British Airways very rarely offers status matches, but they’re currently offering to match bmi Diamond Club elites with addresses in Belgium, Israel, Ukraine, and the Netherlands — places that bmi is pulling out of servicing.

Even British Airways Silver members get lounge access, including when flying on partners like American. And British Airways Gold members get access to British Airways first class lounges — even when they aren’t flying BA. This saved me one time in Milan, where Alitalia’s Boticelli lounge is one of the worst pits I’ve ever experienced (fortunately they had shower kits; unfortunately there was no hot water and the drain didn’t work and the line to get a coffee was 10 minuts long).

If you have a bmi Gold card, this may be a good opportunity for a year of BA Gold status and BA lounges (provided you are based at or transit a terminal with a dedicated BA lounge) provided you have access to an address in Israel, Belgium, Ukraine, or the Netherlands.

  1. yosithezet said,

    What a circuitous route…

    Used earned TG Gold to get NW Plat.
    Used NW Plat to get BMI Gold.
    Now I can use BMI Gold to get BA Gold and have lounge access while completing an AA Plat Challenge in the second half of 2010.

  2. cc said,

    Yosithezet’s comment would make for a very, very interesting blog writeup. If one can figure out what the easiest program to get some kind of elite status on (hotel or fly program) and then use that easily attainable status to work a circle of achieving top status somewhere else using status match. And roundabout she goes to the top.

  3. Kiwi Flyer said,

    This is a very nice match.

    BA Silver is Oneworld Sapphire status, with much more benefits than bmi Silver (Star Alliance Silver status).

    BA Gold (Oneworld Emerald) is more similar to bmi Gold (Star Alliance Gold).

  4. David said,

    Is anyone considering a virtual move? Any problems in doing this?

  5. yosithezet said,

    The interesting thing is that the AA Platinum is only Oneworld Emerald. If BA Gold gives a soft landing to BA Silver then I’d only need to do the AA Platinum challenge in the second half of 2011.

  6. Baggageinhall said,

    David – the only issue with the virtual move is with any BA branded credit card you may hold.

    If you are currently based in the UK and have a BA Amex credit card, a move to Europe will result in the card being cancelled or at best being suspended.

    cc – one of the easiest ways to get BMI Gold at the moment is to take advantage of TK’s very low companion fares from IST to the far east. Someone on FT worked out that it would cost circa £800 per person (min 2 traveling) to get BMI Gold from nothing.

  7. yosithezet said,

    One request has come in so far for a Virtual Relocation.

  8. Rob Burgess said,

    A BA Gold will get you 2 years of lounge access, not one as you imply at the end, since you’ll get a soft landing to Silver for a year after your year of Gold.

  9. Zabes said,

    Do we get an email at some point with the card transfer form or how do we get that?

  10. yosithezet said,

    The form seems to have disappeared from their website. It is located at http://www.britishairways.com/cms/global/pdfs/promotions/BMItiermatch.pdf

  11. Add A Comment

home | top

View from the Wing is a project of Miles and Points Consulting, LLC. Some links to credit card and other products on this website will earn an affiliate commission, and this website has a financial relationship with several credit card issuing banks. All content unless otherwise noted or quoted is the author's own, and not provided or commissioned by any other entity. Opinions have not been reviewed, approved, endorsed, or likely even edited for typos and grammatical errors by any other entity. Occasionally a travel or other product provider may offer a complimentary item, most often that is the source of giveaways, but the author of this blog may also occasionally benefit from the blog's popularity and your travel experiences may differ This site is for entertainment purpose only. The owner of this site is not an investment advisor, financial planner, nor legal or tax professional and articles here are of an opinion and general nature and should not be relied upon for individual circumstances.

DISCLAIMER: This content is not provided or commissioned by American Express. Opinions expressed here are author's alone, not those of American Express, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by American Express. This site may be compensated through American Express Affiliate Program.