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I Hardly Have Any Frequent Flyer Miles, and That’s a Good Thing
Written by
Jason Steele
Jason Steele has been a freelance writer and an expert on credit cards and travel rewards since 2008. His work has been featured by The Points Guy, Business Insider and Forbes. Jason is also the founder and producer of CardCon.
Mary Flory leads NerdWallet's growing team of assigning editors at large. Before joining NerdWallet's content team, she had spent more than 12 years developing content strategies, managing newsrooms and mentoring writers and editors. Her previous experience includes being an executive editor at the American Marketing Association and an editor at news and feature syndicate Content That Works.
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One of my favorite movies is "Up In the Air," about a business traveler portrayed by George Clooney who's obsessed with earning frequent flyer miles. It’s very accurate when it comes to most aspects of loyalty programs, but there’s one line that doesn’t make sense to me. It’s when Clooney’s character explains that the reason he earns travel rewards is because “the miles are the goal.”
Alas, miles are not the goal. In fact, I’ve never met an award travel enthusiast who thinks so. I hardly have any frequent flyer miles in my accounts, and I like to keep it that way.
Why earn frequent flyer miles?
There’s only one valid reason to earn miles, and it’s not so that I can brag to my friends or feel good about my accomplishment. Those of us who are serious about earning miles do so to use them to travel to places we want to go. But even if the goal is travel, why don’t we want to have a lot of miles available in our accounts?
Airline frequent flyer programs are notorious for their frequent, and often unannounced, devaluations. A devaluation occurs when a loyalty program takes steps to reduce the value of its points or miles. This happens when a program raises the prices on its award chart, or even when a company removes its chart entirely, which is becoming increasingly common. It also happens when a company makes fewer and fewer awards available at the lowest mileage levels, or when it adds expensive fuel surcharges to awards.
As a result, any miles that you keep in your account unused are worth less over time. So it’s in your interest to “earn and burn” your miles at about the same rate.
Another reason I don’t like to have frequent flyer miles is because I don’t want to earn them — at least not directly. When you earn miles in a frequent flyer program, they can only be redeemed for award flights on that airline and its partners.
Instead, I like to earn credit card rewards in the form of flexible points such as American Express Membership Rewards, Capital One miles and Citi ThankYou points. These reward programs allow you to transfer your points to different frequent flyer programs. And since these transfers are often instant, you can wait until you find the exact award you need from a particular frequent flyer program before transferring just the amount of points necessary. Once I receive the miles in my account, I immediately book the award I need, returning my mileage balance back to nearly nothing.
Some argue that it’s better to just earn cash-back rewards from your credit cards. And for those who aren’t that interested in traveling, that’s true. For the rest of us, we can earn far more valuable rewards through collecting points and miles than we could from earning cash back.
I can sometimes realize 4 to 6 cents per point in value when I redeem my points for premium class seats on international flights. These are seats in business or first class cabins that we otherwise couldn’t have afforded in cash.
But here’s the real reason my frequent flyer accounts are empty
If I’m earning credit card rewards in the form of flexible points such as American Express Membership Rewards, what about the miles I would frequently earn from flying on planes? You know, frequent flyer miles. The truth is that nearly all of my flights are paid for with the miles I earn from my credit cards. So I can’t earn miles directly from the airlines if I never actually pay for my flights. And since I also pay for nearly all of my hotel stays with the points that I earn from my credit cards, I rarely earn hotel points, either.
The bottom line
"Up In the Air" is a great movie, but there’s no way I’ll earn points and miles just for the sake of it. My goal is to earn flexible travel rewards from my credit cards that I can transfer into miles. I then spend those miles within minutes of receiving them on the travel reservations that I need. And when I do this effectively, I rarely have to pay for travel. That’s why award travelers like me are happy not to have any frequent flyer miles stashed away, waiting for the next inevitable devaluation.