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Is easyJet about to launch a loyalty scheme?

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Whilst there is nothing out there to show you, the word on the street is that easyJet is finally going to launch a ‘proper’ loyalty scheme.

We’ve been here before, of course. In 2018 to be precise.

There is no guarantee that it will finally get off the ground this time, but with a new CEO (Kenton Jarvis) and turmoil amongst British Airways frequent flyers the timing is as good as it will get.

easyjet launching loyalty programme

What appears to be happening is that the other big US management consultancy firm – not the one which advised British Airways on the Executive Club changes – is (allegedly) working with easyJet on a loyalty strategy.

What also seems to be true is that a major US recruitment company is ringing senior people in the UK travel loyalty industry and asking them:

Do you want to become CEO of a start-up loyalty programme for a UK airline?

Who could this be?

What about Flight Club?

easyJet suspended new invitations to ‘Flight Club’ some time ago.

This was easyJet’s ‘invite only’ loyalty scheme for top flyers which had a number of ‘soft’ benefits. Whilst not openly advertised, it is discussed on the airline website.

The criteria for being invited to ‘Flight Club’ was:

  • flown 20 flights or more in the past 12 months, or
  • flown 10 flights or more, and spent £1,500 or other currency equivalent in the past 12 months, or
  • flown an average of 10 flights or more for 10 years, with at least one flight every year
easyjet loyalty programme

What did easyJet Flight Club get you?

You weren’t getting into any airport lounges with your Flight Club membership, or taking any free flights.

However, the benefits were genuinely useful, even if they went to your employer, assuming you travel on business, rather than yourself.

(If Flight Club had a weakness, this was it. At heart, loyalty schemes are seen by travellers as giving them a kickback for all the early mornings, lost weekends and missed birthdays and anniversaries they endure. Flight Club didn’t give you anything unless you paid for your own travel, because your employer would otherwise pick up the cost of the benefits.)

Here are the Flight Club membership benefits, as per the easyJet website:

  • Fee-free changes – Make unlimited changes to the dates and travel routes of your bookings without paying admin fees. Just pay the difference between the original fare and that of your new flight.
  • Price Guarantee – If you find an equivalent flight of another airline cheaper within 48 hours of making your booking, we’ll refund the difference. We’ll also give you a voucher worth 10% of that difference for your next flight. Just let our dedicated Flight Team know within that time.
  • Our Price Promise – We promise you’ll always get the best fares for your easyJet flights. If, on a rare occasion, you find a flight you have already booked on easyJet.com for less, we’ll give you a voucher worth the price difference for your next flight.
  • Preview of schedule seat releases and sales – We think the people who fly with us most often should be the first to know what we’re doing and what’s coming up, so we’ll give you advanced notification of schedule seat releases and sales to keep you in the know.

We know what an easyJet loyalty scheme will look like, because it told us

Back in 2018, easyJet had serious plans to launch a loyalty scheme. It hired a ‘Head of Loyalty’ from Etihad, who soon departed for a life outside travel.

It even put out the following slide in its financial results presentation:

easyJet new loyalty programme

This wasn’t a slide put up as a throw-away at a conference. It was announced in a formal presentation to easyJet shareholders to persuade them that the airline remained a good investment. The airline said:

  • easyJet would introduce a points currency
  • points would be earned on all purchases
  • points would also be earned with selected partners including easyJet Holidays
  • there would be a ‘range’ of redemption options, which implied that this was NOT a straight cashback programme
  • ‘Points & Cash’ would be available, presumably allowing people with only a handful of points to still use them by getting a discount on a future easyJet flight

We were told that it would launch in the UK in 2019 with European expansion in 2020. 

We were also promised, in 2020, the launch of a Business Rewards loyalty scheme for corporates. This was meant to follow the 2019 launch of Corporate Flight Club for businesses which make a substantial number of easyJet bookings.

None of this happened.

Why now?

easyJet is generally seen by investors as being stuck. It is caught in a pincer movement – pricier than Ryanair and Wizz Air, and lacking the access to core airports, alliance traffic and status and loyalty benefits to fight off IAG, Lufthansa Group and Air France KLM.

The 2019 loyalty scheme was meant to help close the gap with British Airways – not through Flight Club, which does little for the traveller themselves, but via a points based scheme.

If the (alleged) appointment of big name US management consultants and the mysterious phone calls being made to UK loyalty executives are a sign that things are moving, it is good news.

British Airways Executive Club will be at its most vulnerable in April 2026 when many people will be waving goodbye to their Gold and Silver cards. easyJet should plan to be up and running before this, ready to status match BA members whilst they still have a card that can be matched.

Comments (94)

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  • Dave says:

    I presume any kind of lounge access would never be a part of this?

    • Rob says:

      No, unless easyJet did a deal with No1 etc to let you spend points on lounge passes – which is very possible. I can’t see any way in which easyJet would swallow an elite member visiting a No1 Lounge on every flight for free, given that easyJet would get a £15-£20 recharge.

