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NEW: Get a huge 36,000 Virgin Points bonus with the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card

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Virgin Atlantic has launched a special offer for its Virgin Money-issued Reward+ credit card and it is the strongest bonus we have seen for a LONG time.

You will get 36,000 Virgin Points if you spend £3,000 within 90 days.

This is paid in two parts – 18,000 points after your first purchase and 18,000 points if you hit the £3,000 spend target.

You can apply here.

Get 36,000 VIrgin Points with Virgin Atlantic credit card

Previously had the card? Virgin Money will give you a new bonus if you cancelled your previous Virgin Atlantic card more than six months ago.

You CAN apply if you currently have the free Virgin Atlantic credit card. This is due to a rule change which we covered here.

You CAN apply and get the bonus if you are currently a supplementary cardholder on someone else’s Virgin Atlantic credit card.

There is also a special bonus on the free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card. The usual bonus of 3,000 points is doubled to 6,000 points. However, it makes far more sense to pay the £160 fee and pick up 36,000 points from Reward+.

You can find out more about the benefits of the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card in this article.  The free Virgin Atlantic credit card is examined here.

The offer ends on 13th October.

Are Virgin Points still worth collecting?

If you are a regular reader, you can’t help but have seen the discussion in the last year over Virgin Atlantic’s move to dynamic redemption pricing. This makes ALL seats available for redemption, but at often stupid points prices.

You should ignore this, and focus on Saver availability.

Saver seats ARE still available, costing no more than seats cost under the previous structure. There are plenty of Upper Class reward seats to/from New York for just 29,000 Virgin Points each way for example.

The snag is that there is no longer guaranteed ‘Saver’ availability. Virgin Atlantic used to promise 12 reward seats per flight at the equivalent of ‘Saver’ pricing, and now it doesn’t. This is less of an issue for the flexible traveller but makes life difficult for, especially, anyone with school age children.

This analysis gives some recent examples of good and bad routes for Upper Class redemptions.

There are other way to use your points, of course. There are flights on partner airlines – which haven’t changed in price – and other redemption options such as the Virgin Red box at The O2 in London. I recently redeemed Virgin Points for SAS flights back from Norway after a family holiday.

To be honest, with such a huge bonus on offer, I’d be tempted to get the card, bank the points (which will never expire) and decide what to do with them later.

You could also top up your 36,000 Virgin Points with a 1:1 transfer from American Express Membership Rewards, using the big sign-up bonuses currently on offer there.

Get 36,000 VIrgin Points with Virgin Atlantic credit card

Pay no foreign exchange fees in the Eurozone

If you are looking for a good reason to apply – apart from the bonus – this is it. The Virgin Atlantic cards are the only travel rewards credit cards which offer a partial respite on FX fees when travelling.

You pay no FX fees on spending in Euro (in the EEA), Swedish Kronor or Romanian Lei. This saves you 3% on your purchases and you earn Virgin Points on top. The 3% fee applies to transactions in all other currencies.

Note that some Euro-accepting countries are not in the EEA, eg Monaco.

Here is the exact wording from the summary credit agreement:

“Non-Sterling Transaction Fee (for foreign currency transactions): 2.99% of transaction. We will not charge this if the transaction is in Euros, Swedish Kronor or Romanian Lei and it takes place in the UK or European Economic Area (EEA)”

It appears that all EEA countries are included based on my experience, even if they are not in the Euro. I wasn’t charged any fees in Norway last month, for example. Don’t take my word for this though.

What are the key features of the Virgin Atlantic credit cards?

These are very attractive cards. Here are the details:

Get 36,000 VIrgin Points with Virgin Atlantic credit card

The free card – the Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

The free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card is a Mastercard which earns 0.75 Virgin Points per £1 spent.

The representative APR is 26.9% variable.

If you take out the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card by 13th October 2025:

  • you get 3,000 Virgin Points after you make your first purchase on the card in the first 90 days
  • you will get an additional 3,000 Virgin Points if you spend £1,000 in the first 90 days

This is a total of 6,000 Virgin Points.

