Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Bits: British Airways Summer 2026 long haul changes, Norse slashes its ‘own brand’ routes

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

News in brief:

British Airways announces Summer 2026 long haul changes

We published an article yesterday on the launch of Bangkok flights for Summer 2026. Gatwick to Bangkok is going year-round – it is currently winter-only – and BA released Avios seats for April to early August 2026 in one go yesterday.

This isn’t the only change for Summer 2026.

New flights:

Jamaica – London Gatwick to Kingston will increase from three to four flights per week

Miami – London Heathrow to Miami will return to two flights per day, presumably taking back a flight currently operated by American Airlines

Dallas Fort Worth – London Heathrow flights will resume after a year where American Airlines took over BA’s historic slot

Las Vegas – London Heathrow to Las Vegas will increase from 10 to 13 flights per week

San Diego – London Heathrow to San Diego will increase to 14 flights per week

Austin – London Heathrow to Austin will increase to 14 flights per week

Bahrain – London Heathrow to Bahrain will become daily from the current three flights per week

Riyadh – London Heathrow to Riyadh will increase to 14 flights per week, as BA looks to compete with Virgin Atlantic and the upcoming launch of Riyadh Air

Jeddah – London Heathrow to Jeddah will increase to five flights per week

Doha – BA will increase flights across both main London airports to 14 per week

Airport changes:

New York JFK – the service between London Gatwick and New York JFK will be removed. A ninth (!) Heathrow service will replace it.

It is not entirely clear where the aircraft to operate these new flights will come from. Some are likely to be Boeing 787 aircraft returning to full operation following upgrades to their Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 engines.

British Airways Summer 2026 long haul changes

Norse Atlantic cuts its network following IndiGo deal

With both Airbus and Boeing struggling to meet their commitments for new aircraft deliveries, a new trend is springing up.

A number of ‘challenger’ airlines are moving away from operating their own flights to leasing out their aircraft to others. It allows airlines to launch new routes now instead of waiting a few years for the delayed aircraft on order.

Norse Atlantic is at the forefront of this in Europe, with Iceland’s Play doing the same for short haul. Indian carrier IndiGo has been keen to launch flights to Europe, and is already using one Norse Atlantic aircraft to fly to Manchester and Amsterdam.

Next year another five Norse Atlantic aircraft will join them. Half of the 12-strong Norse Atlantic fleet, which is exclusively comprised of Boeing 787 aircraft, will be with IndiGo, along with their flight crew.

This means that next summer Norse Atlantic will only operate:

  • Athens to New York JFK
  • London Gatwick to Los Angeles, New York JFK, Orlando
  • Rome to Los Angeles, New York JFK

It is cutting:

  • Athens to Los Angeles
  • Berlin to New York JFK
  • London Gatwick to Miami
  • Oslo to New York JFK
  • Paris CdG to Los Angeles, New York JFK

Hat-tip to @SeamM1997 on X.

Comments (65)

  • Spaghetti Town says:

    How expensive is the US now? Going to Florida next month – first time there in nearly 2 years.

    • Rob says:

      Does it matter? My view of these things is that 95% of the cost of any trip I do is the flight and the hotel. Once those are sorted, the rest is a rounding error. So what if a sandwich is £10 vs £5 in the UK? In the context of the whole trip cost it doesn’t matter.

      We have just done 12 days in Norway and we did wince at a couple of bills, but in truth the actual sums involved (in the context of £6k of hotel bills – 2 rooms per night x 12 nights in 4-star places) didn’t move the needle.

      In reality the biggest shock was when I went into a corner shop and was charged £2.50 for a bottle of coke. That was more of a surprise than the £200 meal bills for four, which if you live in London is pretty normal for 3-course meals.

      (I did laugh once in a sushi restaurant where only one bottle of wine – the house white – was under £100. We switched to beer.)

      • Optimus Prime says:

        Also £2.50 for a bottle of coke is not something unheard of in London…

      • Spaghetti Town says:

        Yes, it does matter.

        I know what you’re saying – the biggest component cost of any holiday is likely to always be the flights and hotels – but the way mortgage costs, food prices and general living expenses have gone up, especially when people have kids to feed, the cost of food on holiday in the US for 14 days might not be negligible for us as we have budgeting to adhere too. So in the context of the whole trip, it may matter to us!

        • NorthernLass says:

          It depends how you spend your money as much as how much you spend. You can save a small fortune by staying somewhere with a kitchen and preparing some meals (even buying sandwich stuff and snacks for lunches), although some people don’t want to be bothered with that on holiday.
          Also if you buy food at, say, Aldi, as opposed to Publix, you’re going to spend a lot less as well.
          In March (our first US trip in over 2 years), we found eating out was still reasonable compared to the UK, even with the tips.

      • Throwawayname says:

        Of course it does matter.

