Flying Blue Silver vs. Gold
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,620
Flying Blue Silver vs. Gold
I am curious as to your (FlyingBlue Experts) opinions regarding what I should do going forward for the rest of the year regarding crediting flights to Flying Blue.
A little background:
I am a citizen of the USA and travel 100% for leisure, I mostly fly domestically in the USA and that means DELTA for the most part.
I have never credited a mile in my flying history to DELTA’s own SkyMiles program and honestly with the devaluations over time I really do not see a good reason to start now. With that said, I have for a while now credited my DELTA miles to Frequency Plus, now Flying Blue (I have always been Silver or iirc RED before that) to have the ability to redeem for Air France First Class which both my wife and I very much enjoy, but would otherwise be out of our price range.
Since the newest incarnation of Flying Blue I have generally earned around 150XP a year, 100% from DELTA and last year as an example, I carried over 50XP which made qualifying this year even easier. Due to an AeroMexico Business class trip which I took in March, I am now sitting at 150XP with approximately 30-40 more XP to go this year after all is said and done. I am wondering if it is worthwhile to go for Gold (180 XP) or just credit the rest of miles to another program for the rest of year leaving me with 50XP starting off next year to make qualifying easier.
I guess my question is this, if the only use for FlyingBlue status is the ability to redeem for First Class is going for Gold status worth it, am I missing something that might be useful which Gold provides?
Any insight would be greatly appreciated, thank you!
A little background:
I am a citizen of the USA and travel 100% for leisure, I mostly fly domestically in the USA and that means DELTA for the most part.
I have never credited a mile in my flying history to DELTA’s own SkyMiles program and honestly with the devaluations over time I really do not see a good reason to start now. With that said, I have for a while now credited my DELTA miles to Frequency Plus, now Flying Blue (I have always been Silver or iirc RED before that) to have the ability to redeem for Air France First Class which both my wife and I very much enjoy, but would otherwise be out of our price range.
Since the newest incarnation of Flying Blue I have generally earned around 150XP a year, 100% from DELTA and last year as an example, I carried over 50XP which made qualifying this year even easier. Due to an AeroMexico Business class trip which I took in March, I am now sitting at 150XP with approximately 30-40 more XP to go this year after all is said and done. I am wondering if it is worthwhile to go for Gold (180 XP) or just credit the rest of miles to another program for the rest of year leaving me with 50XP starting off next year to make qualifying easier.
I guess my question is this, if the only use for FlyingBlue status is the ability to redeem for First Class is going for Gold status worth it, am I missing something that might be useful which Gold provides?
Any insight would be greatly appreciated, thank you!
#2
Join Date: May 2015
Location: RBA / TBS
Programs: AF Gold / Accor Gold / Hilton Diamond / TP Silver / A3 Gold
Posts: 2,750
Since the newest incarnation of Flying Blue I have generally earned around 150XP a year, 100% from DELTA and last year as an example, I carried over 50XP which made qualifying this year even easier. Due to an AeroMexico Business class trip which I took in March, I am now sitting at 150XP with approximately 30-40 more XP to go this year after all is said and done. I am wondering if it is worthwhile to go for Gold (180 XP) or just credit the rest of miles to another program for the rest of year leaving me with 50XP starting off next year to make qualifying easier.
If you have amex rewards card or chase sapphire card and you spend a lot with these cards , you might be able to collect a lot of miles to book these flights in P
#3
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Paris, France
Programs: AF/KL Flying Blue Platinum for life/Club2000 Ultimate, Accor ALL Diamond
Posts: 21,927
The main interest in your case to reach Gold is to have lounge access. But you will not have lounge access for pure domestic flights in the US. So you will not really enjoy a lot of benefits if you only fly domestically in the US.
FB Silver was the equivalent of Fréquence Plus Blue, not red
FB Silver was the equivalent of Fréquence Plus Blue, not red
#4
Original Poster
Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,620
The main interest in your case to reach Gold is to have lounge access. But you will not have lounge access for pure domestic flights in the US. So you will not really enjoy a lot of benefits if you only fly domestically in the US.
FB Silver was the equivalent of Fréquence Plus Blue, not red
FB Silver was the equivalent of Fréquence Plus Blue, not red
Ooops I could not remember Red/Blue, thanks for the correction.
#5
Join Date: Apr 2017
Programs: Flying Blue Silver
Posts: 123
Keep in mind in case you make it to Gold you can still soft-land to Silver the following year even if you neither hit the requirements for Gold nor Silver.
Another remark: by signing up for the BoA FB card you get 60 XP in the first year (and afaik 20 XP every following year).
Another remark: by signing up for the BoA FB card you get 60 XP in the first year (and afaik 20 XP every following year).
#6
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: SAN, CDG
Programs: FB Plat
Posts: 59
#7
Original Poster
Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,620
Keep in mind in case you make it to Gold you can still soft-land to Silver the following year even if you neither hit the requirements for Gold nor Silver.
Another remark: by signing up for the BoA FB card you get 60 XP in the first year (and afaik 20 XP every following year).
Another remark: by signing up for the BoA FB card you get 60 XP in the first year (and afaik 20 XP every following year).
Thank you all for your advice!
#8
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Netherlands
Programs: KL Platinum; A3 Gold
Posts: 28,741
That you even present it as an option implies you see some merit to this strategy, in that it is of at least of similar value to the strategy of pursuing FB Gold. Can you therefore elaborate for us what those merits are? (Perhaps in doing so, you will convince yourself of the correct answer!!)
