Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

REVEALED! How to earn tier points from your British Airways American Express card

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

HfP has, we believe, got the answer to the big question in the Avios world at the moment.

How are you meant to earn tier points from your British Airways American Express card?

We don’t have all the answers, but we have most of them.

How to earn tier points from your British Airways American Express

As you will remember, when British Airways Club was announced last December, BA said that you would be able to earn 2,500 tier points per year from the British Airways American Express Premium Plus card.

(Note: ONLY the Premium Plus card. There was never any intention to involve the free American Express card or the two Barclaycard Avios products.)

1st April came and went. British Airways Club launched with no mention of the tier points offer. BA fell back on semantics, saying that when it said it would provide more details before the launch, it actually meant the launch of the tier points offer and not the Club ….

When will the tier points offer launch?

Wednesday 18th June.

This is handy because it gives everyone a good conversation opener at the HfP summer party on 19th June!

You will need to opt-in to be included.

Will card spend between 1st April and 18th June be backdated?

We believe not.

What are the thresholds?

We have been told, although this is not official:

  • you will receive 750 tier points for hitting £15,000 of BAPP spend
  • you will receive a further 750 tier points for hitting £20,000 of BAPP spend
  • you will receive a further 1,000 tier points for hitting £25,000 of BAPP spend

This means that earning the full 2,500 tier points will require £25,000 of card spend.

How to earn tier points from your British Airways American Express

What is the timeline for this?

We don’t know. Sorry.

It will NOT align with your British Airways American Express membership year. This would make no sense, because everyone is on the same British Airways Club year now of 1st April to 31st March.

I suspect it will be either:

  • spend £15/20/25,000 from 18th June to [a date 3-4 months later], or
  • spend £15/20/25,000 from 18th June to 31st December, or
  • spend £15/20/25,000 from 18th June to 31st March

We need to see.

Will this offer repeat every year?

It’s not clear. I’ve heard some chatter that it is initially being sold as a one year thing. We need to see.

It obviously won’t run from 18th June in future years.

How far will 2,500 tier points get me?

Whilst it’s not making much of a dint in Gold status (20,000 tier points), it is a bigger chunk of the 7,500 tier points required for Silver status.

Bronze is potentially most interesting. Bronze members of British Airways Club get free seat selection seven days before departure as the core benefit, which can be valuable.

Anyone earning the full 2,500 tier points from their Premium Plus card would only need to spend £1,000 net (note net, not gross) with British Airways in a membership year to earn the extra 1,000 tier points they need.

Any other obvious problems?

Yes.

A lot of HfP readers delay triggering their 2-4-1 Companion Voucher because they don’t want to start the two year clock on using it.

Both my wife and I currently have our Premium Plus cards in a drawer having passed £14,000 of spend for this card year. They won’t be coming out again until a month before our year end date.

Unless American Express has adopted my remarkably sensible idea about changing the expiry date of the 2-4-1 Companion Voucher, anyone chasing the full 2,500 tier points will need to trigger their voucher earlier than necessary.

Let’s wait for the small print

The information above came to me in writing from a named employee at either American Express or IAG Loyalty – I won’t say which – so I believe it is accurate. We haven’t signed any embargo on the news so I am happy to share it. I apologise for the gaps in the small print, but all will hopefully be revealed on Wednesday.

Find out more about the card

Click here for our full British Airways American Express Premium Plus review.

Click here to apply.

The representative APR is 137.8% variable, including the annual fee.  The representative APR on purchases is 30.0% variable.

Comments (158)

  • Chris H says:

    Although it never was mentioned, shame they don’t allow you to accumulate TP on the free card. We are a family of 3 so fly economy, so never needed the paid for card. I might need to stump up the cash for this card now as TP are important for me for lounge access when working and seats and baggage when with family. 4 work premium economy flights doesn’t look to be enough now, so probably need the credit card TP to compliment.

