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What Miles & Points Allow us to Do
April 1, 2013

What are points worth?

There is a lot of talk about “the value of points.” Sure, you can figure out the straight economics of points (for example, each Southwest point = $1.67 cents on Wanna Get Away Fares – or twice that if you have a SWACP), but quite frankly, I don’t pay much attention to the economics of points (funny enough, I was an econ major!). The reason is that points allow much more than just not outlaying cash. Even if the economics didn’t make sense because I could have found cheapish tickets to Mardi Gras, the fact that nspfiance and I could both travel from round-trip between Cleveland and New Orleans for $10 total made the 23-hour foray worth it – and thus we booked it. If flights were as low as $200 round-trip, would we have pulled the trigger? That’s a toss-up. And that trip, and experience, is hard to put a dollar-value on.

In addition, how would you value our trip to South America last fall, flying first-class on 5 segments, mostly international? Do you value it at the ~$6,000+ the flights themselves would have cost? Do you value it at the ~$1,800 it would have cost if we flew economy (given that we were taking the trip for a friend’s wedding regardless of price)? Or do you chalk it up that miles and points gave us an experience we won’t soon forget, allowing us to do things we otherwise would never have been able to do? That’s how I value miles & points.

Smoking a cigar and having a glass of wine sitting on the courtyard deck above is hard to put a value on

Last Wednesday afternoon I learned I needed to travel to St. Louis, quickly. Surprisingly, there are very few non-stop flights. There was one the following day that left at 7:30am, and luckily had Saver Award Availability. 10,000 Miles + $77.50 (due to United’s Close-In fee) and I was in St. Louis. I could have chosen to fly on United, Southwest, U.S Airways or American – all for miles alone if I had wanted/needed. This was a short-haul trip, so prices each way were in the $200-$300 range. But if I needed to go to Timbuktu, I could still have found a way to get there, essentially for free or for minimal costs.

That’s how I value my miles and points.

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Miles & Points  / Travel

February Miles & Points
March 18, 2013

February turned out to be a fairly dull month; however, March should be quite the opposite! February Monthly Recap:

  • 1,594 United Airlines Miles – 1,350 mile bonus for purchasing flowers through United’s Shopping portal for nspfiance for Valentine’s Day, 79 miles for staying at a Marriott and linking my United Account and the balance for eating/drinking at one of my local hangouts that is tied to my MileagePlus Dining Rewards.
  • 8,902 Ultimate Rewards through purchases on my Chase Freedom Card including 3,974 bonus points from the Quarter 1 Spending Bonuses and the 7% Dividend Bonus that posted for my 2012 spend on my Chase Sapphire Card
  • 1,653 British Airways Avios for spend on my BA Card
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Miles & Points

Sacrificing United Miles
February 23, 2013

This coming up weekend nspfiance and I are heading to Tulum, Mexico for a good friend’s wedding. For the first time in a long time, this trip isn’t being booked with miles or points – like whoa! That doesn’t mean there isn’t some travel hacking going on, though. Moving to Cleveland last year, only a 2.5-hour drive away from the rents and ending a 3-year long-distance relationship (the distance part, not the relationship part) resulted in not attaining United Premier status for the first time in years. While no more complimentary upgrades is painful, the most pain comes from the lack of other benefits. Apparently airlines these days charge for checked baggage and don’t give everyone access to special security lines, how rude. Since I cancelled my United card in January to get approved for my Southwest card, I’m really treated like a pleb.

So, what’s the quickest way to get some of these benefits back? Aegean Airlines gives you a 1,000 mile signup bonus when you signup for their loyalty program, Miles and Bonus. I got in on a 2,000 bonus in November. The cool think about Aegean? After only 4,000 miles you gain Star Alliance Silver status. And that signup bonus, yep, it counts toward status. You might be thinking how or why a Greek airline might be beneficial to someone who, say, has never been to Greece and doesn’t have plans to do so for the foreseeable future.

