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Expert yields, status mapping and premium reviews.

14
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The Platform

Everything you need to fly smarter

Avios Intelligence brings together calculators, maps, guides and reviews — built specifically for Oneworld frequent flyers who want to make every flight count.

The Basics

What are Avios — and why do they matter?

Avios is the reward currency of the Oneworld alliance — shared by British Airways Executive Club, Iberia Plus, Qatar Airways Privilege Club, Aer Lingus AerClub and a dozen other partners. You accumulate them by flying, spending on travel credit cards, staying in hotels, or shopping with hundreds of retail partners.

What makes Avios unusually powerful is zone-based pricing. Unlike most programmes that price awards by distance, Avios groups destinations into zones — so a 1,500-mile flight in the same zone as a 500-mile flight costs exactly the same number of points. The trick is knowing which routes sit at the cheap end of each zone boundary.

The second dimension is yield: not just how many Avios you get, but how many you earn per pound or dollar spent on the ticket. A heavily discounted economy fare might yield only 0.3 Avios per mile; a full-fare business class ticket on the same route can yield 3×. Our calculator shows you both numbers instantly.

14
Oneworld loyalty programmes supported in our calculator
Zones
BA & QR both use zone maps — not pure distance — for award pricing
Yield
Avios earned per mile flown, weighted by fare class and cabin
TPs
Tier Points — separate from Avios, they determine your elite status level

How it works

Using the tools

Avios Calculator — how to use it

1
Pick your programme

Select the loyalty programme you earn miles in — BA Executive Club, Qatar Privilege Club, Finnair Plus, etc. The calculator uses that programme's exact earning rates.

2
Enter route & cabin

Type airport codes (e.g. LHR → JFK) or city names. Then choose your cabin class: Economy, Premium Economy, Business or First. The fare class within a cabin can halve or double your earnings.

3
Read the results

You'll see Avios earned, Tier Points, route distance, and a yield rating. The yield card tells you whether this flight is a good earner — use it to compare routes before booking.

Open Calculator

Status Run Generator — how to use it

1
What is a status run?

A status run is a flight taken primarily to earn the Tier Points needed for — or to retain — elite status. For example, if you need 400 more TPs before your BA year ends, a targeted return trip is far cheaper than booking at random.

2
Enter your home hub & target tier

Tell the generator your nearest hub airport and how many Tier Points you still need. It then calculates return trips across multiple routes to find the most efficient options.

3
Compare routes by TPs per £

Results show Tier Points per £ spent — a higher ratio means you're getting more status credit for your money. Filter by cabin class to see how upgrading to Business affects the math.

Plan my Status Run

Latest Intelligence

From the Reports

About

Built with care

Avios Intelligence is built by Oneworld frequent flyers for Oneworld frequent flyers. Every tool on this site exists to solve real problems we ran into when optimising our own travel.

About The Project

Markus

Markus, Founder

Avios Intelligence was born out of a practical challenge in March 2026. When my partner struggled to calculate Avios yields for a British Airways business class flight while being a Finnair Plus member, I realised that existing online tools lacked the precision and "arbitrage" perspective that elite flyers demand. As a member of the Qatar Airways Privilege Club, I felt a drive to build a tool that simplified complex loyalty mathematics for everyone.

My passion for aviation is in my DNA. I am a child of the 80s and 90s, born into a family with deep industry roots. My late grandfather was a pioneer for Lufthansa, establishing their South American technical stations in the mid-20th century. While Lufthansa always felt like a monolithic "cult" in my childhood, it cemented my destiny as a travel enthusiast and aviation geek.

In the last two and a half years alone, I have logged over 260,000 miles—a distance slightly greater than a one-way trip to the moon. This frequent travel is driven by a search for the best global deals and superior cabin products. While I pride myself on being an objective critic, you will notice my preference for the world-class service standards of Japan Airlines and Qatar Airways.

Today, I am a dedicated Oneworld loyalist, having moved away from the Lufthansa group in pursuit of higher premium standards. Avios Intelligence is a passion project built on the philosophy that "sharing is caring." Whether you are a status chaser or a casual traveller, I hope these tools bring clarity to your next journey.

M
Mission: Critical Strategic Clarity

Comprehensive Privacy Policy

Last Updated & Effective: March 30, 2026

Welcome to the Avios Intelligence Project ("we," "us," or "our"). We are committed to protecting your personal data and respecting your privacy. This comprehensive policy explains how we collect, process, and safeguard your information when you use our website, the Yield Engine, the Tier Planner, our community features, and our newsletter.