You receive an annual voucher worth up to 150,000 Virgin Points when you spend £20,000 in a card year.

Get 36,000 Virgin Points sign-up bonus with the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card

The paid card – the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

The £160 Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card is a Mastercard which earns 1.5 Virgin Points per £1 spent. 

The representative APR is 69.7% variable, including the annual fee.  The representative APR on purchases is 26.9% variable.

If you take out the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card by 13th October 2025:

  • you get 18,000 Virgin Points after you make your first purchase on the card in the first 90 days
  • you will get an additional 18,000 Virgin Points if you spend £3,000 in the first 90 days

This is a total of 36,000 Virgin Points.

You will also benefit from earning a very generous 1.5 Virgin Points per £1 spent as your base earnings.

The fee is not refundable pro-rata if you cancel during the year.

You receive an annual voucher worth up to 150,000 Virgin Points when you spend £10,000 in a card year.

This offer makes the Reward+ card your best deal for Year 1

The Reward+ card is clearly the best deal, in my view, given the enhanced bonus.  36,000 Virgin Points easily offsets the £160 annual fee for the first year.

More importantly, once you have the Reward+ card, you are earning the superior 1.5 points per £1 whenever you shop.  You also trigger the annual voucher more quickly.

Big spenders should note that your monthly points earning is capped by your credit limit. What this means, in plain English, is that if your limit is £10,000, the maximum number of points you can earn per month is 7,500 on the free card and 15,000 on the paid card.

If you spend £10,000 every 10 days and then pay off your balance mid-cycle, you will not earn miles on your spending above £10,000. This is unlikely to be an issue for 99% of people.

Get 36,000 Virgin Points sign-up bonus with the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card

How do the annual vouchers work?

Virgin Atlantic introduced a new type of annual voucher in 2024.

These vouchers are, thankfully, easier to understand than the old ones.

Your reward is triggered within 1-2 weeks of hitting the spending target.  The target is £20,000 in a card year for the free Virgin Atlantic Reward credit card and £10,000 in a card year for the £160 Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card.

If you have no elite status in Virgin Flying Club ….

…. your voucher will get you 75,000 Virgin Points off the cost of a companion ticket for a friend if you have booked a cash or redemption ticket for yourself.

Taxes and charges will be payable on the companion ticket.

A solo traveller will be able to use the voucher to save 75,000 Virgin Points on the cost of upgrading a Virgin Atlantic cash or reward flight by one cabin.

(Economy Light cash tickets cannot be upgraded. You need to book Economy Classic or Economy Delight.)

If you have Gold or Silver status in Virgin Flying Club ….

…. your voucher will get you 150,000 Virgin Points off the cost of a companion ticket for a friend if you have booked a cash or redemption ticket for yourself.

Taxes and charges will be payable on the companion ticket.

A solo traveller will be able to use the voucher to save 150,000 Virgin Points on the cost of upgrading a Virgin Atlantic cash or reward flight by one cabin.

(Economy Light cash tickets cannot be upgraded. You need to book Economy Classic or Economy Delight.)

Get 36,000 Virgin Points sign-up bonus with the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ credit card

New to Virgin Points and Virgin Flying Club?

Last year we published a 13-part series of articles on the best ways to spend Virgin Points – click here. Some of the earlier articles need re-writing following the move to dynamic pricing.

Whilst premium flights are clearly the best option (sorry to spoil the surprise!) you will find that there are plenty of other options available too.

Virgin Points convert into Hilton Honors and IHG One Rewards points

These cards are a good way of earning IHG or Hilton points from a UK Mastercard / Visa credit card.

The conversion rate into Hilton Honors is 2:3 and the rate into IHG One Rewards is 1:1.

There is a minimum conversion of 10,000 Virgin Points and conversions must be done by phone.

The sign-up bonus on the Reward+ card would convert into 54,000 Hilton Honors points or 36,000 IHG One Rewards points.

Conclusion

36,000 Virgin Points is a VERY strong sign-up bonus if you are confident of spending £3,000 within 90 days.

There isn’t a lot of value in getting the free card – at least for Year 1 – when there is such a good bonus on Reward+. This is despite the bonus being doubled to 6,000 Virgin Points.

