Should You Still Credit to British Airways?
For years, British Airways was the automatic place to credit oneworld flights. Status was attainable, Avios were familiar, and keeping everything in one account felt efficient.
That assumption no longer holds automatically. Since April 2025, BA uses a spend-based earning model for Tier Points. Qualification thresholds are higher. And the same business class ticket can generate materially different Avios returns depending on where it is credited — because not all Avios programmes use the same earning model.
Crediting a flight serves two purposes: earning Tier Points (for status) and earning Avios (for flights). The optimal programme is not always the same for both. If you are chasing status, consistency matters — credit to one programme. If status is not the goal, credit each flight to whichever programme produces the most Avios, then consolidate balances later using Combine My Avios.
How Earning Models Differ
The biggest structural difference between Avios programmes is how they calculate what you earn on partner flights. This is what makes the crediting decision genuinely important.
| Programme | Own flights | Partner flights | Key advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| British Airways | Spend-based (1 Avios per £1 + cabin bonuses) | Distance + booking class | Best for status seekers flying BA frequently |
| Finnair | Spend-based (6–10 Avios per €1 by tier) | Distance + booking class | Higher distance-based partner rates; cheaper status path |
| Iberia | Spend-based (Elite Points per €1) | Distance + booking class | Strong on Iberia long-haul; off-peak Avios pricing |
| Qatar | QPoints (fare + cabin based) | QPoints + Avios by distance | Best for discounted long-haul business class |
| Aer Lingus | Distance-based | Limited partner crediting | Narrow use case; mainly Dublin hub |
All five programmes use Avios, and balances can be moved freely between them. But the number of Avios earned from the same flight can differ significantly depending on which programme you credit to.
Why Discounted Business Class Changes Everything
On a full-price business class ticket, BA’s spend-based model can be competitive — you earn Avios based on the high fare, plus cabin bonuses. The model rewards expensive tickets.
On a discounted business class fare — which is what most UK leisure travellers actually buy — the picture reverses. A £1,800 BA sale fare to New York in Club World earns Avios based on £1,800 of spend. The same physical flight credited to Finnair earns Avios based on the 3,450-mile distance at business class rates (typically 125–150% of distance), which can produce more Avios than the BA spend calculation.
The longer the route and the deeper the discount, the more distance-based earning outperforms spend-based earning.
Before crediting any flight, check the Avios you would earn with BA, Finnair, and Qatar. Each programme publishes partner earning charts. On discounted long-haul premium fares, the difference can be 30–50% more Avios from the stronger programme. Then move the Avios back to BA later if needed.
When BA Is Still the Right Choice
You are pursuing BA status
Tier Points from partner flights only credit to BA if you credit the flight to BA. If Gold or Silver is the goal, consistency is essential.
You fly BA-marketed flights mostly
BA’s cabin bonuses apply on BA-marketed flights. If most of your travel is on BA metal from Heathrow, the home programme advantage is real.
You value simplicity
One programme, one account, no cross-checking. The optimisation gain from crediting elsewhere is real but requires effort. If you prefer simplicity, BA works.
When Another Programme Earns More
Discounted long-haul business fares
Finnair’s distance-based partner earning often beats BA’s spend-based model on sale fares. Check before crediting.
Qatar or AA flights
Crediting Qatar flights to Qatar Privilege Club earns QPoints for status AND Avios. Qatar’s own programme often returns more on its own flights.
Status is not the objective
If you are not chasing BA status, there is no reason to credit to BA by default. Credit each flight to the strongest earner, then Combine My Avios afterwards.
Codeshares: The Hidden Variable
On codeshare tickets, the ticketing airline (the one whose flight number appears on your booking) often determines how earning is calculated — not the airline operating the aircraft. A Qatar flight booked with a BA flight number may earn differently from the same physical flight booked directly with Qatar.
For travellers optimising Avios, the booking channel can matter as much as the airline flown. Check what the flight number is before assuming which earning chart applies.
Combine My Avios: The Safety Net
Avios move freely between BA, Iberia, Qatar, Finnair, and Aer Lingus. If you credit a flight to Finnair for a better Avios return, you can transfer those Avios back to BA in seconds — at a 1:1 ratio, with no fee.
This means the crediting decision does not lock you into a programme permanently. It only determines how many Avios you earn. Where you ultimately spend them is a separate choice.
If you are pursuing BA status, credit to BA for consistency. If status is not the goal, check the partner earning charts for BA, Finnair, and Qatar before every flight. Credit to whichever produces the most Avios, then consolidate later. The same business class seat can earn 30–50% more Avios in the right programme. That adds up over a year of flying.