That’s where the power of airline alliances comes in. US Airways flights can be credited to Aegean at a 100% rate. United does too on many fare types. So my 2,800 miles on United are going to my Aegean account, 100% on the way down and 50% on the way back. That totals 2,100 miles. Add that to my signup bonus and I’m a Star Alliance Silver member for only taking one round-trip flight. That gives me access to:

  • Priority Reservations Waitlisting
  • Priority Airport Standby
  • Access to Premier Access Security Lanes at select airports
  • Free Checked Baggage on select airlines

And now I have 12 months from March 3, 2013 to earn an additional 16,000 miles and earn Gold Status. Those benefits include:

  • Priority Airport Check-in
  • Airport Lounge Access
  • Priority Boarding
  • Extra Baggage Allowance
  • Priority Baggage Handling
  • Priority Reservations Waitlisting
  • Priority Airport Standby
  • Access to Premier Access Security Lanes at select airports

Meet-up in a *G Lounge anyone?

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Miles & Points  / Travel

Mardi Gras
February 14, 2013

Well, that pay-off was fast. I earned my Southwest Airlines Companion Pass on February 2nd, you can read about that here. And while I haven’t even received the physical card, we put the Companion Pass to quick work. Liz had an old Southwest Award Ticket (before SWA began using points), good for a free round-trip ticket as long as there was availability on the flight. Given the high demand for Mardi Gras, I didn’t think we had a shot at using it this past weekend; however, upon doing a quick search on Thursday, it looked like we could jump on an 8am flight, land in New Orleans by 12:30pm – giving us enough time to hit both Tucks and Endymion Parades – and jump back on an 11am flight on Sunday to get back to Cleveland. Of course, with the Companion Pass, Liz’s 1 round-trip award voucher was easily turned into two award vouchers. Total Cost for Flights: $20 for 9/11 Security Fees.

While I was initially reminded why I’ve enjoyed being a United Premier member for the past 2.5 years upon arriving at the airport…



…these little guys did help start the trip off on the right foot:


We didn’t have a hotel until we had an hour layover in Nashville and began trying to find the best deal. Unfortunately there is no United Lounge at BNA, so I used a free one-hour of Boingo Hotspot service that I received for taking a 2-question survey last month:



It is Mardi Gras, and hotels were expensive! We could have used 10,000 Starpoints for the W Hotel, but I would prefer to use the Cash + Points option, which I find to be a far better value. At the end of they day, we both Named-Our-Own-Price on Priceline and wound up at the Hyatt Regency for $200. It was a great hotel and our Platinum Status from holding the Chase Hyatt Visa card granted us free internet.


View from the Hyatt


We watched Tucks from a grandstand that some friends had access to, had a quick dinner at John Besh’s Domenica restaurant (the best pizza in New Orleans), watched Endymion from the famed St. Charles Avenue, then trekked it to a balcony party on Bourbon Street to throw beads down to the crowd. The open-bar and all-you-can-eat spread of Nawlins food hit the spot. The 60-70 degree weather allowed me to don the flip flops for the entire trip as well as enjoy my first cigar of the past 6 weeks.


Noah’s Ark Float in the Endymion Parade



Bourbon Street from atop during Mardi Gras Weekend


Of course a trip to Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop for a nightcap and 1:30am Beignets from Cafe Du Monde was in order to close out the night.



I’m impressed that Southwest has Wifi – which allowed me to listen to the Michigan Basketball game on the way down and take care of some needed work on the way home. Now I just need to find out how to become an A-List Member to avoid those $8 Wifi Charges, any ideas?

Overall, it was a great trip – New Orleans still feels very much like home.

Southwest has had some amazing deals lately ($49 one-way airfares for flights within 500 miles and $69 for flights within 1000 miles). Given that you can always cancel the flights and either have the points go back into your account or have the funds be credited to your account to be used later, Liz and I have already started booking flights just in case we feel like going somewhere when the weekend arrives. That $98 round-trip fare can hit up DC, NYC and Chicago – for both of us. We’ll be in touch if we are coming to a city near you! I think I could get used to this.

