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Review: British Airways A380 First Class

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This is my review of British Airways A380 First Class from Dubai to London Heathrow.

It’s been nine years since we ran a review of First Class on the British Airways A380 fleet. This was back in the days when the airline took advantage of the new-style ovens on these aircraft to offer a tasting menu to passengers. Good luck with that in 2023.

I’ve flown the seat a few times since but never done a fresh review. Since it looks as if the A380 fleet will be with us for a while longer I decided it was time, but this piece will be out of date by 2025. Club Suite and the new First Class suite are due to be installed, and First Class potentially moved upstairs.

Spookily, we got four Avios seats in First Class from Dubai to London Heathrow. I wrote about this particular seat dump back in July. We were travelling to/from Oman with a cash connection on Oman Air.

British Airways A380 First Class review

I reviewed the British Airways lounge, and in particular ‘The Bar’ for First Class passengers, last week – click here.

On a British Airways A380, First Class is situated downstairs.  I would say ‘in the nose’ but as the plane does not visibly taper much at the front – unlike First Class on the old 747 fleet – this does not seem like the right phrase.  Club World and World Traveller seating is split between the lower and upper decks whilst World Traveller Plus is only to be found upstairs.

One downside of being downstairs is that – looking out of the window – the A380 feels like less of a novelty. When you’re on the upper deck it feels very different before take-off and landing due to the distance from the ground.

Boarding in Dubai is never a classy affair. Boarding, at least for this flight, was done from the front doors. First Class passengers are boarded first and then get to experience the rest of the passengers pushing through the cabin on the way to their seats.

We had 1K, 2K, 3K and 4K, ie the entire right hand side of the cabin. There are 14 seats in all – four down each side and three pairs of two seats in the middle. Refurbished BA Boeing 777 First Class cabins have eight seats and we may see the A380 drop to eight as well in 2025.

If you are sitting near the front the stairs leading to the Upper Deck will dominate your view. The front stairs are redundant, unless they are a safety requirement, and could be removed as passengers do not use them.

This is the view from 1K (note the empty magazine rack!) of the staircase:

BA A380 First Class

Here is a picture of the stairs from the galley in front of Row 1, which is one of the widest you will ever see:

British Airways A380 galley

Here is a PR shot of the cabin looking towards the rear – you are looking at Row 4 there – which I could never have taken in real life given the people who were streaming past me during boarding:

BA A380 First Class cabin

The BA A380 First Class seat

The A380 First Class cabin has one clear difference from other aircraft types – it does NOT taper in.   Given that the A380 lower deck is exceptionally wide in the first place, it gave the designers a little extra space to work with.

Let’s take a look at 1K. There is a long standing joke – not started by us – that British Airways First Class is ‘the best Business Class seat in the sky’. There is an element of truth here, and to be honest there are multiple ways that the Qatar Airways Qsuite product beats this seat. Even the new British Airways Club Suite beats it in some ways.

British Airways A380 First Class seat

The key difference between this seat and a Business Class seat is that your feet are not in a cubby hole. As you can see here:

British Airways A380 First Class seat

…. the seat is long enough for you to be able to stretch out without your feet disappearing under the seat in front.

There are some smart touches. On the outside of the seat is a wardrobe:

British Airways A380 First Class wardrobe

…. which can take your coat or jacket (there is a coat hanger inside) and, depending on size, your hand baggage.

There is also storage inside the seat, including this flip up unit:

BA A380 First Class storage

If you were wondering how the middle pairs are arranged, they look like this:

British Airways A380 first class seat middle pair

Your head is a decent distance from the head of your seat neighbour, and apart from take-off and landing you can activate the divider between the two seats. I would be fine with this seat if travelling alone and no window seats were left.

The seat is showing its age in places though, such as the IFE remote control:

British Airways A380 First Class remote control

…. and the flip out TV screen, which as well as not having the definition of a modern TV is also unable to be used for take-off or landing because it’s not fixed.

British Airways A380 First Class seat

I do have a soft spot for this dial-based control for the seat which is easy to use:

BA A380 First Class seat control

In general, I’d say that it is a classy First Class seat whilst, at the same time, clearly not looking as if it was launched in 2023.  The cream and navy blue scheme follows through into things like the pyjamas, blankets and male amenity kits which brings a level of coherence to the overall look.

