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Which 34 airlines can you book with Avios points – with one we’ve never mentioned?

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In this article I want to look at which airlines you can book with Avios points.

You know about British Airways, of course.  But there are actually 34 airlines which let you use Avios for some or all of their flights.

The list has got bigger in the last couple of years as Qatar Airways, Finnair and Loganair adopted Avios as their loyalty currency.  This means that you can now redeem via a number of Qatar Airways partners which were not already partners with British Airways, Iberia or Aer Lingus, such as Virgin Australia, Garuda Indonesia and JetBlue.

Which 34 airlines can you book with Avios points?

You won’t find the information in this article in one place on any of the Avios websites – iberia.com, ba.com, qatarairways.com, finnair.com etc – but we have pulled it all together for you.

There is a sister article to this one called ‘Which 36 airlines can you earn Avios on?’ which you can find here. The lists are obviously similar but not identical.

There’s a new addition to this list

It’s worth noting that – with no publicity – some China Southern flights have recently appeared on ba.com for Avios redemption.

Not all routes seem to be included but, for example, if you search Guangzhou to Bangkok there is availability, albeit only in economy.

Taxes are nominal – Guangzhou to Bangkok, one way, is 12,000 Avios + £13.50 for example for a three hour flight.

What flights can you book with Avios?

I have listed all of the airlines below which accept Avios redemptions.

The airlines marked ‘(BA)’ can be booked on ba.com.  This means that the process is the same as booking a redemption flight on British Airways.

An airline marked ‘(AC)’ can be booked via Aer Lingus.  You can open an Aer Lingus AerClub account on its website and then use ‘Combine My Avios’ on ba.com to move your points across. Confusingly, you need to select ‘Avios Partners’ in the dropdown menu. Read this article to learn more about the new-ish Aer Lingus reward booking site, launched in 2024.

An airline marked ‘(IB)’ means that you can only book from an Iberia Club account. To transfer to or from an Iberia Club account, the Iberia account must have been open for 90 days and have ‘earned’ at least 1 Avios.  The easiest way to ‘earn’ an Avios in Iberia Club is to transfer 1,000 American Express Membership Rewards points.

An airline marked ‘(QR)’ means that you can only book it from a Qatar Airways Privilege Club account.  You can use your British Airways Avios balance on the Qatar Airways website by following the instructions here.

An airline marked ‘(AY)’ means that you can only book it from a Finnair Plus account. You can transfer your Avios from British Airways to Finnair by following the instructions here.

Vueling (VC) flights can only be booked by Vueling Club. You can open a Vueling Club account on its website and then use ‘Combine My Avios’ on ba.com to move your points across. Confusingly, you need to select ‘Avios Partners’ in the dropdown menu.

Loganair (LO) flights can only be booked via Loganair Loyalty. This article explains how Avios redemptions on Loganair work.

Which 34 airlines can you book with Avios points?

A word on pricing and availability

When a flight is bookable across multiple websites, it is worth checking each of them to see if there is a difference in the Avios and the taxes and charges required.

Whilst there is some alignment (a British Airways flight should be identically priced if you book via BA, Iberia, Finnair or Qatar Airways) this is not the case with all partners. Doing a bit of legwork can pay off.

Some airlines also offer extra availability on their own websites. Iberia has extra availability on its own flights if you book via Iberia Plus. Qatar Airways offers a lot of extra Avios seats – albeit for double points – via its own website.

British Airways offers extra availability for Gold members (in economy) and British Airways American Express 2-4-1 Companion Voucher holders (in business). Aer Lingus will occasionally have better availability via its own site even though ba.com is meant to show the same seats.

Which airlines can you book with Avios points?

The airline list is alphabetical. In brackets, I have added the programmes which let you redeem Avios for that airline:

  • BA for The British Airways Club
  • IB for Iberia Club
  • AC for Aer Lingus AerClub
  • VC for Vueling Club
  • QR for Qatar Airways Privilege Club
  • FI for Finnair Plus
  • LO for Loganair Loyalty

Some partners can only be booked by telephone via the service centre of the relevant programme, eg Avianca. You cannot necessarily book all routes operated by a particular airline.

Aer Lingus (AC, BA)

Air Nostrum / Iberia Regional (IB, BA)

Airlink (QR)

Alaska Airlines (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Which 34 airlines can you book with Avios points

American Airlines (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Avianca (IB)

Bangkok Airways (QR)

Binter Canarias (IB)

British Airways (BA, AC, IB, QR, FI)

Cathay Pacific (BA, IB, QR, FI)

China Southern (BA)

Fiji Airways (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Finnair (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Garuda Indonesia (QR)

Iberia (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Iberia Express (BA, IB)

Japan Airlines (BA, IB, QR, FI)

JetBlue (QR)

LATAM (BA, IB, QR, FI)

LEVEL (IB)

Loganair (LO)

Malaysia Airlines (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Middle East Airlines (QR)

Oman Air (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Qantas (BA, IB, QR, FI)

QantasLink (BA – telephone only, read here)

Qatar Airways (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Royal Air Maroc (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Royal Jordanian (BA, IB, QR, FI)

RwandAir (QR)

S7 Airlines (QR)

SriLankan Airlines (BA, IB, QR, FI)

Virgin Australia (QR)

Vueling (VC, IB)

Details of The British Airways Club partners can be found on ba.com here.

Details of how to spend Aer Lingus AerClub Avios can be found on aerlingus.com here.