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Travel

Double Down
February 11, 2013

One of the great things about Citibank is that their IT infrastructure seems to have been built in an age that did not allow for updates. What exactly does that mean? Well, theoretically, when applying for a credit card, Citi’s system should have real-time ability to assess whether or not you already have one of their cards, and if so, reject you from applying for the exact same card, with the exact same sign-up bonus. But because today is 2013, with the googles and interwebs, and Citi seems to be using Altvista and dial-up, the following is possible:

Yes, that is 2 Citi HHonors Signature Visa Cards. Yes, they both had a sign-up bonus of 50,000 points after $1,500 spend in 4 months. How did I sign-up for 2 of the exact same cards? I filled out one application form in Google Chrome and one in Mozilla Firefox, and then hit submit within seconds of one another.

Yes, that is over 103,000 Points (and Gold Status due to a sign-up bonus from last spring) – all for spending what I usually spend (rent, car payments, insurance, food, etc…). I’m pretty sure I am going to go for the Hilton AMEX Card that gives 40,000 Points after $750 in spend on my next churn in April. That would put me at about 150,000 Points. The AMEX Card will give me access to AXON Awards, which would give me discounts on 4-night stays in a hotel such as:


Hilton Bora Bora – 4-Night Stay: 145,000 Points with AXON Award


Hilton Maldives – 4-Night Stay: 145,000 Points with AXON Award

Add in that Liz will have 150,000 points as well within 60 days, I’m thinking a good use of those would be on our way to or way back from either Bora Bora or the Maldives in one of my favorite cities:


Hilton Phuket – 4-Night Stay: 85,000 Points with GLON Award

Throw in that my favorite custom-made suit store and panang-curry restaurant is within walking distance from the Hilton in Phuket, and I think this will be a trip-of-a-lifetime. 8 nights at some of the best hotels in the world, all free (including breakfast due to my Gold status). Stay tuned, and in a bit I’ll share how we are planning to fly Business Class for this trip. Total price-tag? A few hundred dollars for taxes.

UPDATE: After this trick working for years, there are rumors running around that Citi just fixed this. While I have not confirmed the rumors, if you have tried this and get a pending status for one of the cards, don’t call up the consideration number. Just let the system work its magic. Let this be a lesson, though, that when deals present themselves, there’s no time to think. Just act.

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Luxury Hotel  / Miles & Points

January Miles & Points
February 7, 2013

There are dozens of ways I have been earning miles and points over the past 7 months, so I figure putting together a monthly post with all of my miles and points awards will help illustrate the different methods:

  • 110,070 Southwest Points + Companion Pass from 2 Credit Card Signups: Valued at over $3,000
  • 400 Club Carlson Points from liking their Facebook Page: Nominal Value
  • 50,000 Hilton HHonors Points from my 2nd Citi HHonors card posted: Valued at roughly $250
  • 1,000 Priority Points from liking their Facebook Page: Nominal Value
  • 100 Amtrak Points through a Facebook Promotion: Nominal Value
  • 30 Starwood Points through CC spend: Nominal Value
  • 502 British Airways Miles through CC spend: Nominal Value
  • 2,500 Ultimate Rewards from purchasing Vanilla Reloads on my Chase Freedom Card: Valued at $40
  • 302 United Miles from MileagePlus Dining Rewards

As you can see, the Southwest Companion Pass was really where I focused my energy for January. The funny part about it is that when I woke up on January 2nd for my January Churn, neither Southwest card was in my game plan! A quick read of the Miles Forum and Flyertalk made me think otherwise, a quick audible was make and I am very happy with the outcome. Always need to be flexible in this game.

My “rookie mistake” moment was purchasing a new suit from Macy’s and completely forgetting to go through the Chase’s Ultimate Rewards portal. Bye bye 1,000 United miles.

Award Wallet is a very powerful tool that is extremely helpful in tracking all miles/points and I would be lost without it. You can use a free version or pay $5 for 6 months.

