2-4-1 voucher in Parent B’s name is used for Parent B to book a solo ticket with a 50% Avios discount

(Remember that from 2nd October 2023 you no longer get a pro-rata fee refund when you cancel an American Express credit card. You would need to decide whether it was best to cancel Person A’s Premium Plus card ASAP after the voucher is triggered or to wait until the year end to maximise the value of the £250 annual fee.)

Option 2 (for higher spenders):

If your household spends over £20,000 on American Express cards each year, you may want to consider both adults getting their own British Airways Premium Plus card and keeping both active at all times. My wife and I do this, as it is the obvious choice for a family of four who want one Avios holiday per year.

Whilst you would be paying £500 per year in annual fees, you would be triggering two x 2-4-1 vouchers, one in each name.

This allows you to book a trip for a family of three each year:

  • one x 2-4-1 voucher in Parent A’s name is used for Parent A and the child
  • one x 2-4-1 voucher in Parent B’s name is used for Parent B to book a solo ticket with a 50% Avios discount

Option 3 (for those with lots of non-Amex spend):

A final option is to bring the Barclaycard Avios Mastercard into the equation.

The Barclaycard Avios Mastercard gives you an Avios upgrade voucher each year. You need to spend £10,000 on the £240 per annum card or £20,000 on the free card.

Importantly, both vouchers are valid for two years and both vouchers can be used in all classes, except First Class.

Just as important, the Barclaycard Avios upgrade voucher is transferable. As long as the cardholder books, anyone can fly.

This means, for a family of three:

  • the second adult could book a separate ticket using a Barclaycard Avios Mastercard upgrade voucher (this can be done irrespective of whether the voucher is in the name of the second adult)

The way the Barclaycard voucher works (and we wrote a full article here) is that it ISN’T really an upgrade voucher. What happens is that you book an Avios seat and pay the Avios price of the next category down. Book Club World and you pay the Avios needed for a World Traveller Plus seat, plus the standard Club World taxes and charges.

One snag with this option is that users of Barclaycard vouchers do not get access to the additional Club World reward seats that are made available to someone using a Premium Plus 2-4-1 voucher. This may make it harder to find the availability you need.

Conclusion

It is frustrating that British Airways does not allow a family of three to use two x British Airways American Express 2-4-1 vouchers (in the same name) for a trip. This would allow two people to benefit from a 2-4-1 deal and the third person to benefit from the 50% solo traveller discount.

You can get around this by alternating which family member holds your British Airways Premium Plus American Express card, or by getting a Barclaycard Avios Mastercard to use alongside it.


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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:

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You can see our full directory of all UK cards which earn airline or hotel points here. Here are the best of the other deals currently available.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

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British Airways American Express Premium Plus

30,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

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50,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

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Earning miles and points from small business cards

If you are a sole trader or run a small company, you may also want to check out these offers:

American Express Business Platinum

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Capital on Tap Business Rewards Visa

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For a non-American Express option, we also recommend the Barclaycard Select Cashback card for sole traders and small businesses. It is FREE and you receive 1% cashback when you spend at least £2,000 per month.

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Comments (61)

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

  • lumma says:

    Isn’t the problem with the Barclaycard option that you don’t get the extra availability that you get with the AMEX voucher, so you need to find flights with true business availability?

    • Erico1875 says:

      With the BC upgrade voucher you are charged the max Avios/min £s so you would require more Avios than what is reqd for the Amex voucher.
      Although with Avios boost, you may be able to buy the difference

    • Rob says:

      Yes.

  • Jake says:

    Would this work:

    Using two vouchers book a trip for four people (even though you only want three to travel)
    Call up / go online in the 24hr cooling off period and cancel the ticket for the person that was not supposed to fly

    Would BAs IT be good enough ensure the correct realignment of Avios? I suspect not.

    Even if this didn’t work and you didn’t get any Avios back it would still allow you to use two vouchers, access the additional business inventory and ensure you don’t spend any taxes.

    Am I missing anything?

    • P4D says:

      Even it this did work you would need 4 seats available which would make availability even more challenging

    • Peter K says:

      What you are missing is that to book for 4 people using 2x 241’s you use the same number of avios as booking for only 3, but you’re paying extra taxes for a fourth person!

  • Scandinavian traveler says:

    If you call up BA you can allegedly (I have not tried this myself yet) also use two 2-4-1’s on one booking for two people to both reduce the Avios by 50% and get 2-4-1.

