Are discount business class fares making this less fun for you?
I have been looking at ways to spend points, and I used to think that the aspirational way to redeem your points was to fly premium international cabins. But as I notice lately, price wars are breaking out on trans-atlantic routes (and other routes). And the use of my miles there seems to be in question now, if you ask me.
Example 130k Virgin Elevate Points to fly ORD-OGG in first, when first is $1380~ 80k points + taxes to fly ORD-CDG, when business is $1700~ And then I started to price out discount premium international cabins - and it isn't that unreasonable all of a sudden. Especially in comparison to paying taxes + a ton of points for a weak $1700 in savings? Have premium fares always been this cheap? Are these fares keeping your point coffers full, when you might otherwise spend them? |
They're great, they're temporary low summer fares, and I grab 'em when their useful.
And miles are still quite usable, often on routes that don't offer discounted fares (USA-Australia at under $8k for Business is something we're not likely to see) or a heck of a lot more for First), aspirational destinations, First, etc. One must be flexible and know how to search (doggedly) for options, but I've used AA miles for two people to / from Australia in Business, not the easiest to find, four times. |
Originally Posted by JDiver
(Post 24849985)
(USA-Australia at under $8k for Business is something we're not likely to see) .
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As this isn't specific to the Information Desk we'll try this out in another forum.
~beckoa, co-moderator Information Desk |
Why less fun? You get to save miles. But you mention who offers $1700 business ORD-CDG, so I don't know if you get to also earn miles. (If you get to earn a good amount of miles, that may be fun too!)
But another to consider is that many of these business fares sales only work from a handful of cities. So you're posting about this ORD- and that ORD- because you're based near ORD (presumably), but someone who's based at a less major airport is often going to find no sales that work from their home airport. For example, South-America-based LAN periodically offers business sales to EXE and SCL and LIM, but only from MIA, LAX, and I think one more city (that they fly their own metal out of). If you happen to live near one of those airports, great. If you don't, maybe not as great. |
Business class redemptions aren't worth it for me to Europe anymore, especially considering in based on the East Coast.
125,000 Delta miles makes a lot more sense flying LAX-LHR-some expensive small city that it does flying JFK-LHR where I have 3 hours to sleep after the meal service. I always find redemptions to have great value to Asia, even buying the miles for $2500 or so during a promotion is better than buying the ticket outright most of the time. |
For me, it makes the game even more fun. The airline game has always forced a lot of folks to make a choice: chase status, chase rewards. Hotels not so much since most chains count reward stays towards status.
Not airlines. Now, however, for someone making a decent amount of money but not rich, the current climate can make it easy to earn rewards (easy enough--more money to spend, more appealing a customer for a bank, and easier for the cardholder to make minimum spends without having to dip into MS to a great degree) but also easy to earn status (biz class seats are generally going to get you there faster than almost any sort of coach seat and the lower prices often will tempt a purchase rather than a reward). With where I am in my life, the game has actually become more fun to play. |
If I used to be able to fly A to B for X points, and I now can fly A to B for X points - no, it's not "less fun". Having other, better options should be a positive.
I guess I chalk this up to the "I got a high value" fascination that I never understand. I'd rather go somewhere I want to go than brag about the "cents per point" I redeemed. My award trip to Paris isn't made any less fun because my calculation is lower. |
Originally Posted by CPRich
(Post 24856271)
I guess I chalk this up to the "I got a high value" fascination that I never understand.
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Having other people being able to enjoy these same flights (business int'l) makes the experience better for me not worse (more for everyone!).
The only downside would be if service levels drop, but I haven't seen that in my experience due to these fares. |
Actually it's more fun. I have to earn the miles somehow and I take advantage of the low fares to do that in Business.
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For flights to Europe I think I generally agree that paying cash can make more sense. I just paid $1900 for BWI-MAD. That was thanks to the fare war between oneworld and SkyTeam last fall.
For trips to Asia I get the most out of my miles in F or C. Those 12+ hour flights are where I really appreciate flying up front and the price of those tickets is seldom cheap, notwithstanding occasional sales to certain destinations. But it's always worthwhile to evaluate each journey on its own. If you're miles-rich and cash-poor then spending miles makes sense. |
Makes no difference, I can't make use of either one :(
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Originally Posted by glennaa11
(Post 24904386)
For flights to Europe I think I generally agree that paying cash can make more sense. I just paid $1900 for BWI-MAD. That was thanks to the fare war between oneworld and SkyTeam last fall.
For trips to Asia I get the most out of my miles in F or C. Those 12+ hour flights are where I really appreciate flying up front and the price of those tickets is seldom cheap, notwithstanding occasional sales to certain destinations. So to where it works better cash vs miles can depend just as much on where you're based as anywhere else. And not just east vs west, but also hub airport vs small airport (LAN, for example, does business class sales only from 3 cities, and if you live nowhere near those, you either can't participate or have to stitch together a complicated connection that may need to be booked separately to take advantage of that sale, and your seat on that connection may have to be awful just so you can have a business class seat on the rest of journey). Oh, and it can also depend on how far in advance you have to plan. If you have to snag miles awards 11 months out, that's way too early to know if there will be a cash business class sale. But the time you can see whether there's a cash business class sale, award seats may be gone. |
I wouldn't say fun has anything to do with the decision. I have a cpm that I buy miles at, and a higher cpm that I redeem miles. If I'm considering a redemption for a ticket somewhere, but the revenue ticket is the equivalent cpm of where I would normally buy miles, then the revenue ticket wins.
This year has seen a lot of cheap premium cabin tickets, along with a decent amount of mistakes. |
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