BA vs Qatar

Two Avios programmes, two approaches to status. BA wins on short-haul, vouchers, and predictability. Qatar wins on surcharges, product, and cheaper Sapphire. The smartest travellers use both.

BA vs Qatar: Status and Avios Compared

British Airways and Qatar Airways both use Avios, both sit in oneworld, and both deliver Sapphire or Emerald status to UK travellers. But the mechanics are fundamentally different — how you earn status, what it costs, how redemptions are priced, and what you get for your money diverge in ways that matter.

Since BA’s April 2025 overhaul, this comparison has become the most important decision for UK oneworld travellers. For many, Qatar is now the cheaper route to the same alliance benefits. For others, BA’s UK integration still makes it the right home. The answer depends on how you fly.

✦ THE HEADLINE

The same flight credited to BA and Qatar earns different status points. BA Silver (Sapphire) requires ~£7,500 of eligible BA spend. Qatar Gold (Sapphire) requires 300 QPoints — achievable for ~£5,000 of flying including just 4 Qatar sectors. Same oneworld Sapphire benefits. Different cost to get there.

Status: Head to Head

BA (The British Airways Club) Qatar (Privilege Club)
Earning model Spend-based (1 TP per £1 on BA + cabin bonuses) Distance + cabin based (QPoints)
Sapphire threshold Silver: ~7,500 TPs (~£7,500 eligible spend) Gold: 300 QPoints (~£5,000 flying)
Emerald threshold Gold: ~20,000 TPs (~£20,000 spend) Platinum: 600 QPoints (~£10,000+ flying)
Partner earning Distance-based on partners (25–150% of miles flown) Distance-based on partners (varies by airline)
Minimum airline requirement 4 qualifying BA flights per year 20% of QPoints from Qatar, or 4 Qatar sectors per year
Renewal Same TPs in membership year 270 QPoints / 12m or 540 / 24m for Gold
Soft landing Gold drops to Silver, Silver to Bronze Gold drops to Silver if active; Burgundy if 24m inactive
Qualification period Membership year (rolling from join date) Rolling 12 months

The Cost Comparison That Matters

BA’s spend-based model rewards expensive tickets. If you routinely buy full-price Business Class on BA flights, the Tier Points accumulate naturally. But discounted premium fares — the kind most UK leisure travellers actually buy — earn far fewer TPs per pound than the headline rate suggests, because only the base fare (not taxes) counts.

Qatar’s QPoints system rewards distance and cabin class regardless of fare price. A discounted Business Class return to Bangkok via Doha earns roughly 120–140 QPoints — the same whether you paid £2,000 or £3,500. Three such trips reach Gold (Sapphire) at 300 QPoints.

Real-world example: one UK traveller earned Qatar Gold (Sapphire) with 331 QPoints for approximately £5,000 of total flying — a mix of Business and Economy fares via Doha. The same flights credited to BA post-April 2025 would have earned substantially fewer Tier Points, falling short of Silver.

★ THE KEY INSIGHT

BA’s model favours high spenders on BA metal. Qatar’s model favours long-haul travellers in premium cabins via Doha. If you buy discounted Business fares (the most common pattern for UK leisure travellers), Qatar’s distance-based system typically reaches Sapphire for less total spending.

Avios: Same Currency, Different Pricing

Both programmes use Avios — but they price their own flights differently and charge different taxes. The same seat on the same flight can cost more or fewer Avios depending on which programme you book through.

BA Qatar
Own-flight pricing Peak/off-peak + Reward Flight Saver option Dynamic (Saver/Standard/Flexi)
Partner pricing Distance-based per segment Distance-based per segment (broadly aligned)
Surcharges on own flights High (£300–600+ return LHR long-haul) Minimal (no carrier surcharges via Privilege Club)
Best for own flights Short-haul Europe (cheap Avios, low taxes) Long-haul via Doha (no surcharges, QSuite)
Companion voucher Yes (BA, Iberia, Aer Lingus via ba.com) No
Peak/off-peak calendar Published, fixed, predictable Dynamic, unpublished — Saver pricing fluctuates
Multi-partner bookings Yes — mix airlines on one ticket No — single partner per ticket
Short-haul network Extensive from UK airports None from UK

The surcharge difference is the most impactful for UK travellers. BA long-haul redemptions from Heathrow carry £300–600+ in taxes and surcharges per return in Business. Qatar’s own flights booked via Privilege Club carry minimal fees — often under £100 for the same type of journey. On a return for two in QSuite, the cash saving from booking via Qatar instead of BA can exceed £500.

Where BA Wins

Short-haul Europe

Qatar has no short-haul network from the UK. Avios for weekend breaks, half-term flights, and European city trips can only come from BA (or Iberia/Aer Lingus). This alone keeps BA relevant for every UK traveller.

