ngajic
Newbie
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2025
- Posts
- 1
I'm reaching out to the community after experiencing what I believe to be a significant failure in Velocity's Family Pooling disclosure process, which has resulted in my unexpected downgrade from Gold to Silver status.
Timeline:
When I set up the Family Pooling feature in late May, I was not adequately informed that Status Credits would be permanently reallocated in a way that would affect my ability to maintain Gold status. The system allowed me to complete the setup without clear warnings about these irreversible consequences.
During my annual status review period, I discovered that due to the Family Pooling configuration, Status Credits of approximately 11000+ AUD worth of flights had been allocated differently than I understood or intended. This resulted in me falling short of the requirements to maintain my Gold status, despite having earned sufficient Status Credits through my actual flying activity.
1. Has anyone else had problems with Family Pooling affecting their Status Credits?
Did you receive clear disclosure about how it would work?
Were you warned about irreversibility?
2. What disclosure did you receive when setting up Family Pooling?
Were there prominent warnings?
Was the impact on Status Credits clearly explained?
Were you shown examples or scenarios?
3. Has anyone successfully resolved similar issues with Velocity?
What approach did you take?
Did you escalate to external dispute resolution?
What was the outcome?
I've been a loyal Velocity member for several years and have genuinely valued the program. This isn't about being vindictive - it's about what I believe to be a legitimate consumer protection issue where inadequate disclosure has resulted in material detriment.
If Velocity's position is truly that once you've set up Family Pooling (even without adequate disclosure of consequences), there's absolutely no remedy regardless of circumstances, then I think that's something the broader frequent flyer community should be aware of and discuss.
I welcome all perspectives, including those who think I might be wrong or missing something. I'm here to learn and hopefully resolve this fairly.
Thank you for reading this lengthy post. Any insights, experiences, or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Timeline:
- 28 May 2025: Set up Family Pooling arrangement through my Velocity account
- 9 October 2025: Received response from Velocity refusing to rectify Status Credit allocation issues
- 14 October 2025: Received notification that my status had been downgraded from Gold to Silver
When I set up the Family Pooling feature in late May, I was not adequately informed that Status Credits would be permanently reallocated in a way that would affect my ability to maintain Gold status. The system allowed me to complete the setup without clear warnings about these irreversible consequences.
During my annual status review period, I discovered that due to the Family Pooling configuration, Status Credits of approximately 11000+ AUD worth of flights had been allocated differently than I understood or intended. This resulted in me falling short of the requirements to maintain my Gold status, despite having earned sufficient Status Credits through my actual flying activity.
Velocity's Response
I have corresponded with Velocity Membership Contact Centre regarding this matter. Their position is:- Family Pooling was set up on 28 May 2025 (confirmed)
- Once Status Credits are allocated, they cannot be reversed or transferred "regardless of how the pooling was originally set up"
- They cite their Terms and Conditions as governing the program
- Their decision is "final and remains unchanged"
My Concerns
As a long-time Velocity member who has actively earned Gold status through genuine flying activity, I find this situation deeply concerning:- Consumer Protection: I believe there are potential issues here under Australian Consumer Law regarding misleading or deceptive conduct and consumer guarantees for services.
- Transparency: A loyalty program should operate with clear, prominent disclosure of material consequences, especially for features that can permanently affect status qualification.
- Fairness: The refusal to rectify what appears to be a disclosure failure, particularly when I earned sufficient Status Credits through flying, seems unreasonable.
- System Responsibility: If Virgin's system allowed members to inadvertently configure Family Pooling in ways that undermine their status qualification without clear warnings, this seems like a design flaw that members shouldn't bear the full consequences of.
Questions for the Community
I'm reaching out because I suspect I may not be alone in experiencing this issue:1. Has anyone else had problems with Family Pooling affecting their Status Credits?
Did you receive clear disclosure about how it would work?
Were you warned about irreversibility?
2. What disclosure did you receive when setting up Family Pooling?
Were there prominent warnings?
Was the impact on Status Credits clearly explained?
Were you shown examples or scenarios?
3. Has anyone successfully resolved similar issues with Velocity?
What approach did you take?
Did you escalate to external dispute resolution?
What was the outcome?
I've been a loyal Velocity member for several years and have genuinely valued the program. This isn't about being vindictive - it's about what I believe to be a legitimate consumer protection issue where inadequate disclosure has resulted in material detriment.
If Velocity's position is truly that once you've set up Family Pooling (even without adequate disclosure of consequences), there's absolutely no remedy regardless of circumstances, then I think that's something the broader frequent flyer community should be aware of and discuss.
I welcome all perspectives, including those who think I might be wrong or missing something. I'm here to learn and hopefully resolve this fairly.
Thank you for reading this lengthy post. Any insights, experiences, or advice would be greatly appreciated.
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