#9
Original Poster
Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,620
Can you explain the logic behind the option of "just credit the rest of miles to another program for the rest of year"?
That you even present it as an option implies you see some merit to this strategy, in that it is of at least of similar value to the strategy of pursuing FB Gold. Can you therefore elaborate for us what those merits are? (Perhaps in doing so, you will convince yourself of the correct answer!!)
That you even present it as an option implies you see some merit to this strategy, in that it is of at least of similar value to the strategy of pursuing FB Gold. Can you therefore elaborate for us what those merits are? (Perhaps in doing so, you will convince yourself of the correct answer!!)
Essentially, FB status is more about redeeming for Air France First Class rather than any other tangible benefits, so Gold probably does not provide that much more to me and the miles would be better off deposited into my China Airlines account for a free ticket somewhere in Asia for 150,000 a ticket after I hit 150XP for the year or at least that was thinking prior to learning about the BoA credit card which changes things a little.
I am not as savy as you all, honestly, I travel probably a small fraction of you all and thus my logic is probably flawed most of the time when it comes to frequent flier earnings, etc.
#10
Join Date: Mar 2018
Location: Netherlands
Programs: FB Platinum
Posts: 113
My thinking which maybe entirely flawed is as follows: If I were to go for Gold, next year I will have less XP (maybe none) to start with (after FlyingBlue deducts the 180) and will have to fly more to obtain Silver where as say if I stop at 150XP, I will have 50XPs to start off with next yer only necessitating 8.3 (really 9) segments at 6XP per DELTA First Class segment to qualify again for Silver.
Essentially, FB status is more about redeeming for Air France First Class rather than any other tangible benefits, so Gold probably does not provide that much more to me and the miles would be better off deposited into my China Airlines account for a free ticket somewhere in Asia for 150,000 a ticket after I hit 150XP for the year or at least that was thinking prior to learning about the BoA credit card which changes things a little.
I am not as savy as you all, honestly, I travel probably a small fraction of you all and thus my logic is probably flawed most of the time when it comes to frequent flier earnings, etc.
Essentially, FB status is more about redeeming for Air France First Class rather than any other tangible benefits, so Gold probably does not provide that much more to me and the miles would be better off deposited into my China Airlines account for a free ticket somewhere in Asia for 150,000 a ticket after I hit 150XP for the year or at least that was thinking prior to learning about the BoA credit card which changes things a little.
I am not as savy as you all, honestly, I travel probably a small fraction of you all and thus my logic is probably flawed most of the time when it comes to frequent flier earnings, etc.
#11
Original Poster
Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 1,620
Plus 20XP a year from the BoA credit card would put me in a pretty good place.
You all are amazingly insightful and helpful, thank you!
#12
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Netherlands
Programs: KL Platinum; A3 Gold
Posts: 28,741
My thinking which maybe entirely flawed is as follows: If I were to go for Gold, next year I will have less XP (maybe none) to start with (after FlyingBlue deducts the 180) and will have to fly more to obtain Silver where as say if I stop at 150XP, I will have 50XPs to start off with next yer only necessitating 8.3 (really 9) segments at 6XP per DELTA First Class segment to qualify again for Silver.
To say that you "have to fly more to obtain Silver" is incorrect; when you reach 180XP, that gets you a year of Gold, followed by a year of Silver, regardless of what flying you do in those two years.
As your priority seems to be just to maintain status, then you are turning down the opportunity to earn a further year of Silver for only just 80XP.
Even if you don't make it up to Gold, you will still start the new Silver year with a significant head start on making the 100XP necessary for that further year of Silver.
#13
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Hong Kong, France
Programs: FB , BA Gold
Posts: 15,557
I might misunderstand your post, but I don't see what benefit you currently derive from FB.
As you have noticed, you need a huge amount of miles to get a F award. As you don't fly much, you have been hit by successive devaluations of the FB program.
You seem to mostly fly domestic and FB is of little use. If you were on DL SM you might get upgrades. And spreading your limited travel into two skyteam programs seems a bit strange.
As you have noticed, you need a huge amount of miles to get a F award. As you don't fly much, you have been hit by successive devaluations of the FB program.
You seem to mostly fly domestic and FB is of little use. If you were on DL SM you might get upgrades. And spreading your limited travel into two skyteam programs seems a bit strange.
#14
Join Date: May 2018
Posts: 760
I might misunderstand your post, but I don't see what benefit you currently derive from FB.
As you have noticed, you need a huge amount of miles to get a F award. As you don't fly much, you have been hit by successive devaluations of the FB program.
You seem to mostly fly domestic and FB is of little use. If you were on DL SM you might get upgrades. And spreading your limited travel into two skyteam programs seems a bit strange.
As you have noticed, you need a huge amount of miles to get a F award. As you don't fly much, you have been hit by successive devaluations of the FB program.
You seem to mostly fly domestic and FB is of little use. If you were on DL SM you might get upgrades. And spreading your limited travel into two skyteam programs seems a bit strange.
But FB is interesting in getting, and especially, keeping status. It makes a hell of a difference to travel with perks like preferred seats, security fasttrack, lounge access, sky priority and free luggage.
#15
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Netherlands
Programs: KL Platinum; A3 Gold
Posts: 28,741
But again, the OP in this particular case travels mostly domestically on Delta so no lounge access . Silver doesn't get security fasttrack anymore (to the best of my knowledge) and I'm not entirely sure that FB Silver/Gold get any meaningful seat fee discount on Delta.
Last edited by irishguy28; May 19, 2019 at 10:55 am