    Gives the same amount of Avios as if the two vouchers were split between each of the parent’s.

    • Scandinavian traveler says:

      This obviously requires the third ticket being paid with the full Avios amount and does not come with the additional J availability of the voucher, but the Avios is the same.

      • jjoohhnn says:

        In a three person scenario, yes, but if you wanted only two people to fly, had two vouchers, and you both then pay 50% of the avios..

        • Scandinavian traveler says:

          You can apply both vouchers for two people on one booking apparently. I.e. a booking costing 200,000 Avios per person will be 200,000 Avios in total if using one voucher and 100,000 in total if using two.

  • Chris R says:

    Great insight. Thanks Rob and team.
    I had planned on using the 241 and Barclays Premier voucher. Knew about the availability issue, but forgot about the defaulting to RFS pricing. Might re-think

    • CamFlyer says:

      My strategy is also Option 3, or just paying the full Avios while we run down the balance. Being based in Cambridgeshire, ex-DUB / Europe with a positioning flight from STN or LCY is far more appealing than fighting traffic to LHR for BA.

  • yonasl says:

    Just to be clear. If I use two vouchers at once (at my name) I can basically trigger one of them for two extra people even if none of them is me?

    • Tracey says:

      Yes, if you are all travelling together.

    • Reney says:

      which voucher? Amex you cannot use one in your name for someone else. Barclays yes you can use on others.

  • yonasl says:

    Now that you cannot pro-data the £250 Amex fee I do not see the point of cancelling. Just keep the card as you paid for it and make 1.5 avios per £ spent.

    • Travel Strong says:

      Resetting the 24 month fallow period sooner

      • JDB says:

        You are assuming the fallow period remains at 2 years. The move to extend this to ‘lifetime’ (which in practice can sometimes mean seven to ten years) in the US came around the same time as removal of pro-rata refunds there.

        If Amex UK follows the US policy on pro-rata refunds by allowing them on downgrades but not cancellation as they have suggested that also changes things although there can be no certainty of allowing you to upgrade for the next voucher.

        You are also assuming that in cancelling (as opposed to downgrading) you don’t fall foul of the requirement (and/or enforcement thereof) to remain eligible for the promotion at the time of travel.

        • ken says:

          Lifetime rules on bonuses in USA were introduced 2 1/2 years before removal of pro rata fee refunds.

          I wouldn’t be put off by scare stories about what might happen in the future.
          Little to lose by resetting the clock if your partner has the same card.

          • Rob says:

            The US lifetime bonus rule has a little less impact due to the huge number of different Amex cards out there. For example, Charles Schwab (the investment firm) issues Amex Plat with its logo on the front – this is treated separately to the mainstream Amex Plat under lifetime bonus rules.

        • Reney says:

          if they do introduce lifetime bonus, whilst you are on your break, the ‘opportunity’ cost is the 0.5 avios per pound you would have earned had you kept the card for the full year (as you can have the free barclays card). And the upside is the new bonus if they don’t introduce the life time rule.

  • John G says:

    We are a family of 3 but only one of us has (silver) status. We use the alternating years method with Amex but the frustrating part is not being able to get everyone on the same ticket thus at least one of us would be subject to seat selection fees.

    I assume there is no way around this (except not bothering with the seats?) I know it would be a different story if I had gold status.

    • Reney says:

      I wonder – can the bronze holder give the silver holder access (i.e fill in the form) and the silver holder book using the bronze holder’s voucher for all 3?

  • Tony says:

    I received a 2 for 1 economy voucher in March on my basic BA card. Went to upgrade back up to BA black Amex card. Was told by Amex that as I had received the economy voucher in Narch, I wouldn’t start to collect towards the new black card until next March!! ….even though I had paid for the Black card. What a con…told them to stuff the black card….and will not use the blue card either. And if they think that I will use the economy voucher ,well….I don’t fly economy, darling.,.! Stick it where the sun don’t shine Amex.

    • JDB says:

      Why is it a “con” for Amex to apply the rules you agreed to in taking out the free card? Some might suggest the customer simply didn’t understand what they were doing.

    • lumma says:

      Why did you spend £12k on a card to receive a voucher that you don’t want to use.

      Using it to fly to Athens, for example, would save you around £200 worth of avios on a peak day, so it’s hardly worthless for something earned on a free card. It’s even worth £50ish on domestic or short euro flight, so not using it is only affecting you

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