        The approximate GBP values of my cash element of my last long haul trip was: £150 to get to MAD, £35* for the hotel there, £100* for the flight to EZE, £200 for the 3 nights there, £180 for the local flight to GRU, £450 for 7 nights there and £50* for the flights back to England.

        This wasn’t a luxury trip but it involved no Y flights (J long haul, premium eco local) and the S. American hotels were all 4 stars where I stayed in rooms/suites bigger than 30 sq.m. (the MAD one was the brand new Ibis Styles, which was great too).

        Of course the asterisks denote that points/miles redemptions were involved so it does all depend on the accounting, but I certainly did spend more than £61 (1/19th of the total flight+hotel cash cost) in the couple of weeks I was there. If I’d chosen to go to California instead, I’d have probably ended up with a second mortgage.

        • Throwawayname says:

          Forgot that I did fly in Y for all about 2.5 hours to get to MAD, but you get the gist!

      • Andrew says:

        £60pp/day food, plus activities/tours, is a rounding error compared to £125pp/day hotels and Avios return flights?

        Something there doesn’t add up, especially if the prices for activities in Tromso a few months back are anything to go by… FnB activities was over 50% of the cost.

        Eating out in the US is particularly atrocious value for not a lot of culture unless you put the work in to go off the beaten track.

        • Rob says:

          The PREMIUM is a rounding error, not the net cost (ie the difference between eating out in Bergen vs Barcelona, not the cost of eating out full stop).

      • CJD says:

        Sorry, do you think those of us who aren’t living in London are paying £10 for 3 course meals or something?

        Food doesn’t magically stop being expensive to produce and sell if you’re doing it in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Manchester or Birmingham.

      • Paul says:

        Not sure I agree with that. Its a rounding error when your talk abut £0,000s for hotels and £200 a night to eat out. But such costs are then unlikely to make a dent in your net worth. That may or may not be representative of HfP readership.
        For most people however, they save to travel and the costs once they get there have to be factored in. For them its is anything but a rounding error.

    • Joseph says:

      If you’re in Miami (not sure if this holds true for the rest of Florida) watch out as the tipping system is slightly different from the rest of the US. The 20% tip will automatically be added but they will still leave a line on the bill for you to add an additional tip. The additional tip is not expected but many get caught out by this and end up tipping an extra 20%.

    • Andrew. says:

      It will be cheaper than the same period in CentreParcs. It’s no different to anywhere else, buy 24 bottles of Sprite in Walmart for $15, or buy one bottle of Sprite at a park for $8.

      I’m off to DC next week. Paying £75 a night for a Crystal City Hotel, including breakfast.

    • Alex B says:

      I was in the US last week, and thought besides alcohol at sporting venues, it’s fine.

  • Super Secret Stuff says:

    No mention of what Norse is doing with their Bangkok or South Africa routes?

  • Ken says:

    I’m sure I saw a single can of coke in Tesco (large store) for £1.40

    Didn’t find Norway anywhere near as expensive as I’d expected bar alcohol.

    £20 for a small glass (I’d say 175ml) of local cider was a shock. I thought they had forgotten to give us the whole bottle .

    However I don’t believe anyone is spending 95% on flights and hotels in Norway. Not even close.

    • Rob says:

      True, I was thinking more of a long haul. I reckon we spent about £10,000 in 12 days of which £7,000 was hotels / flights / trains for four.

      About 30% was therefore ‘on the ground’ spend.

      However, the point still stands. Even if we’d eaten lunch and dinner each day from a corner shop instead of a decent restaurant, it would have cut no more than 15% from the total cost of the trip.

    • Jonathan says:

      Although I didn’t spend too much time there, and I was in the northern regions (within the Arctic Circle) I also didn’t find Norway to be overly expensive in contrary to what I’ve heard.

      I friend of mine who lives in Finland said that she went to Norway on holiday and was asked to pay pretty much the exact same as she’d be asked for at home in Finland. (She doesn’t live in Helsinki or anywhere near there, and she wasn’t in the south of Norway either

      • Throwawayname says:

        I haven’t been to Norway in over a decade, but my friends who live in Switzerland say that foodstuffs (with the possible exception of meat) and household goods have seen rather modest price increases in the last few years, meaning that it no longer makes sense to take supermarket trips across the border from Zug to Germany where there’s been serious inflation since the pandemic. I wouldn’t be surprised if something similar has been happening in Scandinavia, because I certainly didn’t think that Copenhagen was any more expensive than London when I visited a couple of years ago.

  • DHA says:

    Expiring Sunday is a 20% transfer bonus from Revpoints to IAG Avios (BA, EI, IB, VY) so if you collect Revpoints with the intention to convert to Avios it will be a good idea to move them over by Sunday.

    More info here: https://www.revolut.com/legal/revpoints-avios-promotion/

    I got an alert in the Avios app mentioning this promotion.

Leave a Reply to BlairWaldorfSalad 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.