Showing posts with label miles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miles. Show all posts

6.30.2017

collecting airline miles | worth it?



Do you collect credit cards to collect airline miles? Or, to put the question another way, why am I still bothering with airline miles?

I remember the good old days, back in the 1980's. I believe American Airlines began the trend with its AAdvantage mileage program. You earned one airline mile per mile spent. Once you earned enough miles, you could trade them in on a free flight. Later on, the airlines issued branded credit cards, giving you one mile per $1 spent on that card. Of course, the bank paid the airline for those miles, the purchase price being a fraction of the 3% merchants fee that was paid to the credit card company.

Living in Northern New Jersey at the time, I mostly flew out of Newark, and Continental was my airline of choice. I had one of the earliest Continental frequent flyer accounts (my account number begins with "AB") and a Continental MasterCard. I put all my charges on the MasterCard and ended up with a decent number of miles. I could go to my travel agent, book the lowest coach fare on any Continental flight I wanted, and use 5,000 miles to upgrade to First Class. Roundtrip. Every time!

No more! Miles have become hard to use. The airlines only make a few seats available for free tickets or upgrades on a select few flights. You can possibly be successful in scoring free seats by checking as soon as availability for those flights is loaded onto the airline's website, typically 330 days before.

Example: you want to fly non-stop in First Class from San Francisco to Atlanta on Delta on May 27, 2018. Here's what's available:
6:30 a.m. flight — two saver seats (30,000 miles each way)
8:15 a.m. flight — seats are 70,000 miles each way
11:30 a.m. flight — seats are 70,000 miles each way
1:45 p.m. flight — three seats at 59,000 miles each way
3 p.m. flight — saver seats available (30,000 miles each way)
11:15 p.m. flight — saver seats available (35,000 miles each way)
Mileage "hobbyists" take advantage of the fact that you can sometimes find very last-minute availability on odd flights. I follow the award-flight adventures of my friend Ben Schlappig on his blog, One Mile at a Time. Ben collects tens of thousands of miles through credit card sign-up bonuses and spends them on seemingly random flights, whatever the award-seat gods make available last minute. His travels are based on what happens to become available, not on where he actually wants to go. For Ben, the journey is indeed the destination.

Like most of us whose travels are based on a bucket lists (or business travel), and timed around practical niceties such as when I can take time off of work, I'm finding my collection of miles to be virtually useless. The airline mileage industry is like a ponzi scheme whose usefulness has run out. There are just too many miles out there chasing too few seats. With that in mind, here's my advice on what to look for:

(1) Discounted premium class fares. The airlines have come to the realization that it's more lucrative to sell a business class seat at a discount than give it away as an upgrade. I've found that fares have become more reasonable.

(2) Tour packages that bundle discounted "bulk" fares with another component of your trip. For example, I recently saved a client thousands of dollars per business class seat by combining a bulk fare with a cheap "throw-away" hotel room. You can even find a hotel room you'd actually want to stay in.

(3) Credit cards that offer "cash back" or "flexible points" that you can use towards airline seats. Some cards even have a multiplier effect for some categories of spending and/or when points are used toward flights booked by the credit card company's travel agency partner.

copyright (c) 2017 by Ourisman Travel LLC. All rights reserved. We provide Virtuoso and other Preferred Partner amenities as an affiliate of Brownell, a Virtuoso® Member. If you have comments on this column, or questions about booking travel, email me or visit my website.

9.05.2008

what is the best credit card for travel?

If you travel a lot, you've doubtless thought about this question. What is the best credit card for travel? I can't give the definitive answer to that question because every traveler has different priorities, but here are some thoughts about the question.

What is your priority? Do you want miles, perks, or zero fees?

If you want to collect airline miles, there are two ways to go. Do you fly one airline predominately? When you use a credit card affiliated with that airline's frequent flyer program, every dollar you spend earns you one mile on that airline. You can [try to] use those miles for upgrades or free flights.

Some airlines offer additional perks with their branded credit cards. Alaska Airlines, for instance, offers a yearly $50 companion fare coupon that is a good deal. You can even get the companion fare when flying first class, and there are no blackout dates.

Want to use your miles on a variety of different airlines? With American Express and Diners Club cards, your miles accumulate over the years (they never expire), and you can transfer them to a variety of different frequent flyer programs. Potential drawback: both companies now charge you to transfer miles to your frequent flyer accounts.

Would you rather go for perks? Consider either an American Express Platinum card or a World Elite MasterCard (which is the official card of Virtuoso). The AMEX Platinum is expensive, $475 a year as I recall, but it gets you into airport lounges for Continental, Delta, Northwest, and American Airlines on your day of travel when using those carriers.

World Elite MasterCard, which you can obtain with no annual charge, provides you with a Priority Club membership. Show your card and get into participating airport lounges for $25. You know how often you fly; do the math! Both cards also offer an international airline program with 2-for-1 business class tickets on a variety of carriers (at full published fares). While you can often do better with advance purchase discounted premium fares, this is a great value if you and a companion are flying last minute.

If you frequently rent cars, Diners Club offers primary car rental insurance. Most other credit cards provide only secondary rental insurance (which means your own auto insurance pays to the limits of your coverage, the credit card company pays your deductible, and your insurance history gets "dinged" with a claim).

Zero fees are a compelling option for many travelers. If you pass up credit cards with an annual fees that can range from $75 to $475 annually, you keep the cash in your own bank account. Some free cards even pay you a cash rebate. Capital One's cards can save international travelers because they do not impose an additional foreign transaction fee on top of what Visa or MasterCard tack onto every charge in a foreign currency.

My conclusion? While any of these options can represent a good value, my most important advice is to use credit wisely and pay off your balance in full each month. Otherwise, whatever benefit you can possibly accrue from these cards is more than eaten up by the interest you will pay over the years.

best credit card for travel (search here on Google)


copyright (c) 2008 by David J. Ourisman. All rights reserved. If you have comments on this column, or questions about booking travel, email me or visit my website.
.