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OFFICIAL INFO: How to earn tier points from your British Airways American Express card

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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 (229)

  • Len Hunt says:

    I am genuinely bewildered by BA. By virtue of two previously booked BA holidays I will requalify for Gold this year and soft land into Silver in 2027. The likelihood was that I would stay with BA. Now? Now not so much. Four weeks after returning from the first holiday I have run into a wall of witless incompetence trying to get the ‘double tier points’ credited that is pushing me towards Qatar. And then this. The ‘offer’ is of no interest to me, it is the utter contempt for the customer within its delivery that will now ensure the only flights I book with BA now will be those using 2:4:1 vouchers.
    Is this some cunning ‘The Producers’ tax ploy to reduce their customer base?

    • Richie says:

      BA’s top played song in their revenue department is something from Evita, apparently.

      • Rob says:

        ‘Don’t cry for me Marge and Tina’?

        Are they nicknames for two typical BAC members?

        • Richie says:

          Lol! I was thinking of ‘And the money is no longer rolling in’.
          BTW Evita is on at The London Pallidium, The Producers at The Garrick from the end of August, good for a bit of card spend.

          • AJA says:

            And people paying to see Evita are up in arms as the song Don’t cry for me Argentina is actually sung on a balcony outside to people on the street. People inside the theatre watch that bit on screens 🙂

          • JDB says:

            @AJA – have you actually seen the show? I can’t see why anyone would be up in arms about it – it is the same as the director Jamie Lloyd did for Sunset Boulevard. It’s incredibly well done. Rachel Ziegler who is a totally brilliant singer, still sings live but instead of seeing her tiny figure on a huge stage in that vast theatre, she appears on a single huge crystal clear LED screen so that effect, combined with her seemingly walking to the balcony through the halls of the Casa Rosada when she’s actually walking in the Palladium is a theatrical masterpiece. The audience loved it. I would note also that DCFMA is reprised at various points in the show.

          • Michael C says:

            @JDB sounds fabulous, have just booked.
            The last time I saw Evita was on Broadway when Ricky Martin was playing “Ché”! He was actually excellent.

        • James W says:

          Best come back by you! Ever!!!

      • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

        Surely it’s ‘You must love me”

      • Jimbo says:

        So it’s either ;
        1. Oh what a circus
        2. Flying High, adored
        3. And the money kept rolling in (and out)

        • Michael C says:

          But on the other hand, it’s all they have
          The BAPP’s a diamond
          In their dull grey lives

  • MrWhite says:

    This will clearly only benefit those spending huge sums on their Amex already. As it neither aligns to the BAC year or an individual’s Amex year for earning the companion voucher, it creates as real mess.

    The Finnair programme is looking more attractive.

    • LittleNick says:

      Agreed, So I’d need to spend another £25k to achieve the 2500nTPs having already spent £14k which like others just sitting idle until I want to trigger the comp voucher. So I need to spend an additional £24k in excess of the comp voucher for the full nTP when it should just be £10k, no thanks. Rather have teh Amex MR points from Gold

  • Ben says:

    Rob – when do you plan to run the articles on alternative OW schemes? Feels like the consultants may have gotten to you in their quest to reduce negative coverage of BAC…

    • LittleNick says:

      He said he was waiting until this was finalised, now we can expect some articles on other schemes?

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      Rob has never resiled from criticising BA when he feels it is merited.

      Also he’s said many times that the revenue he gets from BA is minimal as a share of HfPs total income.

      To suggest he’s somehow been ‘got at’ is ridiculous.

  • Alan Wheeler says:

    The strange thing is some of us who fly just for holidays will earn might earn more tier points (even by % of required sum) through this than they ever have before!

    Look I fly more now than I ever have with kids having grown up. But still will ‘only’ likely be 3 returns this year. 2 of these are with BA, but one of those is a companion voucher flight.

  • CJD says:

    Only running the offer to 1st February instead of 31st March seems poor.

    Other than that, it’s an actual enhancement to the product which people are seeing fit to whine extensively about for some reason.

  • Wanderlost says:

    The not-backdated part is frustrating. I paid a large chunk to BA on my BAPP card two days ago as a necessary payment on a BA Holiday (assuming it is actually a holiday and BA doesn’t decide for reasons it seems unable to share that my holiday wasn’t a holiday at all, again. Gits).

    Quite a stretch, £25k until end Jan. £3.3k per month, more than the UK’s gross average salary. BA really is making those tier points bloody hard to come by.

    • JDB says:

      What previous Amex opt-in offers have ever been backdated? I’m sure there are lots of offers people might like to have been backdated. It is, as @CJD says, an enhancement to the existing BAPP offer, so all the whingeing seems grossly misplaced.

      • memesweeper says:

        Most offers don’t need to be backdated because they are there to influence new spending choices.

        This is an entirely different type of reward, a benefit of holding the card, and should be obvious why the spending period and TP collection year should align in some way.

        Given a promise this was going to start April 2025, it should be back dated IMHO.

  • Richie says:

    Bronze requires 25 eligible flights, just over one return trip per month, easily done without spending thousands on a card.

  • sigma421 says:

    The general feeling that BA don’t like their customers very much and are convinced that we’re trying to scam them at every turn does leave a somewhat nasty taste.

    • Haimrich says:

      Feelings were never part of the equation and it was and will always be just about money. During/after COVID BA needed cash and made their loyalty program more generous to incentivise customers to travel with them.
      Now, they are seeking to improve profitability by reducing the cost of running said loyalty program whilst betting that the move will have a limited negative impact on the top line. For the customer the question is then: what value do I put on the perks that come as a result of my loyalty and how far I am ready to go to keep those perks yoy.

      • sigma421 says:

        My counterpoint would be that feelings are a huge part of the equation when it comes to loyalty schemes. The point of a loyalty scheme is to drive someone to make an irrational purchasing decision.

        • Haimrich says:

          If I can paraphrase the great Gordon Gekko:
          Don’t get emotional about status, It clouds your judgement…
          But this aside, as per my post, it comes down to how much you value the benefits that comes with the status.

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