BA A380 First Class amenities

In terms of amenities, BA has tried its best. The headphones, from Meridian, come in a smart hard case:

BA A380 First Class Meridian headphones

…. and the blankets and pillows are good enough. We were on a relatively short day flight from Dubai so the bed didn’t get any use and I can’t comment on the sleep quality.

Pyjamas were available, even though I didn’t need them on a day flight. BA should get some kudos for this because a lot of airlines now try to hide them away, or even refuse to load them, in premium cabins on day flights.

The current First Class amenity kit is from Temperley London. The female ones are, I have to say, lovely:

BA First Class Temperly amenity kit A380

The male ones are done in a dull navy blue, with no pattern, and don’t look as smart. Inside you get a surprising amount of stuff – ear plugs, 30ml Elemis shave gel, 10ml Elemis moisturiser, 5ml Elemis eye cream, a comb, a small pack of tissues, eye mask, toothbrush with a larger than usual toothpaste, lip balm, a pen, 10ml facial exfoliator and a 17g deodorant.

What impressed me was that, in the main, the contents are practical. Deodorant is the sort of item that you can definitely use but rarely see in amenity kits, and the handy travel size means it will definitely follow me on a future trip.

IFE

Long term readers of this site will know that I’m not a fan of in-flight entertainment and tend to spend my time catching up on my stash on unread magazines from home.

British Airways has broadened its IFE selection this year. The Paramount+ content is still available, as is a channel called ‘British Originals’ to tie in to the current ad campaign. My wife found a 3-part Lucy Worsley series on Agatha Christie here which she enjoyed and which we’d somehow missed when it was broadcast. ‘The Traitors’ and ‘Nolly’ were also here.

The ‘New Releases’ film selection included The Little Mermaid, Cocaine Bear, Indiana Jones & The Dial of Destiny and The Super Mario Bros Movie along with quite a few which had passed me by (‘The Pope’s Exorcist’? ‘The Machine’?, ‘Hypnotic’?, ’65’?).

British Airways First Class food and drink

With the demise of the A380 tasting menu, First Class is back to the standard approach to meals.

First up is a canape selection – beef bresaola with parmesan cheese, pan seared curried scallop with green pea mint puree and bocconcini with red pepper coulis. Taste wise, it is the highlight of the meal:

British Airways First Class A380 canapes

You will read stories about people not getting their initial choice of meals in BA First Class, but being in 1K and with a Gold card I was safe. To be fair, the rest of my family also got their initial choices, albeit my wife is also Gold.

There were five starter options – grilled barbeque prawns, beef bresaola, warm crispy hen’s egg, red pepper soup and a mixed leaf salad. I went for the prawns which didn’t quite deliver despite (or because of) the addition of corn on the cob, pickled cucumber, sweetcorn puree and chipotle sauce.

British Airways A380 First Class prawns

There were four main options: braised beef short ribs, chicken mandi, pan roasted cod and roasted beetroot and celeriac puree. I went for the chicken, which came with almonds, pine seeds and Mandi rice:

British Airways A380 first class food

The menu claimed that side dishes (creamy mashed potatoes, grilled mixed vegetables, grilled baby courgette) were available. None were offered – not to me, not to anyone. At the end of the meal I asked the Cabin Services Director – or whatever they are called now – about it and he said ‘oh yeah, I forgot about those’. Welcome to BA First Class.

(I should also mention at this point that, whilst my glass was constantly topped up because I sat opposite the CSD, my wife in Row 4 was not offered additional drinks at any point. To be fair, this was still an improvement on her Virgin Atlantic Upper Class flight in May when the crew totally forgot to bring her appetiser and she was passed over for afternoon tea too.)

I passed on the four cheese plate options and headed into the desserts. The options were orange savarin, warm carrot, almond and walnut cake, vanilla ice cream and fresh fruit. Not exactly pushing the boat out. I went for the orange savarin on the basis that it was the only thing that was actually a proper dish:

British Airways A380 First Class dessert

The ‘Light Bites’ selection, offered during the flight if you feel peckish, is pitiful. I can’t dress it up. The options are popcorn, a bag of crisps or a mini-box of Lindt truffles.

