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BIG NEWS: BA moves to revenue-based tier status for Bronze, Silver, Gold and Gold Guest List

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As we have been predicting for some time, British Airways has announced the move to revenue-based tier status.

The net effect is that earning Gold status will now be very, very difficult, bordering on impossible, for leisure travellers.

Some changes are unexpected – the speed of the launch (1st April) and a rebranding of British Airways Executive Club to ‘The British Airways Club’. Whilst a bit more 21st century, it’s ironic given that only ‘executive’ travellers are now likely to qualify for the higher tiers.

British Airways Club membership cards

Here are the new British Airways status thresholds that kick in from 1st April 2025:

  • Bronze: 3,500 points
  • Silver: 7,500 points
  • Gold: 20,000 points
  • Gold Guest List – new member: 65,000 points (with at least 52,000 earned through British Airways-marketed flights and British Airways Holidays)
  • Gold Guest List – renewal: 40,000 points (with at least 32,000 earned through British Airways-marketed flights British Airways Holidays)

There will be milestone bonuses of 2,500 Avios at 5,500 tier points, 4,000 Avios at 11,000 tier points and 5,000 Avios at 16,000 tier points which will be triggered on the way to Gold. Assuming 1p per Avios of value these are not exactly generous.

These changes were made “based on our Members’ feedback” according to BA’s press release so if you don’t like them, you only have yourself to blame.

What is a ‘point’?

1 point = £1 of spending on British Airways-marketed flights.

ONLY the base fare and BA-imposed surcharges are included. Airport charges, Air Passenger Duty etc are NOT included. Seat selection and luggage fees ARE included.

On a £11,990 fully flexible ticket to New York in Club World, virtually all spend (£11,687) would qualify towards status. On a £387 economy flight to New York, only £189 of spend would count.

There are other ways of earning ‘points’

You will be able to earn up to 1,000 points per year by purchasing Sustainable Aviation Fuel credits. You will get 1 tier point and 10 Avios per £1 spent on SAF credits.

You will be able to earn up to 2,500 points per year via spending on the British Airways Premium Plus American Express credit card. It isn’t clear what the ‘conversion rate’ will be – I suspect something close to 1 point per £10 spent.

You will earn 1 point per £1 spent at British Airways Holidays. For high end leisure travellers this could be an attractive way of earning status. However, BA has potentially messed this up because tier points will be split equally between all travellers. You can’t book a £20,000 holiday for a family of four and get Gold – in fact, at 5,000 points each, you wouldn’t even all get Silver.

(What you COULD do is book a BA Holiday – flight and hotel – for one person, and then have the rest of your family book their flights separately. This ensures that you receive all the tier points.)

One upside is that there will no longer be a minimum stay requirement for earning via BA Holidays.

What happens with partner flights?

You will earn tier points based on a percentage of miles flown for non-alliance partners.

For Malaysia Airlines, for example, it will increase from 2% of miles flown on a discounted Economy ticket to 30% of miles flown for a fully flexible First Class ticket.

This structure means that it is VERY unattractive for people buying flexible tickets to choose a partner airline over British Airways. For low cost premium cabin tickets it is probably roughly equal – eg Heathrow to Kuala Lumpur in discounted Business Class on Malaysia Airlines would earn 1,600 tier points under the new structure which is roughly what a £2,000 sale cash ticket on BA would earn.

Some airlines are rewarded more generously. Qatar Airways, for example, earns 25% of miles flown in deeply discounted Business Class. This is double what you receive for flying Malaysia Airlines.

There will be bonus tier points for the first few months

Flights booked BEFORE 14th February for travel after 1st April will earn bonus points. It isn’t clear if these are one-way or return, I suspect one-way:

  • Euro Traveller: 50 points
  • Club Europe: 100 points
  • World Traveller: 70 points
  • World Traveller Plus: 140 points 
  • Club World: 210 points
  • First: 330 points

These are bizarrely small numbers based on the new tier thresholds. 420 bonus tier points for a Club World return flight isn’t going to make much impact on hitting 20,000 tier points for Gold.

What happens with existing bookings for travel after 1st April?

It’s not clear. We are told:

“Customers who already hold bookings for travel after 1 April 2025 will be awarded Tier Points based on a conversion of the existing method. Any existing bookings will earn proportionally the same number of Tier Points, or more, as they would today.”

The implication is that it will be based on the same % of status as you would need today. A flight earning 140 tier points (currently 23% of Silver or 9% of Gold) will presumably earn somewhere between 23% of the new Silver threshold (7,500 points) or 9% of the new Gold threshold (20,000 points).

