Sometimes the way you plan to use your points isn’t the best way to actually redeem them. Sorry.
The points game is changing and the best values are shifting on a month by month basis as airfares dip and historically good points values lose their edge. Right now, there’s one value which stands out above almost all the others, allowing you to experience long haul comfort for short haul money, while using fewer Avios points to upgrade to an even more refined experience. That magic trick is buying premium economy with cash, and then either enjoying that – or upgrading using Avios.
£492 Round Trip Premium Economy Flights
It wasn’t long ago that £492 would’ve been considered an excellent deal to New York in economy, let alone premium. For under £500, locking in over 7” of extra legroom, recline and space is massive, but why stop there? £492 is a screaming deal in premium worth booking, but you can then upgrade to business for roughly 20,000 points each way, or just one way if you like.
Basically, if you have no Avios points this is an awesome deal for a nice and comfy flying experience, but if you do have points you can make it into an even better one.
Why This Deal Is So Good
If you make an “Avios Redemption” booking, where you search for flights with availability in business class and redeem your points, a few things happen…
- You can only fly on dates where they make seats available for redemption.
- You earn no points when you actually fly, you just burn them when you book.
- For NYC, you pay surcharges of £667 per person, in addition to min 100,000 points.
- £492 + 40,000 points for return upgrade for almost any date, plus earn miles.
OR
- £667 + 100,000 points for the same seats on limited dates, plus earn no miles.
Ready for the amaze-balls kicker? You actually earn Avios and tier points when you take the flights, which means if you spent 20,000 points on a one way upgrade, you’d actually get at least 7,000 back! Ready for the bigger kicker? There’s double Avios when you register and book before April 19th for flights all year.
Even better: the upgrade space from premium economy to business class is fabulous on the dates when these cheap Premium Economy flights are available, which means you should have no trouble booking and immediately upgrading. You just need to go about it the correct way, which we detail in depth here. Hint: it’s a must read before you book.
How To Find And Book The Premium Deals
Using 4,500 points or a cheap one way flight to Europe can save you tons of money by starting a deal off from a cheaper city. This is one of those times. The very lowest priced premium economy flights to New York on BA are available from Geneva or Dublin, and there’s also great deals to Los Angeles from Lisbon as well. Here are links for each deal, like…
- £492 Geneva to New York via London Heathrow.
- £545 Lisbon to Los Angeles via London Heathrow.
- £549 Dublin to New York via London Heathrow.
The best prices are available from September 2019 thru February 2020. Look for dates on Google Flights in “green” which represent the best prices. Before you book, remember to read the upgrade post above, which shows you how to pick flights which are instantly upgradeable! Don’t upgrade online. Instead, phone up BA with the knowledge and an agent can help. To recap…
- Read this guide to BA upgrades.
- Find flights where upgrades to business are available.
- Book these premium economy deals.
- Phone up BA and tell them you want to upgrade using Avios.
- Fly flat for a fraction of the price.
Note: if you book via American Airlines you cannot upgrade using Avios Points. If you want to book with BA Avios, you need to book via BA.
Great Post! I will be looking for cheap PE fares from now on? One question, do you have to be in a specific fare class to upgrade from PE to Biz?
Thank you!
As to your question, for now, no! Any BA PE fare booked direct will work.
Correct me if I’m wrong but I believe the 100% promo is on the base miles exclusive of class premium
Can you book on AA metal with a BA flight number and upgrade from PE to biz on the AA flight?
Interesting idea. I appreciate that you’re making an effort to generate original content instead of just regurgitating all the same stuff covered by 100 other points/miles blog.
Hi
How do you search for reward flights that are not direct?
Searching Geneva New York returns a this is not a direct flight error message?
Cheers