Details of Iberia Club partners can be found on iberia.com here.

Details of the Loganair partnership can be found on loganair.co.uk here.

Details of Qatar Airways Privilege Club partners can be found on qatarairways.com here.

Details of Finnair Plus partners can be found on finnair.com here.

Comments (50)

  • RussellH says:

    I am still finding it impossible to move avios out of Aer Club into BA (or Iberia).
    It has never worked since last Christmas.
    I never had any difficulties until the old avios site closed – that always worked, but now I just get error messages telling me that either “You are not eligible to combine your avios” or “Combine my Avios is not available at the moment. Please try again later”.
    Two forum comments to a posting of mine yesterday suggest Firefox as the most likely browser to work, but that other do / may not. However you look at it, it is a mess.

    • Lumma says:

      Are you using a macbook or other apple computer/device? I can’t get combine my avios to work on my macbook air or my iPhone, but it works fine on a windows machine

      • VR says:

        For it’s about safari. It works when I use Google Chrome (even on an Apple device).

  • ADS says:

    China Southern “Taxes are nominal”

    but some of the Avios levels look toppy!

    just checked out CAN-SYD … economy redemptions range from

    25,750 avios + £79.20 to …
    9,000 avios + £209.20

    lots of availability for the dates I looked at in October

  • ChrisA says:

    Slight OT (apologies) but looking to book a one way reward flight from Auckland to LHR. The option for Qantas Auckland to NYC then BA NYC to London, is not bookable online. Does anyone happen to know if there is financial/Avios advantage to phoning up and booking by phone as opposed to booking two individual flights? I am not fussed about whether luggage is checked through or not.

  • Nancy says:

    Is using IATA codes so difficult?

    “An airline marked ‘(AC)’ can be booked via Aer Lingus.” – AC is Air Canada

    “An airline marked ‘(AY)’ means that you can only book it from a Finnair Plus account.” – and then you go ahead and use FI which is Icelandair, in the rest of the article 🤦

    Just stick to consistent IATA codes and you don’t have to make it confusing.

    • Lady London says:

      A good point @Nancy which you’ve made twice, but abrasively put. Was that necessary to the owner of the site who provides you a free subscription ?

      Having similar tendencies myself, a wise friend told me ,”you catch more flies with honey, han vinegar”. Jus’ sayin’

      • Nancy says:

        I apologise that my mental condition makes my comment sound abrasive. I was just stating facts and observations. Nothing personal.

      • Rob says:

        95% of our readers have no idea what IATA codes are, probably rising to 99% of people who google ‘what airlines can I use Avios on’.

        You need to stop confusing the knowledge of 100 regular commenters with that of our 175,000 or so regular readers.

        Some people need to accept that HfP is, financially, reputationally and size wise the biggest site of its type outside the US and that we may know what we’re doing 🙂

        • Nancy says:

          So you’re saying that 95% of readers don’t travel? All their boarding passes, departure boards, flight numbers use IATA codes. If they follow the article and book their flight on Aer Lingus, the flight number will not say AC, will it?

          As the biggest site, I would expect to have some sort of responsibility to the readership and the industry. Not confuse people by referring to the same airline as AY in one sentence and as FI in another sentence, or just simply not making up own abbreviations. Why?

          • lftbeach says:

            I tend to sympathise…perhaps the site needs a volunteer proof reader…mixing up airline codes does seem a bit daft and just confusing for many no doubt.

          • Barrel for Scraping says:

            The one way to do it is to make sure it’s obviously not IATA codes, for example using BAC for BA Club, QPC for Qatar Airways Privilege Club, maybe LOG for Loganair (which happens to be its ICAO code and may make more sense to some than the IATA code LM and avoids using the code for LOT), Finnair plus could be AY+ (or even FA+ if you hate IATA that much), VLG would work for Vueling.

            I think I have my own mental health issues as things like this wind me up more than they should!

          • Jonathan says:

            All abbreviations are very clearly explained the article, the fact that some can’t read and or understand what’s in front of them is not our great author’s problem, translation of the webpage doesn’t guarantee success !

          • Robert says:

            @Jonathan but it’s not about clearly explaining them. They’re not even clearly explained when on one line it’s AY and the next line it says FI.
            I do agree with people above. Why make up new abbreviations when there are established ones already? It clearly confused the author and readers too, based on the comments.

          • Novice says:

            Nancy I would think I am well travelled having toured over 30 countries and having been to 4 of 7 continents but I don’t take note of airline codes so Rob is right I think. I really couldn’t care less about the codes as long as I know which airline belongs to what alliance etc.

        • Gerry says:

          Still doesn’t explain AY vs FI!

  • Lady London says:

    Anyone flown Hainan Airlines?

  • S13SFC says:

    Finding out I can use Avios on Bangkok Airways is a game-changer for me.

  • Avios Traveller says:

    The biggest secret airline was ELAL.
    This was huge benefit for the last 2 years.

    You were able to book avios seats on BA (a mere 24k Avios for Club Europe LHR to TLV or visa-versa) and when they inevitably cancelled the flight were rebooked on ELAL on their dreamliner flat bed service (which tickets go for over £2k one way!)
    This, although not an official spot, was the best use of my avios over the last 2 years, cashing in over 30 tickets!!

    • John says:

      Not sure that many people have wanted to go to Israel for the past 2 years much less pay £2000 per trip for it

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