What are Delta SkyMiles worth?

At Frequent Miler, we keep a database of point valuations (we call these “Reasonable Redemption Values“). These are estimates of the “worth” of airline miles, hotel points, transferable points, and more. The idea is to identify the point at which it is “reasonable” to get that much value or more from your points.

This information is critical for making informed decisions. In fact, it’s a key component of the First Year Value information shown on our Best Credit Card Offers page, and it’s similarly used to show which cards offer the best value for everyday spend, and which offer the best category bonuses.

When we first started looking at the value of airline miles, we used a manual process to create estimates, but we now have a much better way of pinning down the value of Delta SkyMiles.

Points Path, a Google Flights extension, keeps records of both the points and cash prices for all searches conducted on its platform. Points Path founder and former Frequent Miler writer Julian Kheel has made this data available to us to identify rewards program point values.

Thanks to Julian and Points Path, we now have access to results from over 6.4 million domestic and international Delta searches, showing both the cash and award prices for the same flight (including partner flights). Using this data, we can provide a far better estimate of the “Reasonable Redemption Value” of Delta SkyMiles than we were ever able to obtain using manual calculations.

Based on an analysis of Points Path’s data, we’ve concluded that the new Reasonable Redemption Value (RRV) for Delta miles = 1.1 Cents Per Mile…exactly the same as when we did this survey last year.

Points Path Data

Listed below is a summary of the raw data from Points Path. There are two values that are important to us. The median is the point that half of the observed results offered equal or better point value, and half offered equal or worse value. We also have the average value of all the searches, in total and by booking class.

Cabin Median Value (cpp) Number of data points
Basic Economy 1.12 2,949,743
Economy 1.11 1,895,056
Premium Economy 1.09 302,274
Business 1.09 1,178,564
First 1.07 129,750
Combined 1.11 6,455,387

Calculations

  • Points Path Median Observed Value for Delta Flights: 1.11 cents per mile
    (based on the past 365 days of data as of March 19th, 2026)
  • RRV = 1.1 Cents Per Point.

Conclusion

The exercise described above resulted in an unchanged Reasonable Redemption Value (RRV) for Delta miles: 1.1 cents per mile. That’s the point at which you are likely to get that much value or more.

Please keep in mind that this does not mean you will always get a 1.1 cents-per-mile value from your Delta miles. In practice, you’ll sometimes find better than 1.1 cents per mile value, and sometimes you’ll find worse. As a Delta Gold, Platinum, or Reserve cardholder, you’ll also get slightly better value because of the 15% discount that cardholders receive on rewards. Additionally, note that there are some ways to get better value from Delta miles. For more details, see: Best uses for Delta miles.

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Gene

@ Greg — I’ve been shocked by the recent increase in the value of SkyMiles (at least for the flights we prefer to book). I honestly never thought I would see this day. There have been countless great offers for international DL1 lately. So many, in fact, that we have managed to bring our mountain of multiple million SM down to just a few 100k. Now, I regret all of those 1.3-1.4 cpp domestic bookings in recent years.

Maybe Delta finally realized that they wouldn’t be able to continue growing their AMEX co-brand charge volume at the desired pace without offering more attractive awards?

Greg The Frequent Miler

That’s great! I haven’t seen the same. Care to share which routes you’ve been looking at?

Gene

I am not referencing anything that is a permanent change, but unadvertised flash sales, like CUN-ATL-MEL-ATL-CUN in J for 204,000 r/t or LAX-HND-LAX in J for 229,400 r/t or xxx-ATL-JFK-GVA-JFK-ATL-XXX in J for 212,400 r/t. These are purchases that yielded about 2.5-6.0 cpm instead of the usual 1.3-1.4. It just seems like these have been popping up with much more frequency, making them worth waiting for.

Jerome R Letang

The crazy thing is they charge you $30 + 0.01 per mile to transfer your miles to someone else. The fee is almost the full value of a mile. Thats $160 to transfer 13000 miles. Just nuts

Sean

This is for people without cobrand cards right? What’s the rrv for people with cobras cards?

