Review: British Airways Business Class, Austin – London Heathrow

British Airways business class from Austin to London Heathrow was the first flight on my trip to Abu Dhabi, Dubai and London, inspired by first class award space on Etihad’s Airbus A380 for my family.

I’ve taken this flight many times, either because BA was running a sale stackable with the AARP and Chase discounts (and upgraded to first class with Avios, back when they ran a Boeing 777 on the route) or because I’ve been willing to pay fuel surcharges for their new business class in order to fly non-stop with my young daughter.

BA operates its Airbus A350 on the Austin – London route, which guarantees their new business class. It’s a solid option, taking the off-the-shelf Super Diamond seat (which American Airlines uses) with some bespoke touches and adds doors. Food and service are always lackluster, and they’ve never once boarded the aircraft on time when I’ve been flying it, but they’ve also never been really late (other than delays circling Heathrow). It gets the job done.

We arrived at the airport almost two hours prior to departure. The airport was packed on this Sunday evening. Though a couple of folks were ahead of us in business class check-in, we were processed quickly and passed through PreCheck without a hitch. The line for CLEAR was too long and so we just skipped it.

Since it was cold and rainy, we skipped the Chase Sapphire Terrace which is down by gate 1 where the BA flight was departing from, and headed over the Admirals Club twenty gates away from it.

I love the staff at the Austin Admirals Club. However, I never see the folks who work the evening shift. That alone was worth dropping in for.

Fortunately, while the lounge gets busy before the BA flight, it wasn’t nearly as bad as it’s been at times. There’s nothing special about the lounge itself, and the new Austin lounge has been put off. Food is ‘improved’ but not really.

British Airways business class passengers used to have complimentary access to paid food and premium beverages, but that’s no longer the case either.

Staff give passengers a heads up about boarding for the BA flight in the lounge, since it’s a good ten minute walk. But they go off of whether the flight shows as on time, which this one did. We headed down to the gate for the start of boarding. When we got there we learned that the crew was late.

I never pressed for why the crew was delayed. Maybe their shuttle picked them up late. They had laid over in Austin – they weren’t coming in off of another delayed flight. But we had to wait for them to turn up before we could board the aircraft.

Once on board you’re confronted with the beautiful seat in a dense cabin configuration. There are 11 rows of business class (44 seats) in the forward cabin, and another 3 rows in a mini-cabin behind that. (There are also 56 premium economy seats and 219 economy.)

Normally I’d like the smaller mini-cabin, but it’s farther back in the aircraft. So my actual preference on the A350 is to sit at the very front of the cabin. That way I’m not looking at very many other passengers. My preferred row is 1, even though it means cabin traffic past me. First, because looking forward I don’t see the sea of people behind me. Second, because there’s more space at the bulkhead for placing items during the flight or when standing up.

On this flight we were in row 2, since there weren’t 3 seats available in row 1. On our return we’d be together in row 1.

Once you’re not looking at the dense cabin, and just looking at your own seat, I find BA’s new hard product to be excellent. It’s a good seat that I’ve always enjoyed from each airline that’s offered it, and that addition of doors as a sense of privacy (even if not actual privacy, they are not tall doors) where you won’t see people around you while in bed mode. And the aesthetics of the seat are very nice, as well.

You aren’t permitted to store your personal item or laptop bag at your feet in these suites, but there are several small areas of storage which is great. I just wish one was large enough for a laptop. Then I could get out everything I’d need for the flight at the outset, place my laptop bag in the overhead bin, and not need access to it again until preparing for landing at Heathrow.

Settling into my seat I moved bedding up into the overhead bin, and had a look at the amenity kit. BA actually does a nice job with its business class bedding and its amenity, both with a nice bag and with the contents.

Predeparture beverages were offered (I had water) and menus were distributed.

Only 3 bottles of champagne for predeparture service in a massive business cabin. They ran out, even rationing shot glasses’ worth of champagne for each passenger. And they had to tell customers who were asking for some that they weren’t permitted to open more bottles on the ground. Tthey would have to pay taxes on the bottles if they did.

I noted that the menu on this flight was quite similar to the menu on the BA Austin – London flight I’d taken six months earlier, and surprisingly similar to one from a year before that. Still, the food is fine and if there’s anything wrong it’s that service takes so long for an overnight flight.

Once in the air, packaged nuts were distributed along with a beverage of choice. I had another water. The nut mix just comes off as cheap when it’s served in a package, rather than warmed and in a ramekin. The nuts, while fine, aren’t nearly as good as what BA used to offer before the pandemic. Their candied cashews were amazing.

I paid GBP17.99 for full flight inflight wifi, but it was largely non-functional for most of the flight. Fortunately I didn’t need to get a lot done on this Sunday night overnight, since the connection would drop frequently, often lasting no more than 30 seconds at a time. On the return trip it worked near-flawlessly.