    • yonasl says:

      It is cheaper to pay for seats than chase status. As a family of 4 you cannot use the lounge. Luggage is not a benefit you get with status (you get an extra case if you already have one, are you really travelling with 8 bags?) You may have better benefits from the Amex platinum and simply paying for the best flight (or try BAH which include luggage in all their fares).

  • Ollie says:

    Once again overseas BA(E)C members left out. With BA cutting HKG-LHR flights to a single battered 787 (down from daily 777s and A380s back in the day), pricing these higher than the much-superior CX product (which flies 5x a day) and doesn’t even bother to compete with QR on connections to places other than London, it seems they’ve given up on those of us based in the Far East. And they penalise flying on OneWorld partners now (Cathay requiring around £300,000 of spend in Economy to get Gold, or around £50,000 in First which is 4x around the world).
    The reason I mention it here is that the Dah Sing Bank BA card has obviously been neglected and doesn’t earn Tier Points at all. The earning rate worse than other convertible-points cards available so it mostly sits unused.
    I realise that the focus of BA (and HfP) is usually London (based- and/or as a destination), but really I think they have taken this “mid-level executive who flying to New York for business but currently takes easyJet down to Geneva for ski holidays” caricature a bit too far.
    Anyway, I don’t care for the club much anymore, not least because I soon plan to be flying for Cathay as a pilot!

  • Nico says:

    Is amex paying BA for those TPs? Thats why it took to close the deal?

    • Rob says:

      We believe so. And as cardholders don’t need an incentive to spend at least £15,000 – because that’s the 241 trigger – you can see where the problem may have occurred.

      • JDB says:

        It sort of shows in the weighting of the TP at each of the three spend points (if yesterday’s number are accurate) in the 2023/24 offer of max 200 old TP you got 50% at £15k, then 25% at £20k and the final 25% at £25k. This time you only get 30% at £15k, another 30% at £20k and the final 40% at £25k. The offer then ran for six months Nov-May, so it will be interesting to see how long twos one runs for.

  • toocou says:

    Any insight into the US Chase BA Visa? The BA website effectively said the same thing for US card holders as UK card holders (in fact, it even implied wasn’t capped to 2,500 TPs given there was no mention of 2,500 vs the UK site)

  • MoneyNeverSleeps says:

    @toocou – their fee is $95 per annum and no forex fees either. Assuming the voucher is identical, we are getting taken for a ride. They spend $30k pa for the same, we are required £15k tho. Maybe it’s not too bad, of course, could be worse!

  • Joe says:

    Curious to see what US cards get. But honestly the more that comes out about the new BA Club the more clueless BA seem in my eyes. A program to monetize spend and bottom line to BA which doesn’t really want to fully even embrace this. It’s an utterly confused middle way which is good for no one except those on corporate contracts which will pay out anyway.

    Luckily I’ve shifted. 2,000 TPs of my 40k required to retain my GGL earned so far on BA this program year. And 15,000 PQP on United in the same time span. Not missing much. And getting a lot more perks, frankly.

  • Nico says:

    Interbank fees not capped in the US, so cards can’t be compared.

  • TP Endgame says:

    After taking out the PP card in Jan this year in anticipation of a TP chase that could be needed to push me up through a tier this year, I now realise it actually wasn’t needed and am rethinking my BA status / TP / Amex play altogether. I hit gold last year after a slow and steady increase in business and personal travel, always paying for club or higher cabin anyway. I will hit gold again this year on flights alone. However, now I’m in this space and looking to spend a companion voucher, it turns out reward flights are few and far between (especially for a family of 4) unless you are hyper organised and not going anywhere too exotic; the “First Galleries” lounge really is not something I aspire to visit – tussling for free hash browns and average champagne just doesn’t do it for me like it did when I was in my late 20s. A pastry in the morning in the Galleries Lounge with children is mildly more tranquil than congregating by Pret. I will still fly BA because I like Heathrow T5, but now realise that paying for a higher class of travel and eating in Giraffe anyway is the way to go (with the option of sticking my head in the lounge if I feel like it).

Leave a Reply to dundj Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please click here to read our data protection policy before submitting your comment

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.