Last edited 1 year ago by Sean
Will

1.1 / 0.85 = 1.294

Simple Math 😀

Will

But to add on, it comes with a cost. You pay for a fixed cost for having a cobranded CC. (Example: $ 150 AF for Delta Gold)

People may argue they can easily offset annual fee with “some work” but it comes with time effort.

To sum up, Delta SkyMiles has a great universal floor value but nearly none exciting redemption value. (People will bring up some rare unpopular Delta One route with 120,000 Miles cost before 15% off saving but those routes are cheaper to begin with.)

Jerry

If given the choice between earning skymiles or cash back, I always go with cash back. Spending on the Delta platinum card just does not cut it in terms of the rewards. I’m not chasing status so it makes sense for folks like me.

Last edited 1 year ago by Jerry
Viv

This calculation is for the value of Delta SkyMiles for Delta flights specifically (not partner flights), correct? I’ve gotten great value using SkyMiles for flights in Asia.

Tim Steinke

Both Delta and partner flights.

Again, this doesn’t say that there aren’t uses that will be better than 1.1cpp, there are and will continue to be.

Over 2 million searches in the last year returned better value than 1.1cpp.

However, over 2 million were below 1.1cpp as well.

Last edited 1 year ago by Tim Steinke
Dan

This makes sense. Delta Y awards (especially with the cardholder discount) and partner redemptions abroad are usually good value beyond 1.2 CPP. Other stuff is pegged to a little over a cent per point based on the cash price and not so great a deal.

Adam

I’ve found that Skymiles are worth more for cheaper tickets than for expensive tickets. However I also feel like there has been a slight decrease in value since the introduction of the 15% discount with a Skymiles credit card

Brent

I did notice that the points and cash prices diverged within 72 hours of travel. So, empty flights could be pretty low on points, but still fairly high in cash. Useful for attending a funeral or a last minute emergency, but I haven’t seen a lot of variation otherwise.

Jack

About 1 Ruble per point.

NK3

What time frame were the searches done? IME Delta have very poor value for close in bookings (even when accounting for the prices going up close to departure). For example, I just looked at the SkyMiles cpp for the last SEA-PHX flight for the next few Mondays. In order from next Monday to later weeks, the cpp were: 1.16, 0.98, 1.21, 1.40, 1.28, 1.40, 1.40. Close in, I almost never use SkyMiles, though for domestic economy flights a few weeks out I more often than not find SkyMiles to have the greatest cpp.

Tim Steinke

Whenever someone searched for any flight and had the Points Path extension installed. So close-in, far-out, etc. When we’re talking about over 4.2 million searches, that’s between 11,000-12,000 data points each day of the last 365. It’s highly unlikely that any one timeframe is over-represented.

cpffp

Whats is the worst Delta redemption you ever seen ? I bet you can get less than 0.25 cent per mile

Tony

Why are you showing only the mean and the median, unlike your analyses of some other mileage currencies? It’d be more interesting to see the values at various percentiles. Showing 90th percentile data, for example, would point to potential better uses for the currency, even for SkyPesos. 🙂

Last edited 1 year ago by Tony
Tim Steinke

That’s a great idea. We currently don’t have those percentiles broken out in the Points Path data, but we’d like to add it in the future.

JoeSchmo

Delta – Lame-o

Harry

I’m retired, fly 1st class almost always and AA hub captive DFW. The posts about DL’s points pales in comparison to how much AA charges. Try DFW to JFK which I fly for positioning flights. Try DFW to LAX, try almost anywhere and DL will beat AA almost always on award cost. Flight coming this fall to JFK, booked 2 in first class for 65K miles. AA wanted almost that much for one. And the kicker is DL is better than AA on the ground and in the air. Common sense, when you are pissed at your management, tell me it doesn’t come on board. In your job, rather work for a profitable company or one that is broke…duh?

Kevin

This valuation makes sense if I only ever fly Delta. Because I’ll often fly another airline if the fare is cheaper then Delta points are worth even less to me.

Matthew

They are worth precisely nothing. Much more concise

Darin

What’s the calculation that gets you to a 7% deduction for the loss in RDMs? If you’re a general member, you’d get 5 miles per dollar spent (before taxes), which is less than 5.5% based on a 1.1 cents per mile valuation. Obviously this gets larger as your status increases, is the 7% taking that into account or am I missing something in the calculation?