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Under the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and applicable data protection laws, the data controller responsible for your personal information is:

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We believe in absolute transparency. The table below outlines exactly what data we collect, why we collect it, the legal basis under the GDPR, and how long we retain it.

Data Category Purpose of Processing Legal Basis (GDPR) Retention Period
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Our core tools, the Yield Engine and the Tier Planner, are designed with a "privacy-first" architecture. We utilize advanced client-side Vanilla JS and the Haversine formula to perform complex distance-based earning calculations ("Partner Hacks") directly within your browser. This means that the majority of your route planning data requires zero server load and is never transmitted to or stored on our servers. When we do intercept live flight APIs to calculate real-time pricing, we transmit only anonymous routing parameters (e.g., LHR-JFK), never your personally identifiable information (PII).

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Terms & Disclaimer

Legal Warning

Avios Intelligence is an independent analytical tool. By using this site, you agree that you are responsible for verifying all data directly with airlines before booking.

1. No Professional Advice

The calculations provided by the Yield Engine and Status Run Generator are mathematical estimates based on distance (Haversine formula) and historical earning tables. These do not constitute financial or travel advice. Final Avios and Tier Point credit is determined solely by the operating airline.

2. Non-Affiliation

Avios Intelligence is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by International Airlines Group (IAG), British Airways, Qatar Airways, Oneworld Alliance, or any other carrier mentioned. All brand names and logos are trademarks of their respective owners, used here under descriptive fair use.

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These terms are governed by the laws of the Republic of Cyprus. Any disputes shall be settled in the courts of Limassol.

Imprint & Legal

Avios Intelligence Project, 13 Stavrou Stylianidi, 3100 Limassol, Cyprus

Founder & Legal Representative:

Email: cooperation@aviosintelligence.com

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← Back to Reports

Doha ↔ Tokyo in Qatar Economy: Eleven Hours, a Blocked Seat, and Still Treated Like Royalty

By Markus N.
Qatar Airways Economy Class cabin on the Doha to Tokyo Narita route

Doha ↔ Tokyo in Qatar Economy:
Eleven Hours, and Still Treated Like Royalty

"A blocked bulkhead seat, two meal services through a typhoon, and a purser who knew my name. This is Economy done the way the West forgot how to do it."

Eleven hours in Economy is a sentence most points collectors try to buy their way out of. This time I did not — and I came away convinced that Qatar Airways flies one of the few Economy cabins in the world where status, seat strategy and genuinely good service combine into something I would happily repeat. Doha to Tokyo Narita and back, at the back of the aircraft, through a typhoon season that kept the seatbelt sign on for most of the way. Here is how it actually went.

A quick note on timing: with the situation in the Middle East still not fully resolved, these flights were not selling out. Empty seats are a gift to anyone who knows how to read a seat map, and I intended to use that.

That same unresolved conflict explains the aircraft I was sitting in. The long-haul to Tokyo is currently operated by the Boeing 777-300ER — not the newer Airbus A350-1000 you might expect on an eleven-hour sector. As I understand it, the A350-1000s have been quietly tucked away in long-term storage at Teruel Airport, the semi-arid plateau in Spain’s Aragón region where Tarmac Aerosave runs Europe’s largest aircraft preservation centre and boneyard. The dry air and low humidity there slow the corrosion that eats stored airframes, which is exactly why airlines park the jets they want to keep pristine. The logic behind the swap is brutally actuarial: with the war with Iran ongoing, the insurance and risk premium on flying the newest, most expensive aircraft through contested airspace simply does not add up, so the older, already-depreciated 777s draw the short straw. The romance of the route map, as ever, bows to the spreadsheet.

1. Why Economy, and Why It Worked

Status changes the calculation. As a Privilege Club member I was not boarding as an anonymous seat number, and on a half-full long-haul that advantage compounds. The plan was simple: pick the best seats in the cabin, pay the small premium to block the seat next to me where it mattered, and let the empty load factor do the rest. On a full flight none of this works. On these flights, it worked beautifully.

So no, I did not need a lie-flat bed to get from Doha to Tokyo in comfort. I needed a good seat, a light cabin, and a crew that treats the back of the plane like it still matters. I got all three.

