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NEW: Spend Avios on Apple products via the new Avios Shop – but should you?

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avios.com has launched a new portal called ‘Avios Shop’ letting you spend Avios on ‘real stuff’.

For now, the shop only lets you purchase Apple products, although I assume the intention is to increase the selection as time goes on.

The website is here.

Avios Shop

I had a dig around to see if it is worth your time and points. Annoyingly the site doesn’t show you the Avios price before checkout – you need to click all the way through.

The key thing to know is that you cannot pay for your entire order with Avios. This seems to defeat the object of launching Avios Shop, to be honest.

You will be presented several cash and points options. Here are the ones I had for purchasing an iPhone 16 Pro Max, listed at £1,599:

  • 67,305 Avios to save £399.80
  • 53,840 Avios to save £319.80
  • 40,385 Avios to save £239.90
  • 26,920 Avios to save £159.90
  • 13,470 Avios to save £80

It seems there is no way to pay for the full purchase using Avios. The maximum discount you are offered is approximately 25% of the cash price.

(You will collect Avios on the cash portion of your purchase at a rate of 2 Avios per £1.)

The Avios numbers above may seem pretty arbitrary, but if you do the maths they all come out at roughly 0.59p per point.

This is above their ‘floor’ value of 0.5p which you get when you transfer Avios to Nectar points and spend them at Sainsburys, Argos etc but below many other redemption options.

It is substantially less value than you’d get redeeming for long haul business class flights, with our target Avios value pegged at 1p+.

Of course, 1p+ may not be YOUR valuation. You may be happy redeeming via Nectar or another low-value redemption, in which case using your Avios to reduce the cash price of an Apple device might be attractive.

Avios Shop

Make sure you compare other retailers first

However, that’s not the full story. As I said, the headline cash price for an iPhone 16 Pro Max with 1TB storage on the Avios Shop website is £1,599.

Although this matches the official Apple website, this is £100-£200 higher than other ‘big name’ sites:

  • Argos sells the same phone for £1,499 (permanent offer)
  • Currys sells the same phone for £1,399 (permanent offer)
  • John Lewis sells the same phone for £1,499 (special offer)

As you can see, if you’re happy paying entirely in cash you can save £200 by purchasing through another reputable retailer. That pushes the overall Avios ‘saving’ even lower.

Why spend 40,385 Avios for a £240 ‘saving’ when you can just buy the same phone at Currys for £200 less? It makes using Avios to reduce the cost of the purchase hugely unattractive.

Of course, not all Apple products are discounted as regularly. A quick search for AirPods Max online shows that the Avios Shop is price competitive with the Apple Store, John Lewis, Amazon and Currys.

In that scenario, using your Avios to reduce the cash price by 0.59p per point is a better option, although still below our target redemption value.

The bottom line is that you should benchmark the cash price offered by the Avios Shop against other retailers based on the device you want to buy.

Conclusion

Avios is rolling out a new shopping portal called Avios Shop where you can use your Avios to reduce the cash price of selected physical products.

For now, it is limited to Apple devices with a maximum 25% discount available. The ‘pence per point’ calculation is not particularly good, at 0.59p per Avios, which is substantially below high value redemptions such as premium cabin flights.

However, as with Nectar transfers, you may prefer being able to cash out your Avios immediately over the option to save for a higher value redemption. The choice is yours.

The Avios Shop website is here.

Comments (27)

  • Lumma says:

    Very seems to be the best place to buy Apple products at a discount. Prices seem to be usually discounted from the full Apple prices and they have a regular 10% back if you put in on their 12 months buy now pay later. Recently got the new M4 MacBook Air for about £200 less than what Apple charges directly. You can even pay off the balance with a Credit Card. No Amex though

    • FlyingTayto says:

      Very also offer 2 avios for every £1 spent via the Avios shopping portal for electrical items, so pairing with an eligible Avios earning card you can get the products at a cheaper cost & make Avios back too.

    • tomtom135 says:

      I’ve literally spent the last few days researching where to buy a new MacBook Pro so this is really helpful, thanks! I don’t like credit/Very though so guessing you can grab the discount and pay it all off straight away.

      • Lumma says:

        Yeah, to get the 10% back you need to put it on an account on the buy now pay later scheme. Probably need to wait until the credit hits before paying it off.

        It’s available right now. The base macbook air is £850 with 10% back, so £765

    • masaccio says:

      Sadly for a limited set of Apple products. I wanted a pimped Mac Mini recently and every discounted retailer only offered Macs with relatively low memory.

  • BJ says:

    Before spending anything on apple products you’d be best advised to visit their service department. In the Edinburgh store there’s typically around four times as many people upstairs getting stuff fixed as there’is on the ground floor buying new products.

