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Delta opens a lot of business seats for Virgin Points but taxes are insane

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Delta Air Lines is known for being extremely stingy with premium cabin award space across the Atlantic, so a big seat drop yesterday is worth a look.

It’s especially interesting because Delta flies to Edinburgh, giving a direct option to the United States using Virgin Points.

What I hadn’t noticed, unfortunately, is that Virgin Atlantic has started charging insane levels of taxes for Delta redemptions.

Delta One using Virgin Points

I don’t use words like ‘insane’ lightly, but tell me if you disagree.

Take a look at this:

Delta One redemption on Virgin Points

Business class (Delta One) rewards between Edinburgh and Boston cost 115,000 Virgin Points and £1,845 of taxes and charges.

Yes, £1,845.

Why is this? It’s relatively simple. Virgin Atlantic’s biggest shareholder is Delta. Delta SkyMiles is known for charging insane numbers of miles for reward seats but with low taxes. To stop Delta flyers collcting and booking with Virgin Atlantic instead, Virgin seems to have been persuaded to add ludicrous surcharges to Delta redemptions.

Let’s look at the same flight booked via Flying Blue ….

Here’s what Flying Blue, the Air France / KLM programme, wants for exactly the same flight:

Delta One with Flying Blue miles

You will need 114,000 Flying Blue miles plus €851 (£728) of taxes and charges.

£728 isn’t exactly a bargain either, but its a bigger bargain that £1,845.

You don’t need to pay £728 though.

Because Flying Blue doesn’t add surcharges on tickets which start in the United States, you can book this trip as two separate flights on two separate tickets.

If you do that:

  • ticket one, Edinburgh to Boston, is 57,000 miles plus €512
  • ticket two, Boston to Edinburgh, is 57,000 miles plus just €29

…. for a combined taxes and charges figure of €541 (£463). This is a crazy £1,382 less, per person, than Virgin Atlantic wants in taxes and charges.

How do you find these Delta One award seats?

If these taxes and charges figures haven’t put you off, there is an easy way to check Delta One reward availability for the next few weeks.

Click here to visit the seats.aero site, which is a similar US-focused tool to SeatSpy.

On that page, which only looks at Delta seats for the next few weeks, search by ‘Europe’ to ‘North America’. You can filter the results by EDI, LHR and LGW depending on which airport you would fly from.

To find return dates, do a similar search in reverse.

These results are not real time but are a decent guide. It is how I found the examples used above.

Hat-tip to One Mile At A Time.

Comments (48)

  • Phillip says:

    The same example with BOS-EDI-BOS through SAS Eurobonus is 130k points and £295 ($400).

  • Erico1875 says:

    JETBLUE will do same dates EDI to BOS non stop, zero miles and £1863.
    Virgin have lost the plot

    • The real Swiss Tony says:

      This x100. Stupid pricing and a proper finger in the eye for customers. In fact Expedia will offer the same route on JetBlue at just £1788, which appears to be price matching Icelandair.

    • BJ says:

      That’s not bad, when I checked Delta revenue flights last year they were around £3500.

  • Rob H not Rob says:

    Quality from Virgin once more. Clowns.

  • Terence Bartlett says:

    The article reminds me that the DELTA . letters represent “ Didn’t Even Leave The Airport “
    Who in their right mind would book with either airline in premium seats. Don’t worry the pending recession in 2026 will sort out Virgin, Delta and the other “Rip Off Pirates Of The Sky ? It needs greater competition which should compel them all to change their policy and return to sanity
    Virgin Atlantic used to have a fantastic reward scheme. Unfortunately it has lost the plot with their reward seats especially in Upper Class charging 350,000 points for a one way ticket for one person is ridiculous and now this latest taxes fiasco . An investigation into both airline reward schemes in the USA and UK needs to take place as its an unfair consumer practise which should lead to its eventual demise.
    Terence

  • astra19 says:

    I’ve done the EDI-BOS flight before but it’s so short that it feels like Business isn’t worth it, and that’s something I rarely say! I was happy in Premium. Status got me lounge access only in Boston but that was fine by me.

  • Mikeact says:

    Shame this wasn’t announced before the party…would have enjoyed a one on one with the Virgin people.

  • GM says:

    I’d love to keep the VS/VAA Gold I managed to scrape last year but they’re really making it difficult. I have family in NYC so try to visit them twice a year and wanted to book my next trip in early December as I finished the most recent one in June. Points prices were very high, so resigned myself to cash. Also checked Google/ITA and noticed the BA rates were good – they had a sale. Ended up booking First LHR-JFK and Club World JFK-LHR for £1200 less than Virgin wanted for the same dates/times. Something is not working when someone actually wants to be loyal but almost can’t!
    Thinking of booking a holiday for the double tier points but that’s hampered by the destinations and schedule so thought maybe Dubai in January as a short city break. Current events have put that thought on hold…

  • LittleNick says:

    This happened at the same time when Delta made Virgin levy $1000 in tax + fees from US to Europe on Delta, as that used to be an old sweet spot, they applied it across the board. We just didnt notice because delta one partner availability is next to non-existent. I’m sure you posted an article at the time

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