  • Jay Sorensen says:

    This is “article” is effectively a “post” as it completely lacks attribution or any description of a source. In addition, the evidence of “what” a program would look like is from 2018 . . . folks, that’s 7 years ago and pre-pandemic. Note to the writer – please honor your readers with far more effort.

    • Rob says:

      You operate under US freedom of speech laws, Jay, which don’t apply in the UK. I cannot specifically say what I know because I couldn’t prove it in court if easyJet decided to challenge it. easyJet is also a public company so, if you believe such an announcement may impact the share price, I could be at risk of breaking various securities laws if specific claims were made which turned out to be incorrect. You just need to trust me on this!

    • sayling says:

      Just ask for a refund, Jay, and don’t bother paying any further subs…

    • PH says:

      UK business press is full of “it is understood that…” “people familiar with the situation said that…” stories, many provided by the PR department on the condition that attribution is vague…

  • ADS says:

    “Fee-free changes … Just pay the difference between the original fare and that of your new flight.”

    is this ever actually meaningful?

    if you booked your original flight a few months out, and then want to change it a few weeks out … the “price difference” usually dwarfs the change fee!

    • CamFlyer says:

      Waiving a change fee is certainly preferable to paying the fare differential AND a change fee. Even better would be if they offered a credit voucher if the new fare is less.

    • Niall says:

      I believe you can change to a much later flight. Eg a regular commuter between say Belfast and London on easyJet. If they didn’t want to take their flight one week they could change it a later week they hadn’t yet booked and if the same price or cheaper it was free. A genuine good benefit for a frequent flyer.

      Not that this matters, Flight club invitations are dead and easyJet didn’t tell anybody, so lost any loyalty from the people who met the criteria and waited for an invite that never came.

      • ADS says:

        fair point Niall – I didn’t think of changing it to a far(ish) future date

  • Chris W says:

    easyJet seem lost in their strategy of trying to be everything to everyone. They can’t compete with Wizz and Ryanair on price, and can’t offer the perks the full service airlines do.

    The fact you have to pay extra for a full sized cabin bag and it won’t show that price on Google Flights will surely turn off many frequent flyers.

    Sort of surprised they haven’t abandoned the corporate market and gone down the Jet2 route of packaged holidays without nasty surprises.

    This all being said, if the new loyalty program offered elites a free full sized cabin bag, I would match

    • Richie says:

      It’s rumoured that BA Euroflyer fares will cease to include a full IATA sized cabin bag for non status passengers in the not too distant future.

      easyJet’s included with the fare cabin bag size is bigger than Ryanair and Wizzair.

      easyJet’s schedule and destinations from BHX are very package holiday and they’re bookable at easyJet holidays.

      • Super Secret Stuff says:

        Whilst it is bigger and that’s handy, easyJet used to be the friendly low cost airline. Removing something that should really be free regardless (carrying your own bag on that fits in the overhead locker), is not friendly. Other than comfier seats on 2+ hour flights, the cost difference isn’t justified

        They’re lost and losing there appeal fast

        • kevin86 says:

          Not really. Passenger numbers were up last year for easyJet

        • John33 says:

          This was years ago. Why are you complaining about it now? I for one am glad that they’ve cut boarding time by decreasing the number of wheelies in the cabin.

    • Michael says:

      One problem with offering status passengers a free large bag is that easyJet limits the number of large bags sold to the space available. You could see a situation such as London to Edinburgh where most of the flight have status and not being able to accept all the status bags on board never mind sell any more….

  • BJ says:

    Soon be a case of HUACRA.

  • Dave B says:

    Not enough check in agents at Gran Canaria despite us being early boarding . will use Jet2 next time . Why spend 1 hour in a queue to limit your time in the VIP lounge? Not paying for enough agents!

    • John33 says:

      Why would early BOARDING give you priority check in? Don’t you mean bag drop?

  • Chris says:

    I’m assuming from the comments that Rob hasn’t fielded one of those calls. But with the finance background and the domain expertise and industry connections it doesn’t sound like it would be crazy approach to make

    • Rob says:

      They are calling people who would never in a million years work for easyJet money. This is why people are telling me – they find it funny that easyJet believed they’d be interested. Anyone who was half serious in taking the job wouldn’t be going around telling the media about the call. I doubt they are offering more than £150k.

      • John33 says:

        Does running a loyalty business really come with salaries that make £150k seem peanuts in comparison?

        • Rob says:

          Adam Daniels got £893k at Avios Group in 2023 as you can openly see in the accounts.

          • Throwawayname says:

            It’s interesting that they need to pay US consultants in order to assist them in failing to attract suitable candidates. Having said that, easyJet has significant presence all over Europe and I suspect that the people heading the likes of Volare, Miles and Bonus, or Suma won’t be on six-figure salaries.

  • John33 says:

    I don’t get this, I was flying easyJet 20+ flights a year in 2019, 2020 (yes, even then), 2022 and 2023. I never got invited to any club. Should I have??

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