There can be lots of value to having airline elite status, though it goes without saying that not all elite levels are created equal. In this post I wanted to take a closer look at British Airways Executive Club Gold Guest List status.
I’ve written about Air France-KLM Flying Blue Ultimate status and Lufthansa Miles & More HON Circle status, and in this post wanted to take a look at the comparable status offered by British Airways. Unlike at the other airlines, Gold Guest List isn’t technically a fully separate elite tier, but rather is a special tier within Gold status. It affords several valuable elite perks, and it’s not easy to earn.
How do you earn British Airways Gold Guest List?
British Airways Executive Club awards elite status based on earning a certain number of Tier Points per membership year. On top of that, to qualify for British Airways Executive Club status, you need to fly at least two or four revenue segments on British Airways or Iberia per membership year.
British Airways Gold status requires earning 1,500 Tier Points per year. Meanwhile Gold Guest List has significantly higher requirements:
- To qualify for Gold Guest List, you need to earn 5,000 Tier Points in a membership year
- To requalify for Gold Guest List, you “only” need to earn 3,000 Tier Points in a membership year
- To qualify for lifetime Gold Guest List, you need to earn 100,000 Tier Points over the course of your account
As you can see, it’s really hard to qualify for Gold Guest List the first time around, as you need more than three times the activity required for Gold status. However, requalifying only requires double the activity of Gold status.
It’s also worth noting that you could qualify for this status primarily through travel on partner airlines, as long as you complete at least four segments per year on British Airways.
How hard are Tier Points to earn? While British Airways doesn’t publish a Tier Points earnings chart, you earn them per segment. You can expect that a business class flight covering a distance of under 2,000 miles will typically earn you 40 Tier Points, while a flight of over 2,000 miles will typically earn you 140 Tier Points.
What are the perks of British Airways Gold Guest List?
What benefits do you receive for having British Airways Executive Club Gold Guest List status, above and beyond the benefits of Gold status (which gets you oneworld Emerald perks)?
- A British Airways Concorde Room card, meaning you can access British Airways’ best lounges, including the British Airways Concorde Room London, the Chelsea Lounge New York, etc.
- The ability to invite one more guest into lounges than you’d otherwise be able to; this means you can guest two people into the Concorde Room when traveling in first class, or one person into the Concorde Room when not traveling in first class
- The ability to have access to more Avios award seats twice per year, for up to five travelers each time; as long as fare classes A (first class), D (business class), T (premium economy), or B (economy) are available if booking with cash, you can redeem Avios for these flights at standard costs
- The ability to gift British Airways Gold status (oneworld Emerald) to a partner, plus the ability to gift British Airways Silver status (oneworld Sapphire) to two others
- Priority boarding on all British Airways flights, with Group 0 (ahead of all other passengers)
- A dedicated phone line that’s supposed to provide an even more elevated level of service
- Hilton Honors Diamond status for as long as you’re a member
- While not published, Gold Guest List members can also expect much better “soft” treatment from staff across the board
- While also not published, there are some reports of Gold Guest List flyers sometimes getting Concierge Key treatment on American flights in the event of irregular operations, but this isn’t consistent
I’ve gotta say, the perks of British Airways Gold Guest List status are really quite robust. I think three benefits stand out most:
- Being able to open up award seats is potentially hugely valuable; for example, being able to snag up to five first class award seats on a flight as long as the “A” fare class is available could save a lot of money
- Getting access to British Airways’ top lounges is also nice; while they’re not my favorite lounges in the world, they’re still way better than what you’d otherwise have access to
- Being able to gift oneworld Emerald to one person and oneworld Sapphire to two people is also cool
How does this status compare to Air France-KLM & Lufthansa?
Between British Airways Gold Guest List, Air France-KLM Ultimate, and Lufthansa HON Circle, I’d argue that the British Airways status might just represent the all-around best value. Now, that says nothing of which airline group I’d prefer to fly, but I think there are several things that make this status stand out:
- While Air France-KLM and Lufthansa primarily make you fly their “group” airlines to earn that status, you can earn Gold Guest List largely through travel on partner airlines, providing lots of flexibility
- If you have Gold Guest List, you can gift status to three different people, which friends and family will appreciate
- Unlike with Air France-KLM and Lufthansa, British Airways offers significantly expanded award availability to Gold Guest List members (though in fairness, with high surcharges, in some cases)
- I’d argue the improved lounge benefit isn’t as good as what you’re getting with Lufthansa (since Lufthansa First Lounges and SWISS First Lounges are better than the Concorde Room), but it’s better than what you get with Air France
What is British Airways Premier status?
It’s worth noting that Gold Guest List isn’t even British Airways’ highest status, as there’s also Premier status. However, this is really, really exclusive, much more so than just about any other elite status out there (including invitation only elite status with other programs).
This is generally only awarded to those who control huge corporate travel accounts worth millions of dollars, so it’s not something to realistically aim for through independent travel.
Bottom line
Gold Guest List is a special level of British Airways Gold status, for those who over qualify. The requirements are very high to qualify in the first place, and are a bit lower to requalify. There’s a lot of value to this status, from access to more award seats, to Concorde Room access, to the ability to gift status to others, to Hilton Honors Diamond status, and more.
In all honesty, it’s a pretty compelling elite tier if you do fly British Airways frequently. Having to essentially double qualify for Gold status to get all these perks isn’t a bad value.
Are any OMAAT readers Gold Guest List members? If so, what has your experience been with the status?