Virgin Atlantic High Five: The Flying Club Reward for Loyal Once-a-Year Flyers
Most airline loyalty programmes are built around frequency — fly enough in a single year to hit a status tier, or lose your ranking and start again. Virgin Atlantic’s High Five takes a different approach. Rather than rewarding how often you fly in any given year, it rewards how many different years you have flown with the airline. One flight per year is enough. The years do not need to be consecutive. And no registration is required — if you hold a Flying Club account, you are already part of it.
High Five launched in January 2026, with flight history backdated to 1 January 2021. Members who had flown with Virgin Atlantic in each of the five calendar years between 2021 and 2025 received their reward automatically at launch. If you were not among them, the clock is still running — every year you fly with Virgin Atlantic adds a stamp toward your next reward.
How High Five works
| Detail | What you need to know |
|---|---|
| The trigger | Fly with Virgin Atlantic in five different calendar years — consecutive or not |
| Minimum qualifying activity | One flight per year is sufficient. A single one-way Virgin Atlantic-operated sector counts as that year’s stamp |
| Eligible flights | Both revenue and award tickets count. Codeshares operated by other carriers do not qualify — only Virgin Atlantic-operated flights. Your Flying Club number must have been attached to the booking at time of travel |
| The reward | 12,000 Virgin Points, automatically credited to your Flying Club account |
| Bonus for Red tier members | Red tier members (the entry level, non-status tier) additionally receive a 10% Virgin Points bonus on all future flights with Virgin Atlantic |
| Repeatable | Yes — every additional five stamps earns another reward. Stamps are cumulative and never expire |
| Registration | None required. All Flying Club members (Red, Silver, Gold, and Wings tiers) are automatically enrolled |
| Tracking | Progress toward your next High Five reward is visible in the Virgin Atlantic app |
| Backdating | Flight history counts from 1 January 2021. If you flew with Virgin Atlantic in 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024, one flight in 2025 would have triggered the reward at launch |
What 12,000 Virgin Points is worth
Virgin Atlantic positions 12,000 points as enough for a return Economy Saver reward seat from London to New York — and that is technically accurate for base availability, though taxes, fees, and carrier-imposed surcharges apply on top and can add meaningfully to the cost. For a full picture of what Virgin Points are worth and how to get the most from them, see our valuation guide.
More realistically, the 12,000 points are useful as a contribution toward a larger redemption — Premium economy or Upper Class awards, where the points value goes further relative to the cash price of the seat. They can also be used toward Virgin Atlantic Holidays packages or transferred within the Virgin Red ecosystem. Points transferred from Amex Membership Rewards arrive at a 1:1 rate, so the High Five reward is the equivalent of earning a moderate spend bonus without the spend.
Who this is designed for — and who actually benefits
High Five is explicitly aimed at leisure travellers who fly once or twice a year and have never accumulated enough Tier Points to reach Silver or Gold status. Under the standard Flying Club model, these members earn points on their flights but receive no recognition for long-term loyalty to the airline. High Five changes that — a member who books a single Virgin Atlantic holiday each year for five years now earns a tangible reward for that consistency, even if their annual flight count never comes close to status thresholds.
The Red tier bonus — 10% extra Virgin Points on future flights — is also meaningful for this segment. Red members already earn at the base rate; a 10% uplift on every future flight compounds over time for someone who keeps flying Virgin Atlantic year after year.
For Silver and Gold members, the 12,000 points are a welcome addition but the Red bonus does not apply — those tiers already earn bonus points through their status benefits. The reward is still worth having, but it is less transformative than it is for a Red member who has simply been quietly loyal for half a decade.
Virgin Points never expire — one of the most underrated features of the programme. The 12,000 points from a High Five reward can be held indefinitely until a redemption worth taking appears. There is no pressure to use them immediately or on a low-value booking. See our guide to booking Virgin Atlantic reward flights for availability tips and redemption strategy.
High Five is one of the more thoughtful things a major airline has done with its loyalty programme in recent years. It does not require heavy spending or frequent travel — just a habit of returning to Virgin Atlantic when you do fly long haul. If you have been a Flying Club member for several years and fly with Virgin Atlantic even occasionally, check the app to see where you stand. Many members will be closer to a reward than they realise. The Red tier bonus on future flights is the most underappreciated part of the scheme — for occasional flyers who stay at Red, it quietly improves the return on every Virgin Atlantic flight they take going forward.