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‘Combine My Avios’ is back to Iberia, Aer Lingus and Vueling – but with new rules

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‘Combine My Avios’ is back and working!

As we covered two weeks ago, the service had been taken down for transfers between Iberia, Vueling, Aer Lingus and British Airways. Qatar Airways and Finnair were not impacted.

We had assumed that this was due to rampant Avios theft, which was taking advantage of a vulnerability to allow fraudsters to open Iberia Club accounts and suck Avios out of your British Airways Club account.

combine my avios is back

The good news is that everything seems to be up and running in a new format.

How does it work?

All ‘Combine My Avios’ transactions can now be done from this page at avios.com.

You will see this:

combine my avios is back

For Iberia, Vueling, Aer Lingus and Loganair, you click the top arrow and you end up here:

Combine My Avios is back

You are now creating permanent links

This is the important bit.

The first time you move Avios to or from an Iberia, Vueling or Aer Lingus account, you create a permanent link.

This is new, although it is the route that Qatar Airways, Finnair and Loganair have always used.

When you return to the page in the bottom screenshot, you will see your account numbers and balances for each programme.

Going forward, you do NOT need to re-enter your Iberia, Vueling or Aer Lingus account details each time you want to make a transfer. The details are permanently stored at avios.com and each transfer can be done very quickly, albeit with multiple levels of 2FA security to clear.

I tried it out last night and it seemed to work fine.

You are no longer forced to transfer via a BA account

You no longer need to use British Airways as a conduit, except for Qatar Airways and Finnair.

You can now transfer Iberia to Aer Lingus, Aer Lingus to Vueling, Vueling to Loganair etc in one transaction. You do NOT need to move your Avios into British Airways Club and then out again.

What data do you need to link accounts?

To quote:

The first name, surname, and email address registered on each account must match. If your date of birth is registered on either account, it must also match to complete the linking process.

Accounts cannot be unlinked

Take note! However, you MUST link your accounts to do a transfer now, so there isn’t much you can do about it.

Transfers can no longer be done via the call centre

This could be frustrating for some people. You can only link your accounts online and transfers can only be done online. The call centre can no longer help you.

There are no longer time limits before you can move Avios

You previously had to be a member of Iberia Club for 90 days, and have ‘earned’ an Avios on your account, before you could transfer in or out.

Effective immediately, there are no restrictions on when new accounts can begin to send and receive points.

Congratulations to the Avios team for getting this up and running. Not only should it make your accounts more secure (and end the current Iberia fraud) but it will make future Avios transfers easier.

The ability to move Avios between Aer Lingus, Vueling, Loganair and Iberia without having to go via British Airways first is especially welcome.

Comments (69)

  • Dave says:

    Dumb question – should I have Avios spread around e.g. some in BA and some in Iberia like how with a bank account you shouldn’t have all your money in one account, or it doesn’t matter?

    • Roberto D says:

      You can have your avios in any accounts as long as you have linked both accounts. Therefore you can transfer from one to another.

    • John says:

      I guess it depends on where you want to use them and what you perceive the risks to be. Is it one of your accounts getting hacked, or a sudden pause in ability to transfer.

      For example, if Sainsburys only accepts cards from Lloyds and Tesco only accepts cards from Natwest, there’s no point keeping money in the account that is not spendable in your preferred supermarket if you think there’s a possibility that bank transfers will suddenly stop being instant.

  • Mikeact says:

    Dumb answer…I spread all mine around, and make secure notes…’who’s got what’.

  • Throwawayname says:

    Works a treat, managed to move a few Avios from IB to BA, transfer some AMEX points to BAC and move the combined total to AY+. Currently on hold to ticket a reservation involving 8 hours of LATAM lie-flat business class for the princely sum of 42k Avios and €78.

  • Dave says:

    So my email address with Iberia needed changing, so when I go into my account to change it they now require a ‘region’ in my address. Can’t for life of me get them to accept any of my options. Anyone know what ‘region’ refers to and is acccepted.

  • Sevy says:

    Got BA / IB to work but not Vueling, where I had a different email that I can’t seem to change. Ouch.

  • John says:

    “Transfers can no longer be done via the call centre.”

    Doesn’t this ~confirm speculation as to the source of fraudulent activity that was discussed in the previous thread?

  • Delbert says:

    My wife and I took part in IB’s generous offer of up to 90k Avios each back in June 2018 so we hoovered up the entire 180k Avios; eventually transferring them to BAEC to spend as we pleased in the short time frame. I subsequently deleted our IB accounts under GDPR and have never been back to an IB account since.

    My question is, is it safe to open new IB accounts without causing a negative balance? We shouldn’t even exist on file given our accounts should have been completely expunged about seven years ago.

    • ChrisBCN says:

      I would think you should be safe yes. BUT if you can use a different email address I would (although that may require you changing your BA email…).

    • ChrisBCN says:

      And wow was that really 7 years ago 😱

      • Delbert says:

        Thanks for your prompt response, Chris. I recall it took me about 40 minutes to book all 20 flights (aided and abetted by autofill) for about £600. There must have been a lot of near empty flights, but IB still got paid. 😃

        I’ve never heard any report(s) of participants coming unstuck, but you never know. I definitely don’t want to mess about with our registered BAC email addresses so will open new IB accounts soon enough and transfer nominal test amounts of Avios to their respective accounts.

        There were also regular IB Groupon offers of 2000 Avios for €19, but never to been seen again, unless I’m missing something.

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