Dinner was actually pretty good. The salmon I ordered was overcooked but the sauce quite tasty. And the chocolate fondant dessert was fantastic. The pea soup was underseasoned and a disappointment, which was surprising since soups are one of the easiest things to get right on a plane.

It was 3 hours into the flight though before I was served dessert. I never got a drink refill or a change of drink for a later course, and never got a second piece of bread. Once the marathon meal service was over, lights in the cabin were turned off.

I had a quick visit to the ‘Club Kitchen’ where snacks were offered just to have a look at what was being provided (really just chips, nuts, and fruit).

The stop at Club Kitchen was on the way to the lavatory to change into a pair of American Airlines first class pajamas I’d brought with me. Then once back at my seat I made my bed.

I realize this is ‘just business class’ and ‘only’ a 9 hour flight but pajamas and turndown service would go a long way to making the experience feel special. With 56 business class passengers, turndown would be a heavy lift for the median BA crew, and pajamas would be an expense for an airline that is allergic to most expense.

I slept for around 2.5 hours and had about that long left in the flight when I got up. The meal service was too long for a good night’s rest, and it’s not because there are many courses. They just don’t have the galley setup to heat meals quickly enough, or the staffing to get them out quickly to the full cabin. I asked about another bottle of water but was told they’d run out.

A couple of hours out they began serving breakfast. The fruit wasn’t ripe. Much of it was hard. The croissant was stale and not warm. And the chorizo and egg sandwich lackluster. I know that most American and European airlines give short shrift to second service, and to breakfast in particular, but it was disappointing enough that I ate a couple of bites of fruit and one each of the croissant and egg sandwich and called it a meal.

While we made up quite a bit of time in the air on the way to London, and despite a short departure delay had actually been projected to land around 20 minutes early, we circled for awhile and wound up landing around 20 minutes late. That was no big deal, because I had a 3 hour 50 minute connection. Though most of that would be eaten up by the monstrosity of changing terminals at London Heathrow.

It started when we arrived at a hard stand (bus gate), so we deplaned down stairs and boarded a bus to terminal 5.

British Airways business class is very serviceable. The new seat (which won’t be completely installed in their fleet until 2026, despite already being four years into the roll-out) is quite good. The bedding and amenity kits are good. Their main meals are ok, snacks chintzy, and breakfast worth skipping.

Cabin crew are friendly enough, though a bit overwhelmed in the Airbus A350 in particular. I don’t really fault them for it. The dense cabin setup that British Airways adopted, to squeeze in more seats, takes space from the galley and doesn’t give much room to store food or for crew to work in.

They ask passengers not to use the forward lavatories during meal service but even still passengers have to walk through their work area to reach the bathroom, and to cross from one side of the aircraft aisle to the other. BA crews vary tremendously in their attitude and effort, but even the best crews are hobbled in their ability to excel providing service on this aircraft.

Still, I was perfectly happy with my British Airways business class hop across the Atlantic. And it positioned me in a single flight for what I was really excited about: my Etihad first class apartment trip from London to Abu Dhabi, coming up next.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. @ Gary — Just flew same aircraft to LHR. Seats are great, galley and bathroom configuration is just plain stupid. The service could have been much better if not for BA’s poor design. The food was horrible.

  2. Sounds like you were happy with your British Airways business class hop because you have lowered your expectations.

  3. If someone has time, I’d prefer a daytime flight to LHR. So instead of

    BA190 AUS-LHR 7:00 pm – 10:10 am +1, I’d prefer

    AA 1405 AUS-JFK 4:54 pm – 9:25 pm then overnight at the TWA Hotel by Terminal 5, then
    BA178 JFK-LHR 8:05 am – 7:50 pm. The TWA Hotel has a lie flat bed with no noise or motion. One is essentially trading less sleep, 3/4 day in London for better sleep and less jet lag. I’d even prefer economy class on BA178 to business class on the non-stop.

  4. Recently flew a long flight LAX-LHR in Y+ and was shocked at how dense the configuration is in the back as well. There’s literally no place for passengers in Y/Y+ to cross over other than all the way at the back. Probably the first configuration I’ve been on with so many seats in the back that doesn’t have a mid cabin galley.

  5. Hard to value your review as worthy when you end it with being “perfectly happy” as there were numerous shortcomings for a true business class experiences. Perhaps you should have said “Somewhat satisfied” of receiving a general lackluster business class trip. The food pix were not appetizing to me at all. I would have rated the flight about a 5 or 6.

  6. @ Todikaois — Indeed. The flight only gets a 5 or 6 from me because the seat was good and I had plenty of water. I should have just skipped the meal in its entirety. Truly awful food.

  7. Thank you for the thorough review on this, Gary! I will be flying the same aircraft from LHR to PHX next month in paid J (got a great deal and glad I did given what I read just now). Interesting to see how AA does better on many comparable elements (aka warmed nuts in a ramekin and plentiful water)… Excited to try the A350 for the first time but after seeing your experience and reading similar reviews, I’ve tampered my expectations. Nevertheless, I’m excited and grateful that I’ll be in Club World for the first time. With that, it will be interesting to see how this experience compares to my AA flight from MIA to CDG the week prior.

