Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

OFFICIAL INFO: 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.

American Express has now officially released details of how you will earn tier points from your British Airways American Express Premium Plus card.

We published most of this information over the weekend, but we now know the small print, including the timings.

Let’s take a look.

How to earn tier points from your British Airways American Express

As you will remember, when The 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: this ONLY applies to the Premium Plus card. There was never any intention to involve the free American Express card. Discussions were held with Barclaycard over including those cards but fell through, according to our insider.

The offer launches TODAY, 18th June

You will receive an email from American Express today inviting you to register, assuming you opted in to receive marketing communications. It will also show in the American Express app.

You will need to opt-in to be included.

All other elements of the card continue unchanged, even if you do not register for this offer.

You are getting 500 free tier points

As a goodwill gesture / apology / call it what you will, British Airways is giving 500 free tier points to all British Airways American Express Premium Plus cardholders.

This offer does not appear on the American Express website when you register, or in the email you received from American Express today. A separate email will come from British Airways.

This bonus will NOT go to anyone who takes out the card today. There is presumably a cut-off point which has already passed.

Will card spend between 1st April and 17th June be backdated?

No.

This is important. Irrespective of what you have spent so far in your British Airways Club year or Amex membership year, you are starting from scratch.

What are the thresholds?

This is what you get:

  • 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.

Remember that only spend from when you register will count.

How to earn tier points from your British Airways American Express

How long does the offer run?

The offer will run until 1st February 2026.

This means that you have just over seven months to spend £25,000 to receive the full tier point allocation.

Will this offer repeat every year?

Whilst nothing has been published, BA has told us that the offer will return in 2026.

It will presumably not start on 18th June and will hopefully run from 1st April.

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.

For the current year, factoring in the 500 bonus tier points you will receive, anyone spending £25,000 on their American Express card would only need £500 of net (note net, not gross) qualifying spend. If the spend was on British Airways you’d do it for even less, because of the bonus tier points offer currently running. This HfP article looks at the cheapest / easiest way of getting the extra 500 tier points you need for Bronze.

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.

Anyone chasing the full 2,500 tier points will need to trigger their voucher earlier than necessary.

A quick note about FX spending ….

The T&C state that the 2.99% FX fee added by American Express on non-Sterling transactions does not count towards your spend target.

The snag is that this fee is not broken out on your statement. If you are totting up what you have spent on a calculator, you need to adjust for this.

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 (228)

  • Adam J says:

    Is there any information about how supplementary cardholder spend is treated?

  • NFH says:

    British Airways’ e-mail of 31st December 2024 stated:

    From April 2025, we are delighted to welcome you to The British Airways Club. A Club designed to give you more opportunities to unlock rewards, combined with a fresh look and feel.

    There will also be new ways to earn Tier Points. From booking holiday packages with British Airways Holidays, making contributions to Sustainable Aviation Fuels (‘SAF’)¹, adding extras to your booking like seating or baggage, or a spend-based offer on the British Airways American Express® Premium Plus Card², giving you more ways to earn than ever before.

    ²Spending on a British Airways American Express ® Premium Plus Card – Cardmembers will be able to earn up to 2,500 Tier Points by spending on their card. More details of this offer will be announced closer to the launch date.

    The launch date of the new British Airways Club, with a list of new ways to earn tier points, was clearly stated as April 2025, and nothing defined “the launch date” of the tier points earning as differing from the “April 2025” launch date given earlier in the e-mail.

    Given that the tier points earning on the card ultimately started on 18th June 2025, and not with effect from “April 2025”, it is now apparent that the e-mail was a misleading action in breach of Regulation 5 of the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008. This legislation was current at the time of the e-mail on 31st December 2024, but was subsequently superseded on 6th April 2025 by Section 226 of the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024.

    The e-mail also forms binding contractual terms pursuant to Section 50 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015, and any ambiguity in contractual terms must be interpreted in favour of the consumer pursuant to Section 69 of the Consumer Rights Act 2015 (contra proferentem). Therefore by subsequently delaying tier points earning on the card until 18th June 2025, British Airways is also in breach of contract.

    The above quoted text influenced many of us to make a transactional decision to credit tier points for flights to British Airways instead of to other Oneworld airlines.

    • NFH says:

      Maybe we should all flood British Airways with complaints about this at https://www.britishairways.com/travel/feedbackclaims/public/en_gb/select/avi, citing the above legislation.

      • JDB says:

        @NFH – so what are you saying BA should do in response to such complaints. It’s interesting that you focus exclusively on the start date that you allege is in breach of contract. No end date was ever mentioned but that too must be a consideration if you are saying you or anyone else has lost out and thus needs compensating.

        • NFH says:

          BA should include expenditure from 1st April to 17th June 2025.

          The unexpected end date is a misleading omission, which is covered by Regulation 6 of the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008.

      • ba says:

        Thanks for this analysis. If you are right that it was a breach of contract, what identifiable loss do you think consumers may have suffered?

        • NFH says:

          The loss suffered would be the value of all the benefits of the status that a consumer would have attained if they had earnt sufficient tier points as a result of expenditure from 1st April to 17th June 2025 being included in the calculation.