Afternoon tea was offered nearer to arrival. This is a step up from the Club World version, but is still short of Virgin Atlantic Upper Class which has hot options. You could pick from a sandwich pack, a mini-plate of patisseries, jam and scones or (as this was Dubai) an Arabic mezze plate.

British Airways First Class A380 afternoon tea

I should say that the William Edwards crockery is as lovely as ever as you can see from the images above. First also features Studio William Cutlery from the Cotswolds and glassware from Dartington Crystal.

First Class drinks

Laurent-Perrier Grand Siecle remains on board, easily the most high profile beverage served on any British Airways flight. Lanson Rose is also available, as is the sparkling Hattingley Valley Blanc de Noirs 2018 from Hampshire. It’s a decent selection.

The usual mix of white, red and dessert wines (three white, three red, one dessert wine and one port) were available. The average retail price of the white and red is around £18 – £20 which may be more or less than you would spend to drink at home for a special occasion.

A selection of gin, vodka and whisky cocktails are also available, as well as mocktails. The spirits list includes Johnnie Walker Blue Label and the Dalwhinnie 15-year single malt whisky. Heineken and Heineken 0.0% are also loaded for …. well, I’m not sure …. plus the special British Airways BrewDog Speedbird IPA.

Conclusion

It is worth remembering that British Airways does not attempt to compete with this seat. Emirates charges (based on booking a few months in advance) £7,000 to Dubai in First Class. BA charges under £4,000.

If you’ve flown the new British Airways Club Suite then you may not be impressed by what you see above. On an A380 route, however, you are choosing between this and the old Club World seat – no storage, no privacy, half the seats face backwards.

On that basis, and that basis alone, I still recommend BA A380 First Class. The step up from ‘old’ Club World is substantial.

When using Avios, however, what you need to remember is the gap between British Airways First Class and Club World is nowhere near as the big as the difference between World Traveller and Club World.

If you have a finite Avios balance and two long haul trips planned, you would be crazy to do one trip in First Class and other trip in World Traveller – it would be far more sensible, more enjoyable and more relaxing to do both trips in Club World, even in the old seat.


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Comments (129)

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

  • meta says:

    Haven’t flown F since pandemic. Are two-tier stands for afternoon tea now gone? Those were really nice.

  • flyforfun says:

    “Good luck with that in 2023.”

    Excellent! That set the tone for the whole article. 😀

  • LittleNick says:

    ‘oh yeah, I forgot about those’. Everyone makes mistakes, I get that. Presumably no apology?
    Was lucky enough to do BA F once pre-pandemic and done a F trip to HOU a few months back, and the service has definitely dropped, almost night and day. Pre-pandemic it was very attentive, recently not so much. They basically served our meals and that was it, no can I get you anything else to drink etc? Had to go up and ask if you wanted anything. The old long-haul fleet clearly knew what they were doing, sadly they all got cut during Covid. However Concorde room service was very attentive this time round. Return journey in CS was probably actually a bit better service than the outbound in F. Having said that F outbound was only £250 more so was worth it on what turned out to be the old Club World seats on the out

  • NorthernLass says:

    I’ve started asking up front if I want anything in J and F, e.g. different wines with starter and main, as some cabin crew definitely seem to serve the minimum possible and then scuttle off and hide somewhere! On my last CW flight I was only offered a drink on boarding and with the main meal, it’ll be interesting to see what happens on the A380 to DXB next week!

    • LittleNick says:

      Seems the best way although you shouldn’t have too. I wish someone from BA management would go undercover and fly J & F like that TV show my boss undercover. Seems they may be out of touch with that’s happening on the ground (or I mean air!). Enjoy the trip to DXB, is that J or F then?

  • SG says:

    ‘I’m not sure what for’ – Heineken 0.0 is for people who want zero alcohol beer (obviously). There’s huge demand for low/no alcohol options these days. I often drink them and the crew tell me they are consistently in high demand. Not everyone wants – or can – have alcohol.