  8. @Gene, awful food? I once flew to London in business class and slept the entire trip. I told the flight attendant that I intended to skip dinner unless I was fully awake and eyes open. That was because I would be in the UK for about 26 hours.

    Gary is not alone. I routinely bring my own pajamas on red eye flights or at least very loose clothes.

    In a way, I like the old Club World seats in a 777, particularly the rear facing window seat that is like a cabin with doors.

  9. The contrast with the British Airways A350-1000 is Virgin Atlantic’s. VS has all of their business class forward of the second doors and has a fairly sizable premium economy cabin but has much larger galleys and 2 more lavs forward of the premium economy cabin – which means that business class and premium economy passengers share the lavs at door 2 while the lavs at the front are available only to business class passengers. DL has a similar setup on its A350-900s and many of its international aircraft. There need to be lavs in both directions esp. for premium cabin passengers and passengers should never be told to stay out of the aisle or lavs during service. The lav situation in economy is better on BA than it is premium cabins.
    It is hard to understand how BA managed to create such a bad configuration for its most efficient aircraft which will take an increasing role in their fleet.

  10. @tim
    Cute. But the contrast between BA and VS in Aus-lhr is done. Virgin lost. If Virgin thought their a35k was the savior for yields vs BA in Austin, a OneWorld stronghold… they had their shot. VS knew it wouldn’t help. Facts show VS knows they can’t compete.

    While we all always appreciate your delta fixation and spin; try harder. This one was a bit sad, even for you.

    Delta does so many things well. You don’t have to make up excuses for VS failures for no reason based on bad DL investments.

  11. I flew BA Business a few months ago from Nashville-Nairobi. Same menu, same everything. I think they specialize in stale croissants. Doubt that I will do that again since the mileage rates have risen so high since everyone has refigured their mileage programs.. What I could do with 120,000 now costs 350,000 and with the high British taxes, it just isn’t worth it. Have to figure out something different.

  12. Derek-

    Agree completely on the daytime flights. They’re my secret weapon for happy trips to London. Fly JFK or BOS (BA) or ORD (AA) and I’m much happier.

  13. holy cow, Max, are you really that dense or do you just want to argue?

    Do you honestly think BA only flies their 35Ks only fly to AUS? Get back w/ us while you deal w/ that issue.

    Virgin Atlantic has just done a far better job of configuring the same model of aircraft that BA is flying, VS has been using the 35K a whole lot longer, and they do a better job in the premium cabins than the same class as BA.

  14. I manage my expectations with BA. I did prefer the B787 when they had it on this route.
    That said it still bothers me that they charge a ridiculous amount for seat selection even when using USD to travel

  15. We flew the 777-200ER from EWR-LHR last month and it was surprisingly good. It was helped by our minicabin window seats being in rows 5-6-7 just behind the 2 rows of F and ahead of door 2 where everyone boarded. Food was tasty and cabin was nice and quiet.

  16. Flown this route several times. I’m the odd man out that I like the old seats better that didn’t have a footwell. Easier to flip and turn around on while sleeping.

  17. How much did BA pay you for this biased spin?

    In the detail everything was mediocre to outright bad (have to pay fuel surcharges, bad lounge announcement, late crew, not enough Champagne, interminable meal service of 3 hours, overcooked food, miserable snacks, inedible breakfast, super-expensive Wi-Fi that didn’t work, etc. etc.), but you whitewash the tone and spin the summary (this cr@p is “serviceable”??)

    Basically, your reviews are not dependable.

    P.S. or is it just Stockholm syndrome of having bought 7 million miles on the worst major airline in America?

  18. @Jake – pay me??? As you observe I lay out all of my criticisms of the BA business class experience. I can assure you that folks at Waterside will not be positive about this. I think the deficiencies and the positives about the experience as clear here.

  19. Nice review. Thanks. My sister lives in the Austin area (Georgetown) and I’ve recommended this route for her but she is heavy into AA miles and the YQ is hard to swallow at times.

  20. The simple fact is that BA remains overpriced, lo-service (now with a little lipstick) but it remains an uncompetitive pig! Eg which other major carrier routinely runs out of meal options in premium cabins yet offers no preordering?
    And all that’s before their unreliable, dysfunction IT, only Southwest comes close to the scale of failure. I won’t mention the absence of functional customer service channels that respond in hours not months.

    A British obal fkyer, embarrassed by what is now just a multinational just harvesting cash from inherited brand and slot dominance. BA, once a high performance organisation has been hollowed out, stripped of many assets and now fails it’s customers daily.

  21. We flew this flight AUS-LHR in October and the service was also REALLY S-L-O-W!!!!!! I was hoping it was a fluke and wasn’t always like that. We were also about three hours in before they came around with dessert. I asked for a nightcap, a double and 30 minutes later she came back with a Scotch but not a double. They really do need to do something about the speed of the service on this route.

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