The implication is that this only applies to existing bookings made before today. If you book today, you will be on the new system for travel from 1st April.

What happens with existing BA Holidays bookings for travel by 30th June?

People have booked with BA Holidays expecting double tier points (for trips taken between 1st April and 30th June) based on the current tier point system.

On paper you won’t be worse off. The tier points you would have got will be multiplied by 13.5 and then doubled. Trust me that this is fair.

The bigger issue is that if you will need additional tier points for status, the gap is bigger. For example, if your BA Holiday would have got you halfway to Silver it still will – but you’d still need to spend £3,750 to earn the other half of the points needed.

British AIrways Club status changes

Are ‘soft landings’ remaining?

It isn’t clear. However, a BA employee has told me that they will be removed. If correct, a Gold member will now drop directly to Blue.

What is happening to Lifetime Gold?

Your existing tier points will be converted. Take a look at the FAQ here for details.

Conclusion

This is, clearly, a pivotal move by British Airways. It is effectively washing its hands of the leisure market and going all-in to attract the dwindling band of full fare business travellers.

With Gold now available for just over one and a half £12,000 fully flexible Club World return flights to New York, it is clear who the target market now is.

Realistically, it will now be impossible to earn Gold for small business travellers, economy travellers or self-funded leisure travellers. Even Silver will be a major stretch. British Airways Holidays spend could have offered a lifeline, but by splitting the tier points equally among all travellers it’s not going to make any real impact.

It’s not clear to me why BAEC members asked for this, since it was done ‘based on member feedback’ according to BA but that’s people for you ….!

It will also be virtually impossible for corporate travellers to earn Gold status based on economy travel. This leads to the question of why you’d even want to push for status – if the only people who can earn status are flying in Business Class, they don’t need Silver status anyway as they have the benefits. Gold doesn’t add much on top.

The long term issue remains. Business travellers have their flights paid for by their employers. Many of these are tied to BA or oneworld via a route deal. Many get huge end-of-year rebates which means their headline spend is not what they actually pay – in reality business travellers with a high rebate will need to spend LESS to earn status than leisure travellers. BA is rewarding ‘loyalty’ from people whose loyalty is contractually enforced on them.

Remove status from those people who DO have a choice of airline – leisure travellers, small business owners – and their reasons for flying British Airways shrink dramatically.

What I don’t understand is why the offsets for leisure and SME travellers are so half-hearted. Capping credit card tier points at 2,500 is pathetic – just 12.5% of what you need for Gold and still leaving you £5,000 of ‘before taxes’ BA spend short of Silver. American Airlines now lets you earn status based ENTIRELY on credit card and partner spend if you wish. If someone wants to put £200,000 through their BA Amex to earn Gold status, why not let them?

The British Airways Club, of course, is not the only game in town for earning oneworld status. I suspect that most people will now find it easier to earn Silver or Gold-equivalent status via another oneworld airline – you would get virtually the same benefits except for Gold access to additional Economy Avios inventory. We’ll be looking at these options in detail as we get nearer to April.

As a starter, remember that oneworld member Royal Jordanian will give you 12-months of BA Bronze-equivalent status for just $49 if you have hotel or airline elite status elsewhereclick here to read more.

You can find out more about these changes on this special page of ba.com.

Comments (3839)

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

  • Jake says:

    @Rob:

    On reading the FAQ – the bonuses for BA Holidays is surprisingly generous. For the lead booker it is essentially 1.x Tier points per £ (I think), where x is split of the number of passengers.

    If true, this re-work is making a bit more sense:

    a) Benefit those who spend the most with BA (appreciate this is not loyalty)

    b) Push leisure travellers to the higher margin BA Holidays business and reward loyalty heavily there

    I think BA are trying to do away with the casual, flight only, cheap business class traveller

    This may make sense if true

    • Stephan W says:

      Sadly no TP bonus for leader booker. They do get a bonus on avios for the value of the whole holiday but TP are split evenly amongst number of people on the trip (irrespective if they have a exec club – sorry “club” – account by the looks of things).

    • patrick C says:

      Actually it doesn’t.
      What they are really scrapping is the regular BA customer that even when the math doesn’t work still chooses BA. Those are the best marginal customers.
      The high priced J seats sell anyway due to anti competitive alliance moats. Here you are giving up a lot of extra revenue and there is no upside for any US – LHR passengers.
      It looks like the accountant’s skills are falling off a cliff. The better approach would have been to devalue silver a bit.
      Now you will just see even more avios cash outs to the competition.
      I guess you can reduce lounge staffing / costs a bit, but the topline loss amd tje cash loss to qatar likely won’t make up for it.