Companion voucher

The BA Amex 2-4-1 companion voucher works on BA, Iberia, and Aer Lingus. It does not work on Qatar. For couples, this is often the single most valuable benefit in the Avios ecosystem — and it only exists in BA.

Predictability

BA publishes fixed peak/off-peak calendars. You know exactly what a Business return to New York will cost in Avios before you search. Qatar’s dynamic pricing means the same route can cost 70,000 or 140,000+ Avios depending on date and demand.

UK integration

UK credit cards, Nectar, shopping portals, BA Holidays double TPs — the earning infrastructure is built around BA. Qatar has no UK credit card and limited non-flying earning options for UK residents.

Where Qatar Wins

Cheaper path to Sapphire

300 QPoints for Gold (Sapphire) via distance-based earning. Achievable for ~£5,000 of mixed flying. BA Silver requires ~£7,500+ of eligible spend on BA-marketed flights. For discounted premium fares, Qatar wins.

No surcharges on own flights

Qatar eliminated carrier-imposed surcharges when booking via Privilege Club. Taxes on QSuite to the Maldives can be under £100 return. BA to similar destinations: £400–600+ in taxes.

Multi-seat availability via Doha

Multiple daily frequencies through Doha mean 2–4 Business seats are far easier to find than on a single BA direct flight. For families and couples, Doha routing solves the availability problem.

QSuite product

Widely considered the world’s best Business Class. Fully enclosed suites, sliding doors, lie-flat, à la carte dining. Eight-time Skytrax Best Business Class winner. BA Club World is not in the same league.

The Decision Framework

Stay with BA if…

You use short-haul Avios redemptions frequently. You hold a companion voucher and want to use it on BA/Iberia. You value pricing predictability over flexibility. Your travel is mostly transatlantic nonstop from LHR. You earn most of your Avios through UK credit cards and want the simplest system. Your BA spend naturally generates enough TPs for Silver without extra effort.

Move status to Qatar if…

You fly long-haul in premium cabins 2–3+ times per year. Your destinations are east or south of Europe (Asia, Indian Ocean, Africa, Australasia). You buy discounted Business fares and BA’s spend-based model undervalues your flying. You want lower surcharges on redemptions. You need multiple Business seats for family or group travel. You fly through Doha naturally or are willing to route via it.

You Do Not Have to Choose One

Avios transfers freely between BA and Qatar at 1:1. You can earn through BA’s UK infrastructure (credit cards, shopping, Nectar) and redeem through Qatar when it offers better pricing, availability, or lower taxes. You can hold status with one programme and use the other purely for redemptions.

The strongest approach is to earn through BA, hold status in whichever programme your flying makes cheapest (Qatar if you fly long-haul premium via Doha, BA if you fly BA frequently from Heathrow), and compare both for every long-haul redemption before committing Avios.

✓ THE BOTTOM LINE

BA and Qatar are not competitors for your loyalty — they are complementary tools in the same Avios ecosystem. BA wins on short-haul, companion vouchers, predictability, and UK earning infrastructure. Qatar wins on long-haul surcharges, product quality, multi-seat availability, and cheaper status for premium travellers. The smartest UK travellers use both: earn through BA, compare both for every long-haul booking, and hold status wherever their flying makes it cheapest. Same Avios. Same alliance. Different strengths. Use them together.

READ MORE

finnair

Finnair

Finnair sits quietly inside the Avios ecosystem but plays a distinct strategic role. It combines predictable pricing, efficient northern-Europe routing and consistently lower long-haul taxes, making it a practical alternative to Heathrow for Asia-focused redemptions.

Should you still credit to BA

Crediting to British Airways is no longer the automatic choice. Earning models differ across Avios programmes, and the same flight can generate more Avios elsewhere depending on fare, airline and status goals.

oneworld Lounges

Galleries at T5, Cathay's Pier in Hong Kong, Qatar's Al Mourjan in Doha, and Qantas First in Sydney. What each oneworld status tier actually gets you — and which lounges are worth arriving early for.

American Airlines

A secondary airline currency for UK travellers, AAdvantage expands long-haul redemption options beyond Avios — particularly for partner flights, premium cabins and routes where surcharges distort value.

Avios Peak and Off Peak Dates

Off-peak saves 16,000 Avios on a Business return to New York. Three separate calendars create arbitrage. The December 2025 changes, the key 2026 dates, and when Iberia's calendar beats BA's.

Best oneworld status for UK travellers

Choosing the best oneworld status from the UK isn’t just about benefits — it’s about routes, airlines and travel patterns. The most useful programme depends on where you fly and how often.
Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated.