Originally published Monday, October 20, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Comments (0)
E-mail article
Print view
Travelers cash in frequent-flier miles to beat high fares
Economy, high fares push air travelers to get mileage award tickets
Associated Press
Airline customers are cashing in more frequent-flier awards this year, looking to avoid higher fares and believing that miles just aren't worth the same anymore.
With so many new ways to earn miles — on everything from car rentals to groceries — savvy travelers fear it'll soon become harder to go where they want, when they want for free.
"The glamour of the frequent-flier award has faded," says Jay Sorensen, who ran the loyalty program at Midwest Airlines and is now an airline consultant. "People are realizing that using miles to go to Hawaii is a difficult objective."
The economy and high fares may also be pushing people to spend their miles.
Randy Petersen, who tracks frequent-flier programs as publisher of InsideFlyer magazine, says recent fare hikes are leading many passengers to burn up miles on humdrum trips instead of vacations to Hawaii or Europe.
"They're going to Boise, Decatur and Bakersfield," Petersen said. "They're spending miles on family emergencies or visiting grandma."
Airlines have been raising mileage requirements and imposing fees to use them in, but plenty of people are still cashing them in.
Continental Airlines reports that through July, customers had cashed in 1.34 million awards this year, up 21 percent from the same period last year.
At Continental, the only major U.S. airline to disclose monthly redemption figures, officials credit changes in their Web site that let customers see available seats on partner airlines, which they can book with miles from Continental's OnePass loyalty program.
American Airlines has the oldest and largest loyalty program in the industry, AAdvantage, with 60 million members who racked up 200 billion miles last year.
Use of awards on American was flat from 2006 to 2007 but is up 10 to 15 percent this year through August, said Rob Friedman, American's president of marketing for AAdvantage.
Like Continental, American credited Web site advances that let customers see at a glance when they can travel a particular route and how many miles it will cost.
![]()
"They can look at the calendar and make trade-offs," Friedman said. "They can be flexible and shop around for flights (that require fewer miles), or they may need to redeem more miles for travel on a specific date."
About 6 to 8 percent of all passengers fly on award tickets, according to airline documents.
Most U.S. carriers have raised mileage standards and shortened expiration periods in their loyalty programs.
Delta now offers members a guaranteed ability to redeem miles for a free trip but at the cost of many more miles. This month, American began charging $50 — plus 15,000 miles — to upgrade from economy coach on a flight within the United States.
"Those decisions are never easy or popular, but in light of fuel costs, they were necessary," American's Friedman said of the new fee.
Those fees and tighter expiration rules might themselves be driving the increase in redemptions.
Shaun Black, a software consultant in Atlanta, burned all his Delta miles on a trip he and his wife will take to Greece next spring. He booked the seats just before Delta began imposing a fuel surcharge on reward tickets in August.
"We weren't even looking to take a trip," Black said. "It was more out of spite — I wasn't going to pay that fee."
Black said he worries that Delta will soon double the miles needed for free trips because so many people now earn miles by using credit cards, renting cars — everything but flying.
Only half of miles earned by American's frequent fliers come from flying, with half coming from using a special Citigroup credit card or making purchases from the airline's 1,000 retail partners.
And that is precisely the problem with these programs, said Tom Farmer, who runs a small marketing company in Seattle — too many miles chasing too few seats. A longtime elite-level flyer, he's had enough.
"There is a crisis in faith with miles — they're constantly being devalued," he said. "A lot of people, me included, have decided the game has peaked and they're getting out."
Farmer said he spent 450,000 Northwest Airlines miles to book business-class seats for a family vacation next summer to Australia and Tahiti and has only 2,000 miles left. Lately, he's taken several trips on JetBlue, but doesn't plan to redeem the miles before they expire — the "game" isn't worth it anymore, he said.
Airlines are looking for ways to make loyalty programs more appealing. American and Southwest recently announced they would set up separate check-in lanes at some airports to help program members pass through security faster.
"It's giving our customers greater utility, especially business travelers," said Ryan Green, director of customer loyalty at Southwest. "Our surveys show that frequent-flier programs rank highly with business travelers."
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
E-mail article
Print view Share:
Digg
Newsvine
Holiday travel challenge eases, but plan for surprises
Amtrak adding trains for holiday
Olympic organizers scuttle plan to turn cruise ships into hotels
NEW - 01:36 PM
Faulty luggage scales fixed at NY airports

MLS trophy arrives in Seattle
Seattle welcomes the Philip F. Anschutz Trophy via ferry to kick-off MLS festivities.
nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
How to tell your office you're gravely ill
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new sedan? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
- Man falls 8 stories, suffers minor injuries
- 'Unusual circumstances' in death of Boeing worker
- Monfort fired after excellent worker turned unreliable
- Boeing facility death was suicide
- Italian prosecutor: Knox hated murder victim
- Swedish threatens to end Regence BlueShield's contract
- Bail lowered for Clearly Lasik doctor in murder-for-hire plot
- Seattle Schools return to neighborhood-based system
- Man sentenced to 31 years in prison in girlfriend's slaying on I-5
- Movie review | Bella + Edward + Jacob = a pale 'New Moon'
- Convicted killer: US student Knox at murder scene
261 - State's projected budget shortfall exceeds $2 billion
246 - What climate-change deniers really believe (and why they're wrong)
183 - Swedish threatens to end Regence BlueShield's contract
158 - Palin and her fans irked by cover shot in shorts
133 - Senate Democrats want to tax nips and tucks
110 - Italian prosecutors wrap up in Knox murder trial
93 - Want the TV info for the Apple Cup?
78 - A Mariners-Tigers swap makes a whole lot of sense for both teams
60 - Monfort fired after excellent worker turned unreliable
59
- Seattle Schools return to neighborhood-based system
- Swedish threatens to end Regence BlueShield's contract
- The Blotter | Police: Would-be ninja impaled by metal fence
- Bail lowered for Clearly Lasik doctor in murder-for-hire plot
- From Methow Valley to Paradise, here are 5 great spots to stage your own winter games. (Hold the glam.)
- Peruvian police: Gang killed people for their fat
- Recipes: Sesame Pork Roast, Sour Cream Mashed Potatoes, Gingerbread with Lemon Sauce and more
- Dave Grohl is part of the trans-generational supergroup Them Crooked Vultures
- State schools chief wants to delay dates for passing key tests
- Burglars hit Rainier Valley Food Bank