2. The Seat Lottery I Actually Won

Qatar Airways Economy rear bulkhead seat to Tokyo Extra legroom front-row Economy seat on the return from Narita

Outbound, I headed for the very back. On the 777-300ER the standard ten-abreast 3-4-3 wall of Economy tapers at the rear bulkhead into a tidy 2-4-2 mini-cabin, and I took one of the pairs and paid to block the seat beside me. The result was, in practical terms, my own little two-seat row for eleven hours — the closest thing to Premium Economy that an Economy ticket and a bit of cunning can buy.

On the return I went the other way and secured the front row on the left side, with the seat next to me blocked again. The foot space there was enormous — the kind of bulkhead legroom you stretch into and forget you are in Economy at all. Two flights, two completely different seat strategies, both of which turned a long haul into something I genuinely did not dread.

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3. Eleven Hours, Two Meals, and a Typhoon

Qatar Airways Economy meal service to Tokyo Second Economy meal service on the Doha to Narita flight

East Asia in storm season is not a smooth ride. For more than half of the flight the seatbelt sign was on, with the bumps you would expect when there is a typhoon somewhere off the coast and the weather is generally in a foul mood. What impressed me was that the crew never used the turbulence as an excuse to disappear. There were two full meal services each way, and between them a steady, almost relentless stream of drinks runs whenever the air smoothed out enough to stand up.

The food itself was the one genuinely mixed note. It swung between slightly bland and slightly too salty, never quite landing in the middle. But let me put that in context: even on an off day, this was more than good, and it remains comfortably better than what I am routinely served in Economy by European or US carriers. Qatar’s floor is higher than most airlines’ ceiling.

4. Treated Like an Arabic Prince

Qatar Airways cabin crew service in Economy

Here is the part that genuinely surprised me, because it happened in Economy, not up front. As a Privilege Club status member I was greeted by name — first by a flight attendant, then by the purser, who made a point of coming back through the cabin to check on me. There was extra care throughout: little anticipations, an unprompted top-up, the sense of being recognised rather than processed. Eleven hours passed, and at no point did I feel like cargo. I felt, to borrow my own running joke from the trip, like an Arabic prince who had simply chosen to sit in the back.

That is the thing European and American carriers still do not understand about loyalty: recognition is almost free, and it buys more goodwill than any amount of extra legroom. Qatar gets it, and they deliver it where it costs them the least and means the most.

5. The Sakura Lounge Detour at Narita

The legendary JAL beef curry in the Sakura Lounge at Tokyo Narita

Non-negotiable: if you did not eat the JAL beef curry, you were never really in the Sakura Lounge.

On the way home, status opened one more door — the JAL Sakura Lounge at Narita, courtesy of the Oneworld relationship. I always make a beeline for it, and not only for the space, although the sheer scale of the place is a luxury in itself. There is the self-pouring beer machine that dispenses a perfect draft, a list of decent and refreshingly un-extortionate wines, and food that punches well above what a Business Class lounge is obliged to offer.

Sakura Lounge dining spread at Narita Sakura Lounge seating and self-serve bar at NRT

And the beef curry. I will not relitigate this: if you have not had the JAL beef curry, you have not actually been to the Sakura Lounge. It is the single most reliable plate of food in any lounge I visit. They do not pour Champagne in this Business Class lounge — instead there is a perfectly decent Cuné Cava — and honestly, I prefer a good Spanish Cava most of the time anyway, so no complaints from me. It was the ideal full stop before the long flight back to Doha.

🎟️ Make the layover count

Turn a connection into a trip. Book skip-the-line attractions, rail passes and tours before you arrive.

 

The Verdict: The Best Economy Long-Haul I Can Remember

Qatar Economy to Tokyo will not give you a flat bed or Champagne, and the catering can be a little hit-and-miss. But pair a lightly loaded cabin with a smart seat choice — the rear 2-4-2 bulkhead outbound, the front-row legroom on the way back, the neighbouring seat blocked both times — and you have a long-haul that I actively enjoyed rather than endured.

Add Privilege Club status, with the by-name welcome and the genuine extra care that came with it, and a Sakura Lounge stop at Narita to bookend the trip, and this becomes the rare Economy ticket I would recommend without an asterisk. If the maths does not justify the cabin up front, do not despair: in the back of a Qatar widebody, eleven hours can pass like a privilege.

Trip report by Avios Intelligence — © 2026 Avios Intelligence.

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