Last month, on a Tuesday I decided to visit my dad for his birthday. His birthday was that Thursday. And, while I live in southeast Michigan, he lives near Greensboro North Carolina: about 500 miles away. Thanks to airline miles, the last minute trip was both possible and cheap.
Finding Flights
Via Google Flights I checked flight prices. Most flights were well over $600. Too high. I would use airline miles instead.
I noted flight options: Delta had non-stop and one-stop flights. AA and United offered only one-stop flights.
Hoping for non-stop flights, I logged into my Delta account first. One-way economy for the dates I wanted started at 32,500 miles. Too much.
I then logged into United. 10K one-way. Nice. United had good options for my outbound flight, but return flight options were less appealing. I decided to keep looking for the return…
American Airlines had saver availability (12.5K one-way) and good options for my return flight. I wouldn’t incur a close-in booking fee because I still had top tier status thanks to last year’s mileage running shenanigans. It seemed like a great option, but I didn’t want to fly AA. This past year I’ve had horrible luck with American Airlines flights. Every time I flew AA at least one leg was terribly delayed or completely cancelled. I recently vowed never to fly AA again.
I took another look at Delta. I found that I could lower the one-way return fare from 32,500 miles to 17,500 miles simply by setting my destination to Buffalo, NY, and picking a route with a stop in Detroit. Of course I wouldn’t fly the final leg from Detroit to Buffalo.
That was a cool trick, but the flight times weren’t ideal. I decided to take my chances with American Airlines one last time.
Booking Flights
For the outbound flight, United had saver availability via Washington Dulles. I would have booked through United.com, but they wanted to charge a close-in booking fee. I have United Silver status (thanks to my Marriott Platinum status), which reduced the fee a bit, but they still wanted $50. Too much.
I had some Singapore Krisflyer miles sitting around. Singapore miles can be used to book flights on Star Alliance airlines including United. Unlike most other airline miles, Singapore miles expire after 3 years, without any way to reset the clock (but you can use a trick I blogged about earlier to extend them for a year). Since I had miles getting close to expiry, I realized that this trip would be a great use for them. I called Singapore and booked the flight for 12,500 miles. Singapore doesn’t charge a fee to book awards (unless you count the obligatory TSA $5.60 fee). I received an email confirmation right away.
Through United.com, I used the booking reference number from the Singapore email to find my flight reservation and I changed the attached frequent flyer number to my Copa account. I still had Platinum status from a status match I did about a year ago and I knew this would grant me entrance to the Lufthansa lounge at the Detroit airport (details here).
I initially booked my return flight through AA.com. Later, though, it occurred to me to check whether Greensboro or Detroit were on AA’s Reduced Mileage Awards list for December. Greensboro was there! AA cardholders get a discount off award prices to or from the cities on the list. I called AA and applied the discount. The phone agent said that 7,500 miles would be refunded to me. Cool! Note that I have no idea how he came up with that number. Plus, when looking at my account later, I discovered that he charged me 6,500 miles for the one-way flight and refunded 12,500 (so I really got back 6,000 miles, not 7,500). Then, I also received a 10% rebate thanks to owning an AA credit card. My final price for the return flight was 6,500 miles – 650 = 5,850.
Instead of paying over $600 for the round trip flight, I paid a total of 18,350 miles plus $11.20 in TSA fees. Not bad at all.
How did it go?
All of the flights were on time and quite pleasant. Yes, even the AA flights. More importantly, my dad was overjoyed to see me. The visit was a surprise.
If you don’t want to pay the $50/75 close-in award booking fee for United, the workaround is to book the same route 21+ days out, then change that reservation to the desired date. As long as the route and points are the same, there will be no added booking fee.
How did you get 7500 miles back from AA? That’s for RT. One way is 3750
I was wondering if anyone would notice that! Upon looking at my account, I see that I really got back 6,000 miles, not 7,500. They charged me 6,500 miles for the new award. I still can’t explain why, but my best guess is that it has to do with the length of the trip:
GSO-CLT-DTW, when you measure each segment is over 500 miles. And when I booked the award online I was charged for an over 500 mile flight.
GSO-DTW, though, is 460 miles. And AA now charges 7,500 miles for flights under 500 miles (but only for non-stops). So, I think the guy charged me for nonstop GSO-DTW (7500 miles) and I got back 1,000 miles from that because that’s the reduce mileage discount for flights under 500 miles.
Long story short: I believe he charged me far fewer miles than he should have.
Very good read, but in the end, I’m not sure I would have chanced two connections in the winter. When these things work out they are a thing of beauty! Glad it worked out and definitely the background thinking (checking the reduced AA awards, using expiring Singapore points to avoid the close-in fee etc.) are what make this article useful to me.
Great article!!! I love reading your step by step process to select your mileage use.
How did you came up with the idea to pick Buffalo NY as one way to reduce the miles? What are some ways you might suggest for us to do similar things other than Skiplagged?
In this case I was just lucky. I’ve priced awards between Greensboro and Buffalo before, for my sister, and I’ve noticed that saver awards are almost always available and that they often route through Detroit.
Another option is to use ITA Matrix to look for cheap Delta only flights from the origin to airports within, say, 500 miles of your destination, but with a stop at your destination. There’s no guarantee that cheap flights means cheap awards, but I think it is more likely than not.