It still isn’t clear, long term, how dynamic reward pricing will pan out. There are currently plenty of 29,000 points one-way Upper Class seats to/from New York JFK in 2026, however, so if you’ve always wanted to try Upper Class on Virgin Atlantic this would be possible with the credit card bonus.

You can apply for either of the Virgin Atlantic credit cards via this link.

The offer runs to 13th October 2025.

Comments (151)

  • 1958 says:

    Wow!
    Earn 36,000 points – About enough for one person to get 10% of the points needed for a one-way Upper Class reward ticket to the USA (with fees on top, of course).
    Under current reward pricing, Virgin points are worth about 0.05 pence. I mean a twentieth of 1p.

    • memesweeper says:

      A more sensible bottom-end valuation is here:
      https://www.headforpoints.com/2024/09/20/use-virgin-points-for-virgin-holidays-discount/ and https://www.virginatlantic.com/holidays/customer-support/ways-to-pay/overview

      0.55p each (unless the rates have changed since last year), so the card is returning at least £ 225 on first £ 3,000 spent (base plus bonus). Conversion to Hilton is also not a bad exit if you hate the new redemption system for Virgin’s own flights, and/or can find nothing with Delta/KLM/AF etc.

      The £ 160 card fee makes the net return on the first £ 3,000 on the premium card pretty poor though, unless you keep on spending after the bonus has landed. I do, and it works well for me. I can’t see me getting lucky with another Upper redemption again (I did last year though, with the voucher in play too) but have used the miles for KLM, Air France and Hilton in the past as well.

    • SP181 says:

      10%? That’s literally more points than you need for an upper class saver ticket.

    • CarpalTravel says:

      My immediate thought too. Years on here I am still sat on 500k+ points that I cannot begin to justify to spend. Am hoping a cruise option will be available once the kids have left home.

      • memesweeper says:

        Why not cash out to Hilton and spend at SLH? There’s some fantastic properties out there.

        • Rabbit says:

          Thanks for this reminder, I was not part of the mass exodus a few years back but it’s becoming that way now.

          I seem to have no luck trying to find an SLH property that is available for points as yet though. Frustrating.

        • CarpalTravel says:

          Thank you for the suggestion, I will definitely look into it.

    • Bill Barton says:

      For a January 2026 trip to Atlanta, I paid only 15000 points + voucher and £868 (plus £70 for cancelling and rebooking at the lower rate). A few weeks ago there were also cheap flights in March/April 2026.

  • s says:

    regarding the vouchers are you on the hook for a second year annual fee of £160? or can you hit the £10k target accrue voucher and cancel before the second year fee hits. thanks

    • Rob says:

      You can cancel.

    • NorthernLass says:

      Beware Virgin Money IT, though. I get my voucher on my anniversary date each year, regardless of when I hit the spend, and I’m not the only one. It’s not been an issue, however, as I’ve struggled to use them and wasted 2!

  • Kathy says:

    Just want to highlight that for anyone who has the free card already, you have to apply for a Rewards+ card as a second card, and not upgrade tumour existing card, to get the bonus.

  • Swiss Jim says:

    Any experience of moving credit limit from free to paid card ?!

  • jj says:

    The, “Are Virgin Points still worth collecting?” section is the most important part of the article.

    Anyone considering the card should use the excellent vseats.io website to see whether their planned redemption is realistic. I’ve done some of the work for you as a warning; so, if you’re flexible with dates and want a trip of 7-14 nights, this is what you face next year:

    – India from 105,000 points each
    – Dubai from 465,000. You can get to the middle East (Riyadh) for 46,000 points, but that’s hardly a prime holiday destination
    – Caribbean from 320,000 point
    – Only five date pairs in Africa for less than 227,000 points (all in the holiday hotspot of Nigeria, starting from 100,000 points)
    – North America has 50 date pairs from 58,000 to 100,000 points, mostly to Washington or New York.

    In many cases, only one ticket will be available at those prices, so, in context, the 36,000 bonus points aren’t really worth very much at all. Trump haters need not apply, but perhaps the Trump lovers may enjoy an icy winter trip to Washington now it’s under Federal control.

