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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 (152)

  • Ang says:

    Can you use Virgin points to book flights on KLM?

    • Jonathan says:

      Yes

      • TimM says:

        KLM has very strange food, both on board and in their lounges at Amsterdam. We used Virgin points to fly KLM business from Manchester via Amsterdam to Bergen and back last year to join the classic 56-stop Norwegian coastal route on Havila. I wouldn’t repeat either. All I can say in KLM’s favour is that the food on the ship was even weirder.

        • Throwawayname says:

          I’m not a fan of KLM but their UK schedules are second to none. You can work all morning in Birmingham and be in Madrid in time for dinner, you can fly from Humberside to Prague in about the same amount of time as it takes to drive across to MAN etc. Even from London, LCY is a huge time saver and likely less prone to IROPS than LHR- connecting through AMS isn’t much of an inconvenience [as long as you don’t have small children and/or mobility issues].

          My preference is to use my VS points on AF, but I’m not going to turn down the opportunity to get to where I need when I need for not a lot of miles just because KLM’s catering is appalling- which it is.

          • LittleNick says:

            Is it (catering) worse than BA?

          • Throwawayname says:

            @LittleNick, I’ve been successfully dodging BA flights for about a decade now so I couldn’t tell you about their onboard food. If the BA standard is at the level of Iberia, it’s light years ahead of KLM.

            When it comes to lounge F&B, KL is definitely worse than BA’s business class lounges at LHR. In my opinion, they’re by far the worst European airline when it comes to food and drink at a hub lounge.

  • GS says:

    Anyone else getting turned down at pre approval (and does this mean an automatic rejection for a full application)? This is with a high credit score, holding other cards and previously holding the Virgin card too over 6 months ago so not sure why it gets stuck at pre approval?

    • Rosie12879 says:

      This happened to me a couple of months ago. I have a near-perfect credit score and had held a reward+ card for over a year (was trying for the free card to get the extra voucher, per Rob’s article). They said they couldn’t provide feedback or reasons as it’s a computer based rejection and no details are saved. If you don’t pass it, you can’t go to a full application. I gave up in the end, pretty awful customer service when I called as well.

      • Bigmaggot says:

        Been trying to do the same for months and get the additional free card too. Sometimes I get the approval and the offer of a £25k credit limit, then it just goes round in circles and I never can actually apply. Tried different browsers, email and phone numbers. I think it’s just poor IT, given up!

    • John G says:

      As Martin Lewis will tell you there is no such thing as a credit score in the UK. Lenders have their own criteria and having strong credit worthiness isn’t always what they are looking for. It may be they see you have too many credit cards already or too much credit (even if you are using it responsibly).

      I think in the early days Virgin Money were quick to reject such people but have softened their stance since, realising that airline miles collectors are a different breed than the mass market.

      Rejection at the eligibility check isn’t 100% sure to lead to rejection during the application but it is a good sign you will be rejected. From experience I would say best not to apply right now, give it a month (the offer will still be on) and try again checking the answers you gave.

  • TimM says:

    Nobody has mentioned sausage rolls. Seems a little strange with Virgin points.

  • shd says:

    For those of us who are allergic to significant cash co-pays on redemption flights, and specifically to paying APD at all, are there ways to redeem Virgin points for premium flights and NOT pay £££ on top?

    I’m happy to start in AMS / DUB / wherever if it saves me £££….

    • Rob says:

      Obviously low fees on Air France / KLM ex Paris / AMS.

      AMS to TYO is €344 one way for example in Business.

      Nothing as low as Finnair’s Avios taxes though (if you book via Finnair).

    • Throwawayname says:

      If you’re going East, the Far Eastern Skyteam members (certainly GA and CI) tend to have no/very low surcharges. If you’re going West, Air Europa will charge you a lot less than the other members of the alliance.

    • NorthernLass says:

      You can use them on DL within the US and to the Caribbean, tax is $6.

  • captaindave says:

    If i wanted to do Exeter to BKK on KLM, using VS points, would the connecting flight ( EXE – AMS ) be included – so that only need points for the AMS – BKK leg ?
    Or would it be better to book the 2 legs separated for APD reasons ?
    TIA

  • as02 says:

    How long does Virgin usually take to deliver the card? Applied and got approved yesterday, received an email this morning confirming the credit limit and saying – “your shiny new cards are on their way and will be with you in the next 7-10 business days.”
    Do they really take that long?

    • KS says:

      Hard to answer. Suspect Virgin and the card issuer can do their bits relatively quickly but then if I recall, delivery is by standard post, so wholly reliant on your postal service. Mine took at least a week.

  • George says:

    I had a Virgin Money CC (nothing to do with points/miles) until about 6 weeks ago, when I cancelled. Does anyone know if I’d be eligible for the sign up bonus for the paid Virgin Card?

  • ad4mlon says:

    Was after a new card after having to put the BA amex on hold until before triggering the voucher, this fits the bill perfectly, never dipped my toes into Virgin points before

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