Key takeaways
- In order to earn frequent flyer miles, you must have a frequent flyer account with the airline and add your frequent flyer number to your reservation.
- Most types of tickets, including those purchased with vouchers or gift cards, are eligible to earn miles.
- You can earn miles by redeeming credit card rewards for travel, but not when you redeem airline-specific rewards to pay for your flight.
- There are some circumstances in which you may not earn miles, such as when you book flights through a third party or travel on a deeply discounted fare.
For decades, one of the perks most airline travelers have enjoyed is the ability to earn frequent flyer miles. Once you’ve earned enough points or miles, you can redeem them for an award flight and potentially other rewards. For those who travel often for business, earning airline frequent flyer miles can be a great way to fund one or more family vacations each year.
However, not all airline tickets are eligible to earn miles, and it’s not always easy to know in advance which ones are eligible and which aren’t. Here’s when you should expect to earn miles on your flight and when you won’t.
When will you earn miles on a flight?
Not every ticket earns frequent flyer miles, but most do. To earn miles for your flight, you must fly on certain types of tickets and take steps to ensure you receive the mileage credits you’re entitled to.
When you use your frequent flyer account
Before you can earn any miles, you need to create a frequent flyer account with the airline you’re flying. Thankfully, nearly all airlines allow you to set this up for free. In fact, you can even create accounts for your minor children.
But to receive mileage credit for your flights, you must then add your frequent flyer number to your reservation; it’s not enough to simply create the account and then book a ticket without logging into that account or manually adding your number to the reservation. The simplest way to ensure your number is on the reservations is to log into your account when you book your flight through the airline; in that case, your number will be included by default when you purchase your tickets.
Alternatively, you can decide to use a frequent flyer number with a partner carrier and credit your miles to its program. Many airlines have partnerships with numerous other airlines that allow customers to earn miles in a partner program. Most of these partnerships also allow you to redeem miles for flights operated by their partners.
For example, if you’re flying on British Airways, you can earn miles with its partner American Airlines AAdvantage program. You don’t have to create a British Airways account; you can simply use your American Airlines frequent flyer account number and earn miles in their AAdvantage program. Once you earn American Airlines miles, you can redeem them for award flights operated by American or for flights with their numerous airline partners, including British Airways.
You purchase tickets
You can earn reward miles or points from most kinds of tickets. For example, you can earn miles if you purchase tickets yourself or if someone else purchases the ticket for you, including employers and clients (assuming they or you add your frequent flyer number to the reservation). You will also earn reward points or miles if you purchase the ticket with a travel voucher or a gift card. And you’ll earn even more miles when you use an airline credit card to purchase your ticket.
Airline miles used to be awarded based on the distance flown, but many airlines now award miles based on the price of your ticket and your status with the airline’s frequent flyer program. However, most airlines won’t award miles for other purchases such as baggage fees, change fees and seat selection or seat upgrade fees.
When you redeem rewards points for flights
You can even earn frequent flyer miles when you redeem your credit card rewards points for travel reservations booked through the card issuer.
For example, when you redeem your Chase Ultimate Rewards points to book travel through Chase, you’re essentially using miles to pay for a regular ticket purchased through Chase’s online travel agency. The same is true when you redeem your American Express Membership Rewards points for flights booked through AmexTravel.com. And when you redeem Capital One Miles to pay for flights, you’ll also receive mileage credit. You’ll still need to remember to supply your frequent flyer number.
When will you not earn miles on a flight?
While most airline passengers will be eligible to earn frequent flyer miles for their flights, there are some situations where you may not:
You don’t enter your frequent flyer number
If you don’t put your frequent flyer number in your reservation, either because you don’t have one or because you forgot to, then you won’t earn frequent flyer miles. Thankfully, many airlines will allow you to retroactively claim credit for a flight. To do so, you will likely have to fill out a form that includes your flight information and reservation numbers.
You don’t complete the flight
Once you’ve purchased an eligible ticket and supplied your frequent flyer account number, the next thing you need to do is actually complete the flight. Simply purchasing a ticket isn’t sufficient to earn miles.
To receive the frequent flyer miles that you’re eligible for, you have to check in for your flight, have your boarding pass scanned at the gate and make it to your destination. If you miss your flight, or even if the flight is canceled, then you won’t receive any frequent flyer miles. And if for some reason you’re able to board the aircraft without having your boarding pass scanned, then you won’t receive mileage credit.
You redeem frequent flyer miles to pay for your flight
When you redeem your frequent flyer miles to pay for award flights, you won’t earn miles on those flights. You won’t earn any miles on the taxes and fees you must pay for your award flights either.
However, there are rare occasions when your award flight is canceled and you’re accommodated on another airline’s flight that can allow you to earn frequent flyer miles. If this happens to you, always try to add your frequent flyer number to the new reservation on the off chance that you might receive miles.
It’s also important to note that redeeming credit card rewards to pay for a flight through your card issuer’s portal is not the same as redeeming frequent flyer miles to book a flight directly with the airline. When you “pay with points” through your credit card portal, you’re still, in a sense, paying for your flight and will earn frequent flyer miles as a regular paying customer.
Keep in mind:
Transferring credit card rewards to a frequent flyer program to book your flight might net you the most value for those rewards, but it will qualify as an “award flight,” and you won’t earn more frequent flyer miles when you take the flight.
You received your ticket as a benefit of the airline or a credit card
You will not earn frequent flyer miles when you travel using a companion pass benefit offered by the airline or its co-branded credit card. The paid traveler will earn miles, but the companion traveling for free will not. For example, those who travel as a benefit of the Southwest Airlines Companion Pass, or with a companion certificate offered by a Delta SkyMiles credit card won’t earn frequent flyer miles.
When you book certain flights through a third party
If you’re booking your flight with a travel agent or under a business travel booking system, you may not earn frequent flyer miles. Booking travel through a third party like a travel agent or online travel portals like Expedia means you could miss out on miles under some frequent flyer programs. Recently, for instance, American Airlines updated its AAdvantage program terms to specify that only direct bookings with American or partner airlines or those booked through a “preferred travel agency” would earn miles for tickets issued on or after July 11, 2024.
When you book your next business flight through a business travel booking system like SAP Concur, be sure to check whether you’re eligible to earn rewards. If there’s any doubt, it doesn’t hurt to add your frequent flyer number to the reservation just in case. By the way, this isn’t uncommon in the travel industry; many hotel loyalty programs also don’t award points for stays booked through a third party.
You travel as an airline employee benefit
If you are an airline employee, or you’re using the benefits offered to an employee’s friends or family, then you won’t earn frequent flyer miles.
You receive ultra-discounted fares and fare classes
There are deeply discounted fare classes, often called basic economy or economy lite, that sometimes don’t offer frequent flyer miles. The airline’s website or mobile app should specify when these highly discounted fares aren’t eligible to earn miles. There are also special fares offered to government and military travelers that may not earn miles.
The bottom line
It’s fun to earn frequent flyer miles and save them for an award flight. But before you get too excited, take a moment to figure out which flight tickets qualify for airline miles and which do not. All but the most highly discounted tickets that you purchase from the airline or an online travel agency will typically be eligible to earn miles.
But if you redeem miles for your ticket, or travel for free as a companion or on an employee pass, then you won’t earn any miles. Understanding which tickets are eligible for miles before you make your purchase will help you decide if earning miles should influence your decision.
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