Confused Around Velocity Platinum Requalification – Review Date vs Membership Year
Hi all,
I’m hoping to get some community insight or shared experiences here.
I’m currently a Velocity Platinum member with a review date of 4 October 2025. I’ve already earned 1,685 Status Credits, including more than enough eligible sectors, and assumed I had requalified under the pre-1 Oct 2025 rules (800 SCs + 4 sectors).
However, Virgin has advised me (in writing) that because my review date is after 1 Oct 2025, I’m being assessed under the new rules, which require at least 50% of SCs from VA marketed/operated flights. I only have ~250 from VA flights so far, so they’re now saying I need another 150 VA SCs to retain Platinum.
This feels unfair and inconsistent with the original policy wording, which I interpreted (like many others) to mean the new rule applies to membership years starting from 1 Oct 2025, not ones already underway.
Has anyone had success pushing back? Or is this happening to others as well?
Appreciate any thoughts or if anyone has escalated further.
Anyone earning 1685 status credits is unlikely to be doing that only in economy class, and the non-VA flying suggests high intl frequency.
With the above assumptions, and applying the VA logic of 'we only want high spending domestic travellers'.
I'd probably drop Velocity and stop flying VA.
Look for a program that better suits your needs.
At 1,685 status credits - this type of flying is likely top-tier in any other airline program.
Ironically for VA - someone flying biz class intl/with partners - these are the perfect secondary customer.
No lounge cross charging (no cost), and airline rakes in accrual, interline and maybe some credit card points from you (income).
Perhaps more importantly, retaining you into the program is revenue protection to VA and it's partners, because, if you switch to another brand/FFP, VA is essentially giving free high margain money to their competitors.
There is zero downside to VA and all upside to the airline by keeping you as Plat in the above scenario.
There is also strong commercial argument to suggest that anyone doing over, say, 1500 status credits, shouldn't need any VA flying.
I sometimes wonder if VA forget that they are a very small domestic airline, in a country where status-holding Australians fly internationally more than any other country on earth.
Side note: VERY few airlines globally have policies for minimum segments, and of those that do, many don't enforce them.