Which aircraft has Virgin Atlantic Upper Class?
A350-1000 (primary, fully equipped with 44 Upper Class seats), A330-900neo (partial rollout, 20 seats, no privacy doors), and 787-9 (on order, first delivery expected late 2026). As of February 2026, the A350-1000 is the only aircraft where Upper Class is reliably available - if your booking is A330-900neo or 787-9, confirm at time of purchase that the aircraft is confirmed, as Virgin Atlantic has been known to swap equipment on lower-demand routes.
Does Virgin Atlantic Upper Class have a sliding privacy door?
Yes, on A350-1000 only. The sliding door is motorized, fully encloses the seat from the aisle, and does not obstruct the view of crew or neighboring passengers - a genuine privacy advantage over BA Club Suite. A330-900neo and 787-9 Upper Class do not yet have privacy doors (February 2026); Virgin Atlantic has not publicly committed to retrofitting them, though internal briefings suggest doors may be added post-certification. If privacy is a deciding factor, book A350-1000 explicitly.
Is Virgin Atlantic Upper Class better than British Airways Club Suite?
Seat-to-seat, Upper Class is slightly superior: the 82-inch bed edges out BA's 79-inch, the A350-1000 cabin is newer and quieter, and the privacy door is a tangible advantage over BA's open-design suite. However, British Airways Club Suite wins overall on consistency (the Collins Super Diamond is now standardized across three cabins and two aircraft), lounge access (Club World Lounges are far more extensive than Virgin's Clubhouse network), and award availability (BA has 76 Club Suite seats on the 777 across a much larger network). For a one-off long-haul trip from London to New York or LA, Upper Class on A350-1000 is more comfortable. For frequent flyers, award hunters, or anyone prioritizing lounge access and reliability, BA Club Suite is the safer, more rewarding choice. Verdict: Upper Class wins on hardware, BA wins on holistic product.
How do I book Virgin Atlantic Upper Class with miles?
Virgin Atlantic Flying Club pricing is 78,000 miles (London - New York off-peak) to 95,000 miles (peak/transatlantic). Award availability is notoriously thin; seats are released 11 months out on A350-1000 routes, but cabin inventory is limited. The strongest value is booking a partner airline - Etihad, Air France-KLM, and other Skyteam/OneWorld partners offer interline awards on Virgin routes, sometimes with better availability. Avoid searching Virgin Atlantic's own site first; instead, check Etihad Guest, Flying Blue (Air France), or Qantas Frequent Flyer for seat inventory before committing your Virgin points.
What is The Loft?
The Loft is a forward cabin lounge exclusive to Upper Class passengers, located at the nose of the A350-1000 behind the cockpit bulkhead. It is a social space with a bar, high-top seating, and a curated selection of beverages and canapés - not a full dining area, but a significant soft-product differentiator. On A330-900neo and 787-9, The Loft concept is scaled down or absent; current Virgin Atlantic communications are vague on whether 787-9 will include a Loft equivalent. If the social experience is important to you, ask at booking whether the aircraft operates a dedicated lounge.
Is the WiFi good?
No. Intelsat is significantly slower than Viasat (operated by some competitors) or Starlink (pending Virgin Atlantic retrofit from 2026). Expect 2 - 4 Mbps on average with frequent dropouts. If you need reliable connectivity, purchase a monthly subscription (Virgin Atlantic offers Monthly Pass for ~£10), but streaming and large file transfers will frustrate. Starlink rollout from 2026 is expected to be complimentary for Upper Class - strongly consider delaying premium transatlantic trips until Starlink is confirmed on your aircraft.
What is the food like?
Virgin Atlantic Upper Class offers a curated à la carte menu (not set service like BA First) with options from luxury food suppliers (e.g., Truffled offerings, partnerships with UK restaurants). The menu rotates seasonally and is genuinely good - not quite BA First standard, but well above typical business class. Breakfast is lighter and à la carte-focused. Bar service is a highlight: the cabin crew are trained on mixology and will create bespoke cocktails on request. However, the soft product is less refined than BA First's hand-stitched leather or polished lacquer tables - Virgin Atlantic prioritizes modernity and playfulness over understatement.