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British Airways Club Avios devaluation: What the 15 December changes mean

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Last Updated: 29 Dec 2025

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After years of relative stability  in the Avios world, change was inevitable. Loyalty programmes tend to move in cycles, and the British Airways Club has reached its next reset. Effective 15 December 2025, BA has rolled out a broad Avios devaluation, changing  the cost of BA reward flight redemptions across the board.  

Below, we break down exactly what’s changed, what’s stayed the same, and who will feel the impact most as the new pricing kicks in.

 

An Overview of the Changes

So what’s really changed in this latest round of updates? In short, British Airways has applied a pretty consistent restructuring to the entire reward-flight landscape, including both the Avios required for a flight as well as the cash element.

The Avios price has increased by around 10% across virtually every route. It doesn’t matter if you’re  booking a quick flight to Paris or a long-haul one to New York: the increase is predictable and very much baked into the new system when you  book flights with Avios.

The cash element, however, is where things get more uneven. Depending on the distance you’re flying and the cabin you choose, you’ll see anything from a modest 3% bump to a noticeably steeper 20% rise. This percentage jump might look dramatic on  short-haul Economy routes that used to charge pennies, while longer European flights and some long-haul routes will see slightly less meaningful increases.

Unsurprisingly,  Economy BA redemptions have taken the hardest hit overall, with higher surcharges and tightening sweet spots. At the other end of the spectrum, long-haul Business Class are seeing the mildest impact, especially if you’re booking with a  British Airways American Express 2-4-1 Companion Voucher.

BA is attributing the changes to rising Air Passenger Duty, higher partner airline fees, and the general pressure of inflation across the travel industry. Regardless of the reasoning, the new structure is now in effect for  all Avios flight redemptions booked on or after 15 December 2025. For travellers planning ahead, the update makes it even more crucial to time your redemptions well when  booking flights with Avios.

Let’s look at how these changes affect short- and long-haul flights.

Short-Haul Flights

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The changes are immediately noticeable if you’re booking European trips. Take the simple London to Geneva route, for example. The off-peak Economy price has risen from 9,250 Avios plus 50p to 10,000 Avios plus £1, and peak flights now cost 10,750 Avios plus £1, up from the previous 9,750 plus 50p. Business Class follows the same pattern, with off-peak redemptions increasing from 15,000 Avios plus £12.50 to 16,500 Avios plus £15, and peak flights rising from 16,250 Avios plus £12.50 to 18,000 Avios plus £15.

The cash element has doubled  on Economy tickets, although in real terms the change is from 50p to £1, so it’s hardly a budget-breaker. The point, however, is symbolic: everything has nudged upwards.

Where Avios collectors will feel it most is on longer European routes,  such as Greece, Italy, and Cyprus. These flights sit at the edge of BA’s short-haul bands, and any increase in either the Avios or cash portion widens the gap even more. The result is that short-haul Reward Flight Saver redemptions, once the best-value use of Avios for many travellers, now demand a little more from your balance and your wallet.

While the changes aren’t catastrophic, they do point to a definitive trend: short-haul BA reward flights have become more expensive, and this pattern holds across the entire European network. 

Long-Haul Flights

Once you move  into long-haul territory, the Avios increase is uniform, but the cash uplift lowers as you climb the cabins. For example, let’s take the ever-popular  London to New York route. Economy sees the biggest pinch, rising from 50,000 Avios plus £100 to 55,000 Avios plus £120 off-peak, a 10% jump in points and a 20% rise in cash. Premium Economy follows the same 10% Avios increase, with a more moderate increase in surcharges. And then there’s Club World: up from 160,000 Avios plus £375 to 176,000 Avios plus £399 off-peak, which is a slight increase in Avios, along with a small bump in cash.

That hierarchy holds across  most long-haul routes. Economy takes the brunt, Premium Economy sits in the middle, and Business Class has the lowest increases.  First Class has also become more expensive, though BA’s variable surcharges make it harder to pin down, and availability remains scarce.

On  ultra-long routes like Sydney or Los Angeles, the rise in Avios cost remains locked at 10%, but the cash differences have become more unpredictable, sometimes as low as 3 – 5% in Club World, which is barely a ripple by comparison.

 

What’s The Real Story Behind the Changes?

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The headline only scratches the surface of what’s really changed. Anyone who regularly books  British Airways reward flights knows that the true decision point is the six different Avios-and-cash combinations BA lets you choose from for every redemption. This is where the change becomes unmistakable.