    • Simon Adams says:

      It feels like people have been effectively scammed here. I didn’t get a premium BA Amex but if I had, and paid £300 for the privilege, I’d be fuming.

      • JDB says:

        How have people been “scammed”? The ability to earn tier points has never been an advertised card benefit. People have happily been paying the £300 for the voucher alone and the TP are an added bonus.

        • Simon Adams says:

          What do you mean? It was specified by BA at the end of December. If anyone had then got the card for the extra tier points offer and then been informed 6 months later that they’d need to spend over £3.5k per month by February, they will have been misled.

        • NFH says:

          By British Airways, not by American Express.

          • Simon Adams says:

            I didn’t suggest it was by Amex, I mentioned that it was specified by BA. It’s inevitable that some people will have paid for a BAPP card as a result of this.

    • memesweeper says:

      You may also want to check the fine print of the Misrepresentation Act, again, assuming you have booked flights with BA and credited to their Club.

    • BSI1978 says:

      I’m certainly not defending BA here or disputing your assertion, but surely their solicitors would have been all over this before the delayed launch……?

      • NFH says:

        British Airways gets plenty of things wrong legally, sometimes knowingly. In my experience, it puts things right for individual customers who challenge a malpractice while continuing the same malpractice for those who don’t.

    • Simon says:

      I booked my BA Holidays vacation departing on July 10th this year, meaning that full payment was due June 12th. So I just spent £7000 on my holiday a few days before June 18th and so none of my spend counts towards this. I am really at a loss as to why I keep my loyalty with BA. I currently have a Gold card and travel between the UK and Japan for work. ANA has a better business class product so am seriously considering moving to Miles and More. It really feels like BA don’t want my loyalty anymore.

  • Paul says:

    Utterly useless. The timings are a joke and a bag one at that

  • Simon Adams says:

    Starting this so late and also curtailing it 2 months early is an utter betrayal of BA’s promises. As if The Club wasn’t made difficult enough for most current members to attain for 2026.

    Piss poor from BA again.

  • tomtom135 says:

    Took advantage of the generous tier point offer last year but this is just a waste of time now. I’m guessing the people who will earn enough points under the new system will not need this help anyway and the people who do need this probably shouldn’t be stretching themselves just to get status (like still needing to spend another £5k with BA and possibly a lot more due to eligible revenue).

    • JDB says:

      But it’s the same offer as last time 1/3 of the way to Silver for £25k spend and they have given you a longer period to spend it.

      • Simon Adams says:

        I’m not sure if you”’re grasping the issue here tbh.

      • NFH says:

        Except last time it wasn’t promised with a misleading launch date of April 2025.

      • tomtom135 says:

        It’s nothing like the same as you still need to spend at least £5k with BA and probably a lot more just to get silver status. IIRC the previous offer meant you could spend £25k on the AMEX and one cheap BA holiday would get you more or less all the way to silver.

  • Badger says:

    Almost as if it’s been designed specifically to avoid being triggered

    • Ken says:

      More like Amex wanted to see additional spend before paying BA for Tier points.

      • Alan Wheeler says:

        Who said Amex is paying BA for tier points? Surely Amex pays a % of card spend to BA as a matter of course and maybe it’s just BA giving the tier points? If the majority of cardholders currently stop at £15k and this encourages higher spending then they both benefit.

        • ken says:

          Well put it this way.

          BA view Tier points as having some financial value. BA would like Amex to pay for them, just like they pay for avios awarded.

          I’d imagine Amex would be happy for BA to announce and award any tier points that they wish as long as it doesn’ cost them.
          I’d be fairly certain Amex didn’t wish to pay more for the same amount spent.

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          I don’t think AMEX pays BA a cut of card spend.

          They do buy gazillions of avios for hundreds of millions of £ though.

          https://www.reuters.com/article/business/british-airways-owner-iag-boosted-by-750-million-pounds-deal-with-american-expre-idUSKCN24P0HU/

          But they now buy those off IAG Loyalty rather than BA.

          I really can’t see a case for Amex paying BA for TPs (and I’ve said this for quite some time). How do you value a nTP in the first place and then translate that into a cost for AMEX to ‘buy’ off BA?

          • Rob says:

            But that’s the plan. It’s what American is doing in the US – an AA mile that counts for status costs the partner 2.5c, an AA mile which doesn’t count for status costs 1.5c-ish.

        • Alan says:

          Thanks for clarifying Rob

  • DMW says:

    I’ve been gold for 10+ years and was aiming for lifetime gold. The recent changes to the ‘loyalty’ scheme were bad enough. This is the final nail in the coffin – it’s not the offer per se but rather what it signifies – it tells me everything I need to know about how the airline views me and my loyalty. I’ll be running down my avios over the next few years, and for flights where I can’t use avios I’ll pick the flights/airline that suit me best at the time, not automatically BA (as I’d done before)

  • RJWillz says:

    I have seen the pop out and offer on the Amex app and website and enrolled without any issue.

Leave a Reply to Alison44 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.