Virgin Australia adds 'carrier charge' fee to Velocity reward bookings
Virgin Australia will add new 'carrier charge' fees onto tickets booked using Velocity Frequent Flyer points, increasing the cash component of a points-based reward booking by up to $460 per person based on a return flight.
The new fees apply to Virgin Australia reward flights booked from January 1 2019.
Journeys between Australia and Los Angeles are the hardest hit, with a $230 one-way charge applying to business class reward flights operated by both Virgin Australia and Delta Air Lines.
Premium economy and economy class reward bookings will see carrier charges of $145 and $60, respectively, per one-way flight on the same LAX routes.
Flights between Australia and Hong Kong will attract surcharges of $50 in business class and $35 in economy per one-way flight, while on all other international routes except New Zealand, the charge is $50 per one-way business class flight, or $25 per one-way economy flight.
Domestic flights within Australia and trans-Tasman journeys between Australia and New Zealand will attract carrier charges of $5.50 in business class and $3.50 in economy class per one-way flight.
Passengers making bookings for travel solely within Australia will also need to pay GST on those carrier charges. Travellers booking connecting flights on the one ticket – such as Brisbane to Hong Kong via Sydney or Melbourne – will pay that carrier charge per flight sector too, but with no GST.
As with genuine government taxes and airport fees, these new carrier charges will be collected at the time of booking, where a credit card surcharge of between 0.6% and 1.3% is also levied, despite there being no other way to pay using money, unless you use additional points to cover the spread.
Itineraries booked before January 1 2019 will not be subject to these carrier charges – including when travel takes place in 2019 – and carrier charges are not being introduced on any other Virgin Australia partner airline bookings, including routes operated by Delta beyond Sydney-Los Angeles.
Virgin Australia already levies an “Etihad Airways Carrier Charge” of up to US$300 per flight when using Velocity points to book Etihad Airways journeys, and this remains unchanged.
Earning status credits on Virgin Australia flights
In related news for Velocity members, Virgin Australia is also changing the number of status credits that can be earned on domestic Getaway-branded fares.
These tickets currently provide as few as five status credits per flight, such as on shorter routes like Sydney-Melbourne and Sydney-Brisbane, although flights taken from December 1 2018 will begin earning a minimum of seven status credits per one-way flight instead.
While that’s a small change in number, it makes earning or retaining Velocity Gold status a fair bit easier for domestic economy travellers.
Currently, it takes 100 short-distance Getaway flights to earn the 500 status credits required to obtain Velocity Gold – that’s 50 return trips every year, or a journey almost every week.
Under the new earning rates, passengers travelling on the same routes could instead reach Velocity Gold for the first time from a reduced 72 one-way flights, or 36 return trips.
Also from December 1, Virgin Australia passengers travelling with Air Canada from Los Angeles to Vancouver, Calgary, Montreal or Toronto on a Virgin Australia codeshare flight number will begin earning status credits, in line with Virgin Australia’s existing earning tables.
Also read: Your Virgin Australia Velocity points are about to lose their value
Delta Air Lines - SkyMiles
16 Oct 2017
Total posts 157
So, pay to use your VA points now. What next, pay to use your own Travel Bank money?
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
20 Nov 2017
Total posts 113
Pretty modest charges, eg, trans-tasman (and domestic) only $3.50 in Y.
28 Dec 2016
Total posts 74
It’s already cheaper to pay for sales fare than redeem VA points for trans-tasman in Y
12 Aug 2014
Total posts 17
I suppose it's only a theoretical $460 given the non-existence of J rewards on VA to LAX.
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
14 Mar 2017
Total posts 152
This is the correct answer.
23 Oct 2014
Total posts 239
Qantas has been charging more than this for years on FF reward seats.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
19 Jun 2017
Total posts 41
Correct, even with the extra charges, the taxes in QF J class are still higher than VA's J. I guess with that in mind, makes them able to do this and still remain competitive.
27 Jan 2016
Total posts 52
Hopefully this means some more redemption inventory opens up, particularly on LA. I was on a flight to Hong Kong 2 weeks ago and there were only 7 other people in J on the outbound with no redemption seats
27 Aug 2018
Total posts 10
I will be transferring all my virgin points over to Singapore before Jan 1. I will then head back to qantas and I don’t think I’ll look back.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
13 Jul 2012
Total posts 118
If there is anything positive to say about Velocity: unlike many other airline programs it makes it pretty easy to leave.
Qantas - Qantas Frequent Flyer
23 Sep 2017
Total posts 162
Qantas don’t make it easy to redeem interflights on their own metal, especially in premium classes.
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
20 Jan 2016
Total posts 59
I may be a little cynical here. But this reads as though VA are using the opportunity that the SQ transfer devaluation presents. More flyers will keep their points in velocity, and look for any opportunities to use them on VA seats, and in their desperation they will pay this charge.
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
20 Nov 2017
Total posts 113
If you look at VA's profitability (or lack thereof), I'd say it's just a simple decision to try and recover some existing costs which they incur on FF redemptions.
22 Dec 2012
Total posts 35
This is a pretty serious devaluation. An additional $460 on LA flights is a slap in the face, but perhaps irrelevant given the lack of inventory. Leveling carrier charges on domestic flights is a bit of a cynical move from VA.
15 Sep 2012
Total posts 95
As Brian Grey of the original Compass airlines said "We won't have frequent flyer schemes, we'll just save eveybody money by having cheaper fares!" Remember Frequent flyer schemes are set up by the airlines. There has to be something in it for them- they Don't give things away for free!!!! Why bother with cards you can never use
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
03 Oct 2016
Total posts 21
Something that seems overlooked here, status credits and points on Air Canada finally! Hopefully this eventually evolves into a full on partnership.
18 Nov 2017
Total posts 3
Whether reasonable or not, like many others, I am treating this as the last straw. See y'all.
Virgin Australia - Velocity Rewards
03 Oct 2016
Total posts 21
The issue I have with these carrier charges are; while they are somewhat reasonable now, once they exist it will be easy for them to jack the price every time they need to squeeze more money.
18 Oct 2018
Total posts 3
The end of award flights given Qantas price gouging for fees and charges plus zero FF points JQ business tickets without ridiculous bundling.
UA
30 Jun 2015
Total posts 36
Hit VA Platinum this month and will be the last time given this devaluation.
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