Originally Posted by
QRC3288
I’ll avoid repeating my longer posts above, just note that 1,800–2,400 seems like dead zone, esp given answers to questions above. You can roll over a max 600 to regular DM the next year, so 2,300 achieved rolls over the same as 1,800.
To reach 2,400, I’ll likely need to shift spend from competitors to CX, including less convenient regional routings (PEK-SIN, PVG-SIN, Tokyo-SIN, etc.) via CX connections instead of nonstop, and add maybe 4-6 more CX long-haul J flights that I’d otherwise book in F on other carriers. So I’d need to “work for it” versus my current freestyle approach, do more transits, less F. I’m primarily HK-based.
Normally I’d call this crazy, but credit CX for making mileage system so addictive. It also helps their service toward DM service esp for ex-HKG fliers is superb, and I’d expect DX/DME even better. I also have lingering concern this may inadvertently “downgrade” DM onboard. Today there are so few DMPs that dilution isn’t really an issue now, but presumably enough DMEs will exist in 2027 that it effectively becomes the highest “normal” tier.
Some people here it seems fly enough CX that 2,400+ appears straightforward. For me it requires habit changes. Curious how others in a similar position are approaching the rest of the year.
I’m slightly out of scope for your question as I typically do 1300-1900 but a few thoughts.
Peoples’ perceptions of the value of benefits will vary but I wouldn’t value the incremental benefits of DME enough to warrant the inconvenience you describe.
To some extent I’m in a similar boat as beyond around 1500 SPs I’m doing inconvenient connections around E and SE Asia via HKG instead of flying direct.
My thinking at this stage is that there is now less incentive to go beyond 1200 as I don’t really need the rollover for DM and no longer have the incentive of BUGs and gold companion. So it’s really just banking the SPs for the post retirement DM extension years (to me not worth inconvenience of always connecting via HKG). The benefits of being DME every other year (rolling forward 600 then doing 1800) likewise wouldn’t incentivise me.
When CX first announced this, my immediate instinct was that 2400 is high relative to benefit and possibly also to actual the number of FFs making 2400 which I guessed is not so large but ultimately CX has the data and I have no clue. I think it will be very interesting to see how these changes drive behaviour and if CX makes any tweaks after a couple of years.