    I’ve given up, and so should most of you. Make Avios your drug of choice instead.

    • DarrenS says:

      Surely, its horses for courses? I am not a Trump lover, but LHR-WAS in December this year at 18,000 points each is attractive to us. Our Son lives in Baltimore and this will include my wife’s birthday. This saves £1500 compared to cash tickets. There is still value to be had.

      • jj says:

        DarrenS, I was being a little light-hearted when I mentioned Trump. My general point was that east coast USA in the winter is the only realistic Virgin redemption option for most people. If that’s what you want, Virgin points work for you; otherwise, not so much.

    • NEIL says:

      You aren’t wrong when it comes to using Virgin Points on Virgin Atlantic, but Air France/KLM is defo worth looking into…

      UK – DXB (Via CDG/AMS) = 50,000 Virgin Points in Business Class One-way.
      UK – JFK (Via CDG/AMS) = 50,000 Virgin Points in Business Class One-way.
      UK – AMS/CDG = 4,000 Virgin Points Economy or 8,000 Virgin Points Business Class One-way.

      Much more availability than Virgin Atlantic, Available from 12 UK airports and not just LHR…

      IMHO the Air France/KLM partnership are the saver of the Virgin Flying Club these days….

      • Throwawayname says:

        You can go even further than AMS and CDG for your 4k/8k, as long as the total distance travelled is under 600 miles. From BHX, that puts LYS, BOD (but not MRS/NCE), Switzerland, and most of Germany within range via CDG/AMS.

      • Rob says:

        Done AF to Dubai, was a great deal.

      • CJD says:

        This would essentially be my plan for Virgin points.

        I don’t actually plan on flying with Virgin, but the card is potentially interesting (at least for the sign up bonus) because 36,000 points gets me and my wife a couple of trips to Paris and Amsterdam.

        Virgin’s lack of expiry and the ease of collecting Virgin points via non-flight activity vs Flying Blue probably makes it the Sky Team scheme for me.

  • Gareth says:

    I know a lot of people moan about the reward changes from Virgin, but ive had nothing but good experiences since they changed. Just booked a reward ticket in economy one way for LAX to LHR for 9000 points and 110usd in fees for mid October.

    If you are a bit flexible, I feel like there is still great value there.

    Applied for the card today. did the pre checks, said I was pre approved and then application gets referred when I actually do the full application. Anyone else had this happen?

    • Dezza says:

      Hi – yes exactly the same. With a message ‘Expect to hear back from us within 7-10 days’.

  • Vit says:

    Thanks Rob. I have the free card. Will looking into applying for this.

    Not using the (free) card much since transferring through to Hilton a couple years ago. Once again, thinking of doing the same with 36000 SUB + 4500 spend = 40,500 or 60,750 Hilton points at £160. So, buying Hilton point at 0.26 pence per point. Can anyone check my math?

    And yes, I don’t and not plan on flying Virgin.

    • No Longer Entitled says:

      Maths works but you can buy the points from Hilton today for £245. Not sure the effort to save £85 is worth it. Every little helps I suppose but it’s not getting me off the fence.

      • Rob says:

        You also get a 0% FX card for Euro use which pays 1.5 Virgin Points per £1, not to be scoffed at even if you have a 0% card knocking around.

        Between your quick £3k to trigger the bonus and a year of Eurozone spend I suspect you’d be close enough to £10k to make it worth triggering the voucher too.

    • Throwawayname says:

      Not flying Virgin isn’t the same as not flying Skyteam.

      • Vit says:

        Oooooh! That’s a good one. We do fly AF/KL quite a bit. Been burning off our FB points though… but never had a look from this (Virgin) angle yet.

        • Throwawayname says:

          One of the best value redemptions I’ve ever made was on China Airlines, flat beds and amazing service on a 2-hour narrowbody flight for 15.5k Virgin points and nominal taxes.

  • Dezza says:

    Rob’s crystal ball proved accurate. Cometh September, cometh the rain and cometh a Virgin CC offer 😊

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