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Miles & Points

Buying Money
February 4, 2013

Yesterday in about 10 minutes I made $92.10 from purchasing money. For this you will need either a Chase Freedom credit card or Citi World Dividend card. Both have no annual fee which is great for building up your credit history, and both offer 5% back on purchases made at drug stores this quarter.

Steps:

  1. Order an AMEX Bluebird card. They are free and do not affect your credit
  2. Purchase Vanilla Reload cards from CVS, load each one with $500. Total fees will be $7.90. There are a number of Vanilla Cards – make sure to get the one that looks like this:

  3. Load your Bluebird card with the Vanilla Reload cards (you can load $1,000 a day or $5,000 a month). Pay rent, car payments or bills for free with your Bluebird card or just use it as your daily credit card
  4. Collect the 5% cash back The Freedom card (caps out at $1,500 in spend per quarter and the Dividend card caps out at $6,000 in spend annually). That $7,500 equates to $75 in fees and $375 cash back, netting $300 in profit for essentially buying money.

A word of caution. Don’t simply run out and buy these if you don’t use the cards for anything else. That could raise a red flag on your account. Instead, use the cards for some everyday-type of purchases. Also, it won’t hurt to add a pack of gum or something else to your purchase to avoid having the exact same charge on your card repetitively.

The Freedom Card actually yields Ultimate Rewards points, which are worth $0.01 each for cash-back – but I like to use them by transferring them to United, U.S. Airways or Hyatt, more than doubling the value!

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Cash Back

Fly With Me – For Free
January 20, 2013

The culmination of 7 months of pure dedication to the miles and points game paid off huge dividends this January. Sure, in half of 2012 I received 75K British Airways Miles, $400 Straight-Cash-Homey, 40K Ultimate Rewards (to be transferred into United, British Airways, Hyatt, Marriott or many other partners), $1,060 worth of hotel rooms at Hyatt, and 90K Hilton points. Not too shabby. However, my January credit card churn makes that look like child’s play. I’ll go into the 100K American Airlines miles in my next post (140K if American merges with US Airways since I also received 40K US Airways Miles). But today I am going to share what I think is one of the best deals out there: The Southwest Airlines Companion Pass (SWACP).

The SWACP allows your designated companion to fly with you for free on any paid or award trip. Going 322 miles to Chicago on a Wanna Get Away fare? 2 for the price of 1. Going 1,975 miles to San Diego on an Anytime fare? 2 for the price of 1. Going to Baltimore every other weekend so nspfiance can see first-hand the color of linens, flowers, and salt shakers? 2 for the price of 1.

How does one qualify for such an awesome item as the SWACP? You must earn 110,000 points in a calendar year. As you might have guessed by being the only italizied word in the previous sentence, the key word there is earn. What exactly does earn mean? Well, you can earn points by either flying or utilizing SWA partners. So, how did I earn 110,000 by February 2nd, only 32 days into the year?

  • I transferred 10,000 Ultimate Rewards points (valued at $100 cash, or roughly $230 in travel) to Hyatt. The conversion rate meant that I received 4,800 Hyatt points (instant transfer). I then transferred the 4,800 Hyatt points to my SWA account. It took roughly 5 days, but I then earned 4,800 SWA points towards the Companion Pass. Phew, 4% of the way there.