Consider a short-haul Business example, such as London to Hamburg, on an off-peak day. Before the update, the range between the cheapest and most expensive options was genuinely meaningful. You could save a decent chunk of cash by leaning heavier on Avios, or you could reduce your Avios cost by paying more at checkout. After the December change, every option has become more expensive, but not evenly. The options that relied most heavily on cash have seen the steepest jumps, in some cases rising by more than 20%. This suggests a deliberate nudge: BA wants collectors to part with more Avios rather than buying their way out with cash.

The shift is even stronger in Economy Class. Let’s look at an off-peak redemption from London to Malaga. Historically, the best value often sat at the bottom of the table: pay a bit more cash, burn fewer Avios, and come out ahead. That strategy doesn’t work anymore. The option that once cost the equivalent of £74 has increased to around £110, a nearly 49% rise. Meanwhile, the entire pricing range has become more competitive. Instead of a wide spread, every option now clusters between roughly £107 and £131.

The message is clear. BA has levelled the playing field, so the “cheap cash, low Avios” tricks of old no longer exist. The new cost also changes what now counts as a good BA redemption, especially in the Economy and short-haul bands. No matter where you land on the sliding scale, you’ll be using noticeably more Avios than before. In other words, the airline appears to be encouraging collectors to spend points more freely and reducing the incentive to hold large balances for years.

How Does this Affect Travellers?

The impact of this devaluation really depends on how and  where you tend to use your Avios. Some travellers will feel the pinch immediately, while others will barely notice a ripple.

  • Economy travellers are hit the hardest: With both Avios requirements and the cash portion rising more sharply in the lower cabins, the classic “cheap and cheerful” Economy redemption simply doesn’t stretch as far as it used to. The sting is real for anyone who used to rely on Avios to take the  edge off family holidays or school-break getaways.
  • European leisure travellers fall somewhere in the middle: Short hops to places like Paris or Berlin haven’t changed dramatically, but head further afield to Greece,  Italy, or Cyprus, and the rises become more noticeable. The longer the route, the more the new pricing chips away at the old value.
  • Club World flyers escape with the lightest bruising: Business Class has seen smaller cash increases across most long-haul routes and the same uniform 10% rise in Avios. It’s still a devaluation, but compared to Economy Class, it feels more like a nudge than a shove.
  • Barclays Upgrade Voucher holders actually see a slight improvement: Because the voucher locks you into the “most Avios, least cash” pricing, which has historically been the weakest option, the narrowing gap between the six pricing choices  makes this voucher a little more useful than before. It’s still not perfect, but it no longer forces you into a poor deal.
  • BA Amex 2-4-1 Companion Voucher holders sit in the grey zone: The impact comes down to how unevenly Avios and cash costs have increased. On some redemptions, the cash element has risen by more than 10%, which slightly reduces the  value of a 2-4-1 voucher. On  long-haul Business Class redemptions, however, the cash increase has been much smaller, meaning this remains the sweet spot for most voucher users.  If you’re booking Club World with a Companion Voucher, you remain one of the least affected Avios collectors out there.

Can You Still Change an Existing Booking? 

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In a rare bit of good news, British Airways is allowing some flexibility for anyone who booked before 15 December. If your plans change later on, you can reschedule your flight to a different date or time without being affected by the higher Avios pricing. It’s a small mercy, but a meaningful one.

There are limits, of course. The moment you make any substantial changes, such as switching to a different destination, upgrading or downgrading your cabin, or moving between peak and off-peak dates, the system will reprice your booking under the new structure. However, if all you need is a new day or departure time, you can make that adjustment without incurring extra charges in Avios or cash.

 

Is This the End of Good Value?

Not quite, but it serves as a reminder that no loyalty programme can maintain prices steady forever. Devaluations are part of the ecosystem, and this one happens to touch more corners of the chart than usual. 

However, there’s still good news.  Business Class British Airways reward flight redemptions continue to provide strong value, especially if you’re booking with a Companion Voucher. Peak and off-peak rules remain unchanged, helping you stretch your Avios further with a bit of planning. Reward Flight Saver caps also continue to keep taxes and fees in check, sparing you from the eye-watering surcharges you’ll see on some cash fares. An Avios redemption still beats paying cash without breaking a sweat on plenty of routes.

While the chart has changed, there are still pockets of strong value if you treat each  Avios flight redemption with a more strategic eye. But there’s no avoiding the reality: the Avios you held yesterday are worth a little less today.

If there’s a lesson here, it’s the oldest one in the game: points are meant to be used. Hoarding Avios only gives inflation time to catch them. So book the trip, enjoy the upgrade, and  take the flight. Avios do their best work in the air, not sitting in your account collecting digital dust.

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