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How to Book Your Next Award Flight Like a Pro

by Scott Mackenzie
Last updated December 18, 2017

The difficulty in finding and booking award travel is one of the primary reasons people become disaffected with airline loyalty programs. If the miles can’t be used, then what good are they? Even carriers that like to promote themselves as having more award availability than their competitors aren’t necessarily promising a good deal. Those award flights may not be for the routes you find useful, or they may include especially expensive awards that don’t make good use of your miles.

Start with the Right Questions

For these and other reasons, the process of booking a great award begins before you earn any miles in the first place. The savvy traveler must ask herself three key questions:

1. Where do I want to go?

An airline that offers many flights to Europe may not have frequent service to Hawaii, making it much easier to book a free vacation to one vs. the other. Airline alliances make it easier than ever to avoid this problem by linking route networks, but gaps still exist.

2. How do I want to get there?

One of the best uses of frequent flyer miles is for international business or first class awards. If your airline has a reputation for poor premium cabin service, it may not be a good choice for redeeming miles. On the other hand, it may partner with another airline that has a very good reputation.

3. Am I flexible?

Award flights are generally available when the airline expects to have leftover seats. It would rather give them away to its frequent customers than let them go empty. But this means you are unlikely to find award flights to popular holiday destinations because the airline has no difficulty selling them.

Despite these conditions, award flights tend to have very flexible routing rules and pricing loopholes that make it easier to book complicated itineraries. And one benefit of frequent travel on award flights is that even if you are unable to pick the best dates, you can probably expect to visit again in the future. There is less pressure to create “once in a lifetime” vacations if they become more commonplace.

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Understand the Award Chart and Alliance Partnerships

Conventional revenue fares between an origin and destination are priced in dollars and reflect the demand between those cities, but award seats are often use zone-based pricing. For example, an award ticket from anywhere in the U.S. to anywhere in Europe costs the same number of miles while the cash price for these tickets can vary drastically.

Often award prices are the same regardless of which airline you fly within the carrier’s alliance or how many connections you make, so look around if you don’t see award availability right away or consider accumulating miles with a different carrier in the same alliance if it has more a better award chart. For example, United Airlines has very generous award chart that permits a free stopover on all international round-trip awards, but its MileagePlus program will sometimes charge twice as many miles for partner awards vs. an award on its own planes. This may be a deal breaker for some people.

A limited number of carriers, such as British Airways, use distance-based pricing for awards. This can be very inexpensive for non-stop flights. One partner, Alaska Airlines, operates dozens of daily flights from the West Coast to Hawaii. These can be booked through British Airways’ Avios program for only 12,500 miles one-way whereas many other carriers (including Alaska Airlines) will charge 20,000 miles for the same flight.

Amounts are one-way, calculated individually for each segment.
Amounts are one-way, calculated individually for each segment. “Blue Class” refers to saver-level award space on British Airways and its partners.

Fuel surcharges are the final sticking point. These are rolled into most conventional international fares so customers never see them, but airlines differ in how they apply them to award tickets. Most U.S. carriers, including United Airlines, do not impose fuel surcharges on awards. American Airlines doesn’t, either, except for flights on British Airways. Both carriers fly to London and both can be booked with American Airlines’ AAdvantage miles, but choosing the wrong flight for an award can cost hundreds of dollars more for an ostensibly “free” ticket.

Use a Strategy to Search for Award Availability

Most award search tools are pretty dumb. They don’t do a good job of searching for all possible itineraries that will get you to your destination, nor do they look at all the available alliance partners. As a result it sometimes seems that no award space exists.

Part of the problem may be where you search. United Airlines will display most partner flights in its search engine, but you will have to call to ask about availability on Singapore Airlines. British Airways doesn’t list Alaska Airlines. American Airlines has a much longer list. Fortunately, most airlines release the same award inventory to all their partners, which matches the “saver” award inventory they offer their own members. You can search for Alaska Award space on its own website or with American Airlines and then call British Airways to book it. Qantas and British Airways have good search tools for the oneworld Alliance, while ANA and Aeroplan can be used to search for Star Alliance flights.

Adding more connections also helps. Look at your airline’s route map and the route maps of its alliance partners to see which connecting hubs make sense. Free online tools like OpenFlights.org can help. When you go back to searching for award flights, begin by searching for award space on each segment individually and then piece the flights together.

OpenFlights REP
Can’t find award space to Siem Reap? There aren’t a lot of flights. So start there and work your way back, constructing your itinerary piece by piece.

As long as connections are less than 4 hours for domestic flights or 24 hours for international flights there are few rules to limit constructing your own itinerary, though some carriers specify a maximum total distance flown. Most seasoned travelers begin by searching for the over-water segments because these have the least award availability. Finding domestic connections at either end is relatively easy.

Check Your Reservations with the Operating Airline

Finally, don’t forget to keep an eye on your reservation. The airline that ticketed the award still needs to communicate with the airlines that operate each flight, so if you booked a partner award you may want to wait a couple days and then call the other airline to confirm it has your reservation on file. This is also a good time to ask about seat assignments or special meal requests. The ticketing airline will be able to provide a different six-digit confirmation number for each partner.

Booking award flights is never as easy as one would hope, but it can be extremely rewarding when all the pieces come together. Patience is required to find the right availability and the best carriers and premium cabins. Sometimes you’ll be looking in obscure places for award space your airline said didn’t exist. But above all, stay calm. If you do need to call in, build a friendly rapport with the agent, who will hopefully help to expedite the process.

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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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If you have a question or would like to make a press inquiry, please contact:

Scott Mackenzie
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