  • I signed up for a Southwest Airlines Personal Card through a link I found online. While this link is not directly from Southwest’s web site, it was a link that is still advertised throughout the web. The sign-up bonus for this card? 50K Points after $2K spend. While I needed to renew my car insurance (thank you for accepting credit cards) and had a few other expenses, I loaded up my Bluebird Prepaid Card with Vanilla Reloads from CVS, costing me $11.85 to pay my rent and monthly car payment, and BAM. Minimum spend hit. Not a bad way to earn 50K points. Phew, 51% of the way there
  • I signed up for a Southwest Airlines Business Card through a link i found online. While this link is not directly from Southwest’s web site, it was a link that is still advertised throughout the web (sound familiar?). The sign-up bonus for this card? 50K points after $2K spend (sound familiar?). What is my business, you ask? Well, you are reading it. In full disclosure, I plan on touting credit cards through this web site and selling some adspace (for the 3+ people who read this blog). While I certainly don’t expect to quit my day-job, I do hope to make some side cash while living the dream and helping others to do so as well. What are my business expenses? Anything travel-related. I went to “that city down south” in ohio last weekend to watch Michigan play ohio in basketball. Gas/f&b/hotel, all blog-related expenses. My stay at the Hilton Garden Inn yielded me 2X points for registering for their 2X Promotion this quarter. Nice. Sorry, where was I. Oh ya, SWA Business card. After expenses from last weekend’s trip, this weekend’s trip to Ann Arbor and purchases for a trip to Tulum, Mexico, I picked up $800 in AMEX Pre-Paid cards that I can use at a later date for work-related-travel-expenses, and BAM. Minimum spend hit (sound familiar?). Not a bad way to earn 50K points. Phew, 100% of the way there.

After a couple hundred more dollars in spend on my Personal card, a quick call to Chase to ask them to move my statement dates up to the next possible date (so the points hit my SWA account sooner), and I’m at 110,070 points. Now, let’s examine this a little closer…

It is February 2nd, 2013. The Companion Pass is valid for the year you earn it AND the entire next year. So, as of February 2nd, 2013, nspfiance and I fly 2-for-1 until December 31, 2014 – 23 full months! The 110,070 points are enough for at least 4 round-trip tickets – and the SWACP can be used on Award Tickets!

That’s 8 round-trip tickets for a total of $368 (2 $69 Annual Fees + opportunity cost of transferring my Ultimate Rewards). I’m expecting to go on at least 10 additional Southwest trips over the next 23 months, and at an average price of $175, it’s looking like the $368 is going to net me about $3,150 in value.

If only United or American could let you earn elite status like that…

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Miles & Points

Trip Review: South America – Food & Drink
January 7, 2013

Other Trip Notes:
Stay in Style
Travel in Style

The trip started off with a nice 45-minute nap from Cleveland to Chicago aboard a 6am flight. That was necessary given Liz & I hadn’t slept the night before. It put just enough fuel in the tank in order to start off the trip on the right foot:



A nice cold Polish beer: Tyskie

We ate a couple wrapped up danishes, and it would come to no surprise that we took a couple bags of chips for the road.


Copy Airlines International First Class Lounge (shared with Turkish Airlines).

Along the way we settled into first class seats with full-on menus to select from, ate lunch with La Martina family at their Polo estate, had multiple Argentinian steaks, sipped wines at multiple Chilean Vineyards, andhad an amazing feast at our friend’s wedding in Lima:


Wheels not quite up; champagne not quite down


A nice soup to start off a meal 35K feet above the ground


First Steak I ate on a plane


A small snack


Much needed Cheese and Meat platter


The first item that would ruin a shirt of mine in the air (it happened 3 times this trip)


Funny enough, this was the best steak I have had in the past year


South American Red Bull


Puerto Madero dessert in BA


Liz extremely excited about the menu, and especially the ice cream


The third shirt I destroyed from food in the air


A first course


Not-fully-popped-popped-corn. At La Mar in Santiago, Chile


Sipping wines in Santa Cruz, Chile


The Andes view while sipping on wine at TerraVina


View from the Italian Restaurant we had our engagement dinner at – yes, Italian in South America


Champagne Engagement


Wines and lunch at the gorgeous Viu Manent Vineyard


Thanksgiving Dinner at Bisquertt Family Vineyards


The dinner and wine pairings continue, but mysteriously the dessert disappeared before Liz could take a picture of it…


Lunch at El Mercado


An amazing spread of cheeses, meats, and whiskey


Let lunch begin


And a drink


And saddest of all, the final dinner

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2-for-1 Wednesday
December 20, 2012

Happy Wednesday!

Free Shoprunner for 1 Year
1-Year Free Membership Link

Use promo code: runner

Club Carlson Instant Gold Status
Gold Status Link

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