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Face it, mileage cards are useless now
I am on the cusp of deciding that mileage cards are useless now. Since I haven't been able to redeem a 25k reward on any airline in 2 years (always getting screwed with the 40k's because of availability) this means that on a value per mile basis I am receiving only about 1 cent. This stinks!
Therefore, I am considering shifting away from my Starwood card (which I love) and my Visa standby to the Cashback Blue from Amex and a 1% cashback Visa card as standby. I can get 1.5%-3% or more on the Blue, and 1% guaranteed on the Visa. Anyone want to give me reasons not to switch? The way I figure, I'd rather get 1.5% or better guaranteed than get continuing to get bad value on my airline redemptions. (I admit, losing the hotel redemptions would be a negative, since I get value there). Plus, no annual fees! Anyone? ------------------ [This message has been edited by erlftex (edited 03-30-2003).] |
Not sure what routes you are trying to redeem on or which airlines but my family and I have redeemed over 250k on AA over the past six months.
Also, we get the point of your irritation but please refrain from using certain "f" words even if you've swapped letters with *. Thanks! http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif |
<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by phoenixitc: Not sure what routes you are trying to redeem on or which airlines but my family and I have redeemed over 250k on AA over the past six months. Also, we get the point of your irritation but please refrain from using certain "f" words even if you've swapped letters with *. Thanks! http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif</font> |
I've always used Amex Cashback card first. 1.5% cash in my bank earning positive interest is always better than some miles sitting sitting at Airline's computer earning negative interest (beause of devaluation).
Since you are in Los Angeles, I am suprised that you have not tried Southwest more often. |
You make a great point. I only wish I could fly on Southwest; all my flights for business are to the East Coast or Europe, so Southwest doesn't cut it...
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Useless...? Er, I dont think so. As posted above, it all depends on your redemption patterns. Cash back is great, but if you redeem your miles for International F awards, you also get quite a nice bang for your mile/buck.
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I have just redeemed a flight from ORD to DEN on 2 days notice, and reserved to 1st class tickets from DEN to LHR. While there may be a bit less availability of award seats of late, it stills seems very realistic if you have a bit of flexibility.
I also check on another airline for the aforementioned ORD-DEN trip. They had availability in first, but not coach. Still, not bad. |
<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by erlftex: I am on the cusp of deciding that mileage cards are useless now. Since I haven't been able to redeem a 25k reward on any airline in 2 years (always getting screwed with the 40k's because of availability) this means that on a value per mile basis I am receiving only about 1 cent. This stinks! Therefore, I am considering shifting away from my Starwood card (which I love) and my Visa standby to the Cashback Blue from Amex and a 1% cashback Visa card as standby. I can get 1.5%-3% or more on the Blue, and 1% guaranteed on the Visa. Anyone want to give me reasons not to switch? The way I figure, I'd rather get 1.5% or better guaranteed than get continuing to get bad value on my airline redemptions. (I admit, losing the hotel redemptions would be a negative, since I get value there). Plus, no annual fees! Anyone? </font> |
<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by erlftex: Therefore, I am considering shifting away from my Starwood card (which I love)</font> As for not being able to redeem awards ... I just did what many here might say is impossible - four awards tickets to Hawaii in high season. The bottom line is that you just have to keep trying. |
I would agree with both you and Family Flyer. Airline miles are not what they use to be. Before MBNA increased their milesage requirements, I use to love that card becuase of the flexibility of traveling on any airline. In terms of your Starwood card, use the miles for hotel stays. With hotel rates continuing to climb, a Starpoint seems to be worth more (in many cases) than converting them to airline miles.
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<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by TTT103: I would agree with both you and Family Flyer. Airline miles are not what they use to be. Before MBNA increased their milesage requirements, I use to love that card becuase of the flexibility of traveling on any airline. In terms of your Starwood card, use the miles for hotel stays. With hotel rates continuing to climb, a Starpoint seems to be worth more (in many cases) than converting them to airline miles.</font> However, while 4 tickets to Hawaii is fantastic, I bet you are travelling on a mon/tues and coming back on a thurs/fri. Or, maybe you just got truly lucky-- something that I haven't been in years. I would prefer they take back their miles at this point, and just lower fares. |
I disagree My fat ... flys First class out of EWR all the time on my miles !!!!
more cookies please |
<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by erlftex: but there is ZERO availability to get flights to high-traffic destinations from my point of view (Florida, California, Hawaii, New Orleans, Europe).</font> After all, it's usually the low-traffic destinations that are expensive. Or save your miles for business/first class. |
My parents earn several free tickets each year on their Citi/AA card and use about 6 25k mile awards each year without much of a problem. Peak flights aren't always available, but with some advance, it works fine.
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