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E vs SE: meaningful difference?
I will easily qualify for E for 2012, but I will land well short of SE. I could probably have reached SE by using miles that went to CO instead even though I had already reached the top tier.
My question is, given that I usually fly upfront, does it make sense for me to actively track my miles in 2012 to get to SE? I checked the AC web site and it seems the most meaningful differences between E and SE are a couple of thousand extra bonus miles and more eUpgrade credits, neither of which is very significant for me. Am I missing something? |
yes
no questions asked. huge difference.
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Only if you want to use your points for flights.
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Originally Posted by rchawla80
(Post 17639256)
no questions asked. huge difference.
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given that you're flying up front most of the time there's less of a difference, as pointed out being SE has better redemption when cashing in your points, useful if you have a huge point balance and want to redeem flights for family and friends
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No real additional benefits to holding SE from what you get flying upfront revenue and being an Elite (assume for US lounge access). Keep your miles going to CO/UA and earn 1K since you won't be hit with all those surcharges when cashing them in as would be the case when using AE miles. You'll also get 100% bonus putting AC flights into CO/UA while being Elite you'd only get half that many. Also, booking one way STAR awards is not always possible with AE, however is easy to do in the CO/UA program (using the CO booking engine) and these only cost half the return "price" while in AE it's about 66% of the return "price". I'm top tier in both programs mainly because I don't fly revenue Exec on AC (just upgraded T+) so find SE benefits of use. Keep doing what you're doing unless you find the merged CO/UA program next year isn't delivering.
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Thank you very much. Exactly the information I was looking for!
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Depends on where you fly. Is it Intl. J or NA J ? I ask because of the concierge... For me, that was the best perk of them all! I mostly fly within NA, and having someone call you at 5am to tell you your flight is cancelled because of a snowstorm 300km away, and that you're rebooked an hour earlier is a godsend. Other times I've been stuck in traffic and had them meet me at security with a BP to rush me through, overslept and had them rebook me, or had irregular ops and had them check availability for me over the phone.
There are other benefits as well: Guaranteed Y reservations-- never hurts to be able to bump someone to avoid sitting in the MLL for 5+ hours. Irregular Ops-- J pax are priority, SE pax are priority, SE pax in J are the top of the top of priorities in cases of irregular operations. I remember once being diverted and told we'd have 2 hours in Calgary, and the only SE, in J, was pushed onto an earlier flight, while the rest of us stood around and waited as they manually rebooked everyone onto a new A320.... What about vacations? Being SE gives you more AE miles as bonus, priority rewards, and better upgrade priority-- after all that traveling, a relaxing vacation might be nice. So on a normal day, not much difference, but the second things go wrong, SE sure is nice! |
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