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Buy almost 20K Airline Miles at a Penny Each!

by Scott Mackenzie
Last updated February 5, 2019

I shared this news on Twitter and Facebook earlier, but I want to make sure everyone is aware of this deal from Wyndham Rewards. Jimmy from Travel By Points has a great explanation of how to go about getting bonus points form Wyndham and then transferring them to your favorite airline for miles. You can get up to 19,200 miles for a cost of roughly 1 cent each.

Earlier this year, I bought 16,000 Wyndham points for just this purpose during the Daily Getaways promotion (they cost me $50). My plan was and continues to be to use these for a hit in the US Airways Grand Slam promotion by transferring them to Dividend Miles. However, if the Grand Slam doesn’t materialize–as everyone is still (im)patiently waiting for news–then I will still transfer them anyway.

I used this same logic when participating in the various Club Carlson promotions earlier this year. I now have over 100,000 Gold Points but I don’t plan to use any of them for hotels. Instead, they’ll go toward padding my balance with United so I can get even greater value out of them and continue limiting my hotel stays to my preferred programs like Hyatt. I outlined back then how you could earn enough points from Club Carlson to get a domestic award ticket for roughly $250 in hotel stays–another case of buying miles for about a penny each.

These examples demonstrate the hidden potential of some hotel loyalty programs that might otherwise be overlooked. I’m not that excited about staying at a Wyndham or Carlson hotel. I just get better benefits from my status with Hyatt, Hilton, and others. But promotions at these second-tier hotels are more numerous along with transfer opportunities to get the points out of there and into a form you are more likely to use. Jimmy even points out that Wyndham is one of the few hotels that explicitly permits receiving award credit for a “phantom stay” where you pay but never check in.

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Follow this link and read B.8 under part II – “If the property requires a credit card for a reservation, the Member is a no-show, and the hotel charges his/her credit card for the first night of the no-show stay, the Member will receive points for such night as if he/she had stayed.”

Jimmy based his analysis for earning cheap miles on a post by Ric at Loyalty Traveler, one that I overlooked because it said “Wyndham” in the title, and I had no interest in Wyndham hotels. But if I had done a little digging like Jimmy, or even bothered to remember that I bought a pile of these for the same purpose, I would have found a hidden treasure! 😉

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About Scott Mackenzie

Scott is a former scientist and business student who created Travel Codex to unravel the complexity of travel loyalty programs. After 11 years in Seattle, he now lives in Austin with his wife and flies over 100,000 miles every year.

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