    • Rob says:

      I know that, in some countries, Heineken is a premium drink, but in the UK it certainly isn’t. On the other hand we treat Stella as a premium drink which most countries don’t.

      • BOB says:

        No one treats Stella as premium in the UK

        • Rob says:

          If you’re over 45 you will have been innoculated as a teenager that Stella is premium 🙂

        • Josh B says:

          Silly man. Dont you know it’s “reassuringly expensive”? (Compared to White Lightning one presumes)

        • Jus says:

          It took my a while to work out when my former colleagues were ordering a pint of wife what it meant.

      • lumma says:

        Heineken wasn’t a premium drink in the UK until the mid ’00s. It used to be a 3%ish abv lager brewed in the UK with a reputation worse than Carling/Fosters. It was then changed to the same as the Dutch original. It probably never shook off that reputation with older people but I think it’s perfectly acceptable for an airline lager. I just wish they’d have a few more craft options, American do really well even in economy on that front (although their T3 lounge only has Bus and Carlsberg)

        • MPC says:

          Finally someone commenting on what premium actually means in the drink industry! New Heineken and Stella are premium lagers – Heineken Silver is not.

          All of them are rubbish – Mainly because all lagers are rubbish.

        • nathanheywood@hotmail.com says:

          Heineken wasn’t ‘premium’ back in the day, still better than Carling, but so is ditch water. As far as I know, this product was UK only. Presumably Brits being the only ones gullible enough to drink it, as with Fosters.
          Heineken Export, however, at 5% was punted as premium and attracted a premium price here (greater mark-up for the normal Heineken sold elsewhere in Europe, nice work if you can get it).
          For a ‘rebrand/relaunch’ some years ago now, the 3% pish was quietly binned and the Export tag dropped from the font head of the stronger stuff.

          Hey ho. It’s still crap I’d use it to put out fires with, but nowt else.

      • SG says:

        Stella has never been treated as a premium drink in the UK. It’s always been treated as exactly the opposite. I think you’ve have been influenced by all those ‘reassuringly expensive’ ads they used to run, which were designed to shift their perception in the UK as the territory of lager louts. The ads didn’t work.

      • Londonsteve says:

        You’re clearly not a beer drinker, Rob. I can assure you that nobody at all views Stella Artois as a premium brand in the UK today. It’s cheap fodder for supermarket promotions and summer bbqs. When it first arrived on UK shores it was imported from Belgium and was a decent quality continental lager. As it become more popular (as is commonly the case) they started to brew it locally for the UK market and the quality took a nose dive. It’s one of the nastiest, most hangover inducing beers you can buy in a UK supermarket. I’d rather drink tap water with a slice of lemon. Heinken IS a higher quality product and has greater perceived prestige in the UK today. Witness the product placement in the recent Bond films; the audience would have howled with laugher had James started to sup a can of ‘wife beater’ instead.

        • Londonsteve says:

          I’m a lager fan so I know what I’m talking about. My tips: Warsteiner and Spaten from Sainsbury’s, Paulaner and Krombacher from Tesco, Pilsner Urquell from Waitrose and (fortunately), Czech Budweiser Budvar from nearly anywhere these days, although it’s my last choice from the above list. Despite being a nation of lager drinkers, the choice in the UK is downright apalling. I look forward to visiting a medium sized supermarket in Bulgaria which has a vastly broader selection. Most lager in the UK is hideous and its dominance has unfortunately come at the expense of the winding down of brewing (and consuming) indigenous beers. Some real ales are superb and merit comparison with the best European artisan beers.

    • Ben says:

      Lucky Saint is your friend here

      • SG says:

        I agree Lucky Saint would be an excellent option in BA First for a more premium non alcoholic beer. Heineken 0.0 is perfectly good for Club but I do have an issue with serving the same in First; they wouldn’t do that with wine or spirits.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    Is that a sea of congealed and slightly crusty sweetcorn puree those poor prawns are sitting in? Looks rank, even by the standards of aeroplane food.

    • meta says:

      I felt queasy just by looking at the photo and trying hard not to scroll to the article when reading the comments.

  • FatherOfFour says:

    So, is the hanger in the wardrobe “stealable” or not?

  • L Allen says:

    No tequila?

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