
If British Airways Avios plays a role in your points strategy — especially if you earn points through RBC Avion or American Express Membership Rewards — a recent change is worth understanding.
As of December 15, 2025, British Airways has officially increased the cost of reward flights booked through British Airways Club, impacting both the number of Avios required and the cash portion of award tickets.
Read on to learn more!

British Airways confirmed that award pricing across its network has increased due to rising UK Air Passenger Duty (APD), third-party charges, inflation, and broader market conditions.
Now that the new pricing has settled in, here’s what travellers are seeing in practice:
On top of higher Avios costs, the cash component of award tickets has also gone up:
While these cash increases may seem modest on paper, they add up quickly — especially on itineraries that already carried high surcharges.

For Canadian travellers, British Airways redemptions have long been a mixed bag.
Even before this change, booking British Airways–operated flights with Avios often meant:
With higher Avios requirements now layered on top, the value proposition of redeeming Avios directly on British Airways has weakened further, particularly for long-haul travel.

Here’s the good news — and it’s a big one.
👉 This devaluation only applies to flights operated by British Airways itself.
Avios remains a shared currency, and once your points are in British Airways Club, you can still transfer them 1:1 to several partner programs where pricing and fees are often far more attractive.
Popular Avios partner programs include:
These programs frequently offer:
In many cases, transferring Avios onward to a partner program continues to deliver significantly better value than redeeming directly through British Airways.

While no one enjoys a devaluation, British Airways deserves some credit for how this one was handled.
Rather than framing the changes as a “benefit” or blaming customer feedback, the airline clearly stated:
In a loyalty landscape where devaluations are often vague or disguised, this level of transparency is — unfortunately — still the exception.

If you earn RBC Avion or Amex Membership Rewards, Avios can still play a role in your strategy but it’s no longer a “set it and forget it” option.
Avios still makes sense if:
You may want to rethink Avios if:

The British Airways Avios devaluation is now in the rearview mirror but its impact is here to stay.
Award flights on British Airways now cost more Avios and more cash, making direct BA redemptions less competitive than ever. That said, Avios remains a flexible currency for Canadians who know how to use it, especially when partner airlines are part of the plan.
As always, the strongest points strategies aren’t about loyalty to one program — they’re about flexibility, awareness, and knowing when to pivot.
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