  • Mike K says:

    Who did BA contact for this change, certainly no one I know!
    It’s going to be impossible for me as a leisure traveller who has held silver status for last 5 years to achieve this now so I will almost certainly now choose an alternative carrier.
    BTW they have also today changed holiday double tier points date from 30 June 2025 to 31 March 2025

  • Gerry says:

    I used to be a loyal customer and heavy BA J flier, but have already drifted away in the last two years with all the “enhancements”, clearly made in response to “customer feedback”.

    Slightly over 100 flights a year on average, used to be 80% BA – this year less than 10 flights out of 104 were on BA. I fly J, rarely eat in the lounge anyway, needed the extra award economy availability once but since I no longer have that perk, I had to buy a 400 GBP intra Europe flight… Still better than blindly chasing status. There’s life beyond BA.

    I don’t miss it much.

  • khatl says:

    Any insight on what will happen to lifetime criteria or status?

  • Jack says:

    Why do they keep lying and saying this is based on members feedback ? It’s completely ridiculous nobody is honestly going to say this is better than the system it replaces and rewards those who don’t need rewarding . Lesuire travellers who can choose who they fly with should be the focus for airlines . Certainly not going to spend £20k a year to earn gold and I doubt many people will do so . Why can’t airlines see business travellers are not going to come back at any level like before COVID and they should not be the focus

    • Throwawayname says:

      They hire people with a lot of ‘experience’, codeword for ‘years of doing the same thing without ever challenging the status quo’.

      This is even more obvious at LH, whose huge network and the efficient way in which it’s managed (basically through incrementally finessing demand forecasting and revenue management based on a steady flow of data going back decades) ensures it can remain profitable, a fact that management use to convince themselves they’re running a really premium airline…at the same time as delivering an underwhelming experience to most of its passengers, employees, contractors and other stakeholders.

    • Joe says:

      I’m sure members did ask for points to be awarded on other purchases like SAF, seat selection and or credit card spend. The rest of the changes is the impact of that (in spin language).

      • meta says:

        This is because everyone working for BA obviously watches Apprentice on repeat…

    • Alan says:

      They’re probably asked folks if they felt the lounges were too crowded!

    • Tony says:

      These are the guys that brought in the brunch menu, say no more…

  • Alastair says:

    Is the fact that this is in effect only rewarding people flying on their employer’s dime playing the long game? A bit like how enterprise software vendors effectively give there top-end offerings out to students for free/hardly anything, because they know that when those students take positions in a company with a budget for software spend, they are hooked on that product.

    Today’s mid-level exec/director/consultant is going to feel wonderful about BA and his/her gold card that when they become partners/board members, there’s little chance they’ll reign in on the BA account spend or jump ship to someone else…

  • James says:

    So I have 1525 tier points so far for the year ending 31 March 2025. Will I keep gold with that until 31 March 2026 at least? Though as others have said, these changes overall mean I will be looking to shift to another Loyalty programme.

  • Andrew Mallinson says:

    BA leadership is not averse to outright lying. Look at how they refuse to pay compensation for cancelled flights (due to ‘adverse weather conditions’) until CEDR conflict resolution points put they are wrong – and they have to cough up. I have no doubt this survey was manipulated!

    • JDB says:

      That’s a fairly outrageous assertion for which you have zero evidence. The fact BA doesn’t pay a claim also doesn’t make them liars. It’s just a standard civil dispute which, if it can’t be settled by the parties, goes to court or some form of ADR. If BA wins, on your analysis, who is the ‘liar’. It’s worth noting that of cases that go to AviationADR, about one third are deemed “spurious or out of scope” and at CEDR most cases are determined in BA’s favour and only around 20% fully in the passenger’s favour.

      • Jake says:

        But that also indicates that 20% of the time, BA have entirely failed to fulfil their obligations.

        For a multi-billion company with an army of lawyers that is poor.

        I appreciate that some of those claims will be genuine corner cases but if BA really valued their obligations to customers, 1 in 5 cases would not result fully in the passengers favour

      • Andrew says:

        In fact 80% of CEDR claims re BA are settled in the complainants favour. Most are settled after the claim has been made but before the case is adjudicated .
        Like pleadying guilty when caught was the stolen goods in your hand…

        • JDB says:

          @Andrew – it is utter nonsense that 80% of cases settle in the passenger’s favour. The figures are published on the CEDR website and on the CAA website as are the claims received but settled by the airline prior to adjudication. The % of claims settled in the pax favour has declined considerably since 2022 which isn’t very surprising.

          The figures are not inconsistent eg with FOS published case statistics.

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