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Review: What does Aer Lingus AerSpace offer you on short haul?

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This is an overview of the Aer Lingus AerSpace product, which is the nearest that Aer Lingus gets to business class on short haul flights.

Heading over to Dublin for a conference this week, I thought I would try AerSpace. Because Aer Lingus uses long haul aircraft for a handful of its short haul flights, I could relax in a flat bed for the short hop to Dublin and get some good content out of it.

Fat chance.

Review Aer Lingus AerSpace business class

A few days before the trip, Aer Lingus cancelled my flight. I was pushed back to the next service which was a bog-standard A320neo. As you can see from the image above, there were no flat beds in sight.

I could have accepted a refund of the £169 I paid, but by this point it would have cost me roughly the same to book an economy seat on BA. I was stuck with the ‘standard’ AerSpace product.

Let’s be fair to Aer Lingus. AerSpace is comparable to British Airways Club Europe and £169 one way is not a terrible deal if you need the bells and whistles (lounge access etc), especially as your ticket is fully refundable.

Where is AerSpace offered?

From the UK, you can book it on:

  • Heathrow to Dublin, Cork, Shannon, Knock
  • Birmingham to Dublin
  • Manchester to Dublin

What does AerSpace get you?

AerSpace takes up just ONE ROW on Aer Lingus short haul aircraft, Row 1.

This means there are just four seats with the two middle seats left empty.

Don’t think this makes it uber-exclusive though, because it isn’t!

Review Aer Lingus AerSpace business class

This is what else you get:

  • Fast Track Security – this is always good to have, even if Heathrow Terminal 2 wasn’t too busy around 10am (although had my original flight not been cancelled, I would have been there in the morning peak)
  • Priority Boarding – this worked well because very few people on my flight had it. It was nothing like the typical British Airways ‘Groups 1-3’ line.
  • Private overhead storage – this was good. Despite AerSpace only taking one row of the aircraft, the first two (possibly three, I forget) blocks of lockers had big ‘AerSpace only’ stickers on them. You obviously need the cabin crew to police this.
  • Complimentary drink and snack – I will return to this
  • Automatic standby for earlier flights
  • Free changes and refunds

Whilst Aer Lingus doesn’t mention it, you are also – obviously – guaranteed a Row 1 seat which is ideal if you want the extra legroom and no seat in front of you.

You can see all of the benefits on the Aer Lingus website here.

Aer Lingus AerSpace food

Food and drink in AerSpace

Aer Lingus has ‘buy on board’ catering. The deal for AerSpace customers is:

“one drink (hot/cold/alcoholic) and one item of food (snack or sandwich/wrap)”

Unfortunately no menus were provided in Row 1 so I had no idea what was available. The crew were unhelpful, basically expecting me to name random food items to which they would reply ‘yes’ or ‘no’ without pro-actively suggesting anything.

After a period of this I managed to tease out the information that toasted ham and cheese sandwiches were available.

I took one of these as my free item. I wasn’t offered anything extra with it (biscuits, crisps, chocolate) and looking at the small print above it seems I wasn’t due anything else either.

To be fair, whilst it doesn’t look like much (see image above) it did the job and a British Airways Club Europe lunch on such a short flight isn’t up to much either. Although BA would have given me some champagne on top ….

Conclusion

If you usually book British Airways Club Europe for short haul travel, Aer Lingus AerSpace is an acceptable alternative from Heathrow.

The highlight is the ability to use the Aer Lingus lounge, although as a British Airways Gold cardholder I would have been able to access this even with an economy ticket.

It’s also worth noting that AerSpace tickets are fully refundable which means, compared to the cost of fully flexible Club Europe tickets, the fare looks competitive. You’re also guaranteed a Row 1 seat, which requires Gold status to reserve on British Airways.

Whilst you can book Aer Lingus flights with Avios, you cannot book AerSpace. Because it is technically an economy ticket with added bells and whistles, there isn’t any way of offering it. The only economy tickets available for Avios are standard ones.

If you are booking this between Heathrow and Dublin then please make an effort to book the services with flat beds and a proper business class cabin – and hope it isn’t cancelled at the last minute.

You can see more about AerSpace on the Aer Lingus website here.

Comments (30)

  • JDB says:

    BA Club Europe lunch on a short flight (e.g. Paris) does get you three courses (with a choice of main course) plus selection of drinks, including champagne as identified.

    • Rob says:

      I know you get three courses, it’s just that its usually a micro salad 🙂

      Flew CityFlyer back from Dublin and frankly the toastie was better than the three tiny slices of chicken on couscous.

      • flyforfun says:

        “Micro salad”! Love it! Very apt and a more truthful description of what it is. The pots of salad you get from M&S are often more filling.

        I do look at BA’s catering sizes and often think they believe all their clients are fat, overweight alcoholics so feed them diet portions and let them drink the bar (trolley) dry.

        • Rob says:

          The problem with the Cityflyer meal was that it was chicken and couscous salad with a side of …. couscous.

          • flyforfun says:

            Lucky for me, I like couscous! But I get that it can be overkill for some!

    • Bobby says:

      What are the three courses?
      The main course salad
      The dessert
      The bread roll????

  • William says:

    Sorry to hear your flight was switched to 320. The 321 is a much nicer experience.
    The catering can be very hit and miss in Aer Space with limited options a lot of time especially on the morning flights for some reason . Some crew can be very stingy and give you the bear minimum while others are much more generous.

    EI no longer operate to Belfast from Heathrow and Gatwick to Knock. The Knock route was switched to Heathrow. Assuming Where Aer Space is offered section of article was taken from EI website which is so out of date.

  • Lumma says:

    You can book similar on domestic flights in Colombia. No lounge access but on LATAM, the upgrade price is so minimal, you’d be mad not to (free food and drink, priority boarding, heavier checked bag allowance). If you credit to BA, it earns avios as a business class ticket. On Avianca, there’s no extra benefits but the seats are wider. They’re still economy, but the middle seat is gone.

  • Liam Connell says:

    Aer Lingus have stopped their services to and from LGW. Flights to NOC transferred across to LHR in spring 2023.

  • aseftel says:

    Surely the big benefit vs CE is that you’re guaranteed the front row and its legroom. Even on a fully flex CE fare, the front row will initially be blocked for golds.

  • apbj says:

    It is maddening that Aer Space isn’t bookable as a separate cabin or option when making connecting journeys or using Avios. As Rob points out, the product is (catering aside) broadly comparable to Club Europe. Presumably it’s some sort of fudge to allow business travellers to book “economy” while still expensing all the bells and whistles, but as usual the antiquated IT can’t provide a solution.

  • Lumma says:

    The Aer Lingus website says fast track security is only available at Dublin. It also doesn’t mention the complementary food and drink.

    The next level of ticket down seems to get most of the benefits without the front row seats for about £35 less, which I think seems to be the best value, if you need a checked bag.

  • Duck Ling says:

    What I appreciate about Aer Space is the name Aer Lingus gives it. It doesn’t even try to pretend that this is a ‘business class’ product unlike nearly all the other euro cabins which although they may offer a slightly elevated catering experience to EI, still falls short of what most around the word perceive as ‘business class’.

    Aer Space (or ‘SAS Plus’) delivers exactly what the name on the tin says I guess.

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