    • John says:

      Daft comment.
      1) you can buy apple gear anywhere, but proper servicing is typically at an Apple Store or authorised service centre, so of course there will be more people than in the shop section at time.
      2) it’s usually not just service upstairs but training also.
      such interactions can take a while, mostly due to issues with the customer rather than the product.
      3) by having a small product line, the gear is incredibly well proven and volume tested. More so than any other manufacturer in the phone space, and more so than most other manufacturers n the computer space.
      Etc
      Etc

    • Ken says:

      You do realise that people “getting stuff fixed “ at Apple stores includes a huge number (the vast majority) of things other than hardware repairs, or software faults.

      The majority of hardware problems are cracked screens – just like any other phone.

    • Rhys says:

      Apple’s in-store fixing service is one of their selling points, not a negative! It’s fantastic. I imagine most of it is people repairing smashed screens etc.

      • meta says:

        … or like me wifi stopped connecting due to software failure. The guy working on my phone at the Apple Store on Regent Store said as much. Apple products are terrible, but they get you hooked and it’s very difficult to leave due to non- compatibility issues. And let’s not forget that the majority of firms use Microsoft/PC products, so you come in with your mac to do a presentation and you have to have a special plug-in for this and that.

    • Daniel says:

      What an odd comment, as others have said the in-store service department is great – you can’t beat talking to an actual human being about issues. I am typing this message on a 5 year old MacBook Pro that has had no issues – Apple products are built to last.

  • Martin says:

    Gerald Ratner is a special advisor on the board..
    He knows how to sell some c**p at inflated prices…..

  • TimM says:

    Remember that John Lewis always offers at least an extra year’s warranty, free of charge. Especially if you are buying a brand new model/design, i.e. relatively untested in the field, that is very valuable. They have dropped their ‘never knowingly undersold’ policy but are usually competitive. I would take the extra year’s warranty over a poor discount for using my Avios.

    • Jay-Marc says:

      Never Knowingly Undersold is back at John Lewis now, but the other sellers they will match against is limited to a listed 25.

      https://www.johnlewis.com/customer-services/prices-and-payment/price-promise

    • masaccio says:

      But their management of repairs is dreadful. They outsource it to a third party and you are left without a device for some time. Buying direct from Apple, you just use the Apple Store for diagnostics and if it’s faulty you get a replacement there and then. I spent 6 months messing about with JL and only got a refund when I told them next stop was MCOL. Luckily I still had a spare phone as each non-repair was 10 days without a phone. A previous iPad repair was an equal drama.

  • Not Long Now... says:

    Fair point for an extra year warranty. In all seriousness, and I am honestly only interested, not trying to support or decry Apple, how many ‘warranty’ claims are made on Apple products, and of those, how many do we suppose wouldn’t be covered under your consumer rights anyway? There are many issues with Apple itself, but I cannot recall anyone I have even heard of having a ‘faulty’ product. In fact, how many modern phones are ever faulty?

    • Cats are best says:

      My brand new Macbook Pro 16″ was faulty out of the box, needed the main board replaced. All models in the same generation have the external display bug that has never been fixed.

      My previous one (Macbook Pro 17″) had the manufacturing defect that eventually caused GPU failure, Apple grudgingly replaced the board once, but of course it failed again and Apple washed its hands of it.

      I’ve been a Mac user since the 1990s, my personal experience is that quality, both hardware and software, has gone downhill.

      • meta says:

        My last two iPhones had software failure issues…

        • Rhys says:

          I’ve had about 5 iPhones since 2015…none of them have had software failures. What have you been doing to your phones 🤣

  • Meike Hokkenbaals says:

    Christ Alive! £1600 for a smartphone is mega expensive!

    • Lumma says:

      It’s the “Apple Tax” on additional storage. The base models are at least competitive (and sometimes genuinely a bargain – the M4 Mac Mini for example) but what they charge for storage and memory is disgraceful. There’s no reason this phone should cost £400 more than the 256gb model for 768gb more storage.

    • Rhys says:

      It’s the 1TB pro model – you can get iPhones for cheaper!

    • Jonathan says:

      Don’t shop directly with Apple then if you don’t like their prices !

  • Concerto says:

    Exactly what happened to me with a 2013 MacBook Pro. What a mess that machine was, I pumped more money than the original cost into repairs. In fact, Apple stuffed me so badly that I haven’t spent a cent with them since. They should watch out, because a lost customer really is a lost customer.

  • Nate1309 says:

    The best way to get customised Apple computer hardware is via the education portal. So seek out your kids/nieces/nephews. I had a custom build Mac Studio earlier in the year and saved at least £300.

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