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How do you get a British Airways Club Premier card?

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Most people think that the British Airways Club tiers are Blue, Bronze, Silver and Gold.  There is also Gold Guest List, but it is a subset of Gold and does not have its own membership card, unless you count adding the letters ‘GGL’ to the corner of a normal Gold one.

There is, however, another elite tier you may not know about – British Airways Club Premier.

This is the card you get (at least before British Airways Club was launched – it may have been tweaked last week):

How do you get a British Airways Club Premier card?

How do you get a British Airways Club Premier card?

This information is taken from official British Airways guidelines I saw, although the guidelines are now a few years old and are likely to have been updated.

The aim of Premier is to keep on the good side of people who control the travel budgets at British Airways’ largest corporate accounts.

In order to get a British Airways Premier card, you need to control a travel budget which spends at least £2 million per year with British Airways.

Importantly – and this is taken verbatim for the guidelines – giving someone a Premier card:

“will not always reflect the revenue generated for British Airways by the company, but should be based upon the individual’s ability to influence travel policy”

How do I apply?

You don’t.  Based on the (now dated) guidelines I have, you need to befriend a member of the British Airways board or a key sales manager.  They will submit an application on your behalf.

Five other BA executives (specified people, not random staff) must ‘second’ the application, including the British Airways Chief Operating Officer.

How do you get a British Airways Premier card?

How many British Airways Premier cardholders are there?

It was 850, at the time of publication of the guidance notes I saw which go back a good few year.  However, Alex Cruz made a decision to cull the ranks when he was CEO and last time I heard the number was nearer 450.  The card was allegedly removed from various high profile celebrities and sports stars who had no commercial value to the airline.

What do you get if you are a British Airways Premier cardholder?

What you DIDN’T get, interestingly, was tier points according to the BA guidance, although I believe that this has changed.  Perhaps the introduction of lifetime status criteria meant that Premier members still wanted to track their points?

As a Premier, you receive all of the benefits of British Airways Gold membership plus (we think):

  • use of the Special Services team at key airports
  • personal escort to/from aircraft, even at remote stands
  • access to British Airways lounges at all times, even if the member is not flying on British Airways
  • ability to bring two guests into a lounge (a Gold member can only bring one guest)
  • access to the top lounge (The Concorde Room at Heathrow Terminal 5, presumably now the Chelsea Lounge at New York JFK) irrespective of class of travel
  • ability to give Gold status and 2 x Silver status to friends
  • an annual upgrade voucher, allowing a single cabin upgrade for two people – this is the same as the Gold Guest List GUF2 voucher

Only the first three benefits above offering something genuinely above what a Gold Guest List member of British Airways Club would get.

Not a bad deal if you can get it …. but don’t get your hopes up.


How to earn Avios from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (April 2025)

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:

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There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

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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

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The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

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

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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.

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Comments (72)

  • WiseEye says:

    I have known two Premiers – Deputy CEO of a Big4 accountancy firm, and the boss of my boss who was CEO for EMEA at a large global bank. The distinctive seemed to be the support from Special Services/Concorde Team. But this clearly does not extend to upgrades. I was once traveling back to London in CE from the city where our bank was headquartered. The boss of my boss who was based there was traveling back to London in Economy (he would have paid for his own ticket, as he was traveling home for the weekend). Slightly embarrassing, nevertheless. Anyway, he was met by Special Services in London.

  • Barrel for Scraping says:

    When recycling content it’s even more important to check it in the new post Executive Club world.

    The new GGL cards do have their own design. They are now white with gold lettering and it states clearly ‘Gold Guest List’ on the card.

    Whether it’s still a sub tier or a tier on its own now I’m not sure. The cards look more distinctive now and back at the GGL event last year they did say they wanted to make GGL its own tier but I don’t know if it happened.

    The previous ones didn’t say ‘GGL’ in the corner, they had a little crown and ‘GL’ in the corner.

  • Dev says:

    They should give one to every companies HR dragon…. The person who enforces their own made up policy of insisting you have to travel in-direct via some crap airline forever heaping misery on road warriors from the comfort of their home … sorry flexible working solution.

    • daveinitalia says:

      If the HR people aren’t travelling for work then giving them a Premier Card makes no sense as they’ll still put their crappy travel policies onto their employees while enjoying the Concorde Room when they go on holiday. The last thing we want is a CCR full of HR.

    • Susan says:

      Why assume it’s HR that WRITES the policy requiring 8 hrs in the cheapest possible seat rather than a penny wise pound foolish ececutive who can cynically ignore his own rules?

  • Stefan says:

    😂

  • daveinitalia says:

    “Only the first two benefits above offering something genuinely above what a Gold Guest List member of British Airways Club would get.”

    Benefit 3 listed is: “access to British Airways lounges at all times, even if the member is not flying on British Airways”

    This benefit is also Premier only, GGLs can’t access BA lounges when flying a non-partner airline (of course we can get in if not flying BA if they’re a oneworld partner…)

    There’s no such thing was a Gold Guest List GUF2, you don’t need to be GGL to get these upgrades. In the old world it was 2500 TP for GUF2 and 3500 for GUF1 so it’s entirely possible to get these without being GGL. The new TP levels I’m unsure of but I know they’re still obtainable without hitting GGL level.

  • Sean says:

    After stepping down as PM, the Register of Members Interests listed that Theresa May was gifted Premier membership from BA.

    • Alex G says:

      Well, she was the Premier!

    • Lady London says:

      What I really want to know is if Liz Truss was.

      • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

        Her entry on the HoC register of members interests should still be available.

        But would you want her associated with your brand? Even the MAGA crowd in the US think she’s bat guano crazy!

  • Matt says:

    🤣🤣🤣
    🥲

    Can’t even get bronze anymore, why would premier be of any interest to anyone!

  • Steve says:

    Things like this are the reason why every bigger corporation is wrapped in so many absolutely horendeous software solutions and servuces, and why accidenture an similar parasites are doing so well in corporate world.

    Managers are ‘shopping’ based on connections and personal benefits instead of actually choosing something that works.

    But it’s a nice flashy perk for sure. Makes you feel special.

    Good article tho.

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