Mileage Planย is the frequent flyer program of Alaska Airlines, and a very powerful tool to get discounted business/first class flights if you know how to use it properly.
Mileage Plan runs regular sales where you can buy miles with a bonus- perfect if youโve got travel plans and want to buy premium cabin tickets for less. The bonus normally maxes out at 40%, although people are occasionally targeted for 50%.
Well, I happen to be one of those people this time round. From now until December 22, 4 pm Singapore time, you can buy Alaska Mileage Plan miles at up to a 50% bonus. You’ll need to login to your Mileage Plan account to see what bonus you were targeted for.
Buy Mileage Plan miles at up to a 50% bonus here
Hereโs the breakdown of how the bonus tiers:
- Buy 10,000 โ 19,000 miles, get a 20% bonus (2.46 US cents each including tax)
- Buy 20,000 โ 39,000 miles, get a 35% bonus (2.19 US cents each, including tax)
- Buy 40,000 โ 60,000 miles, get a 50% bonus (1.97 US cents each including tax)
The maximum miles you can buy in a single transaction is 90,000 (60,000 base + 30,000 bonus). However, there isย no limit on the number of miles you can buy in aย year, so youโre free to make multiple transactions.
Should I buy Mileage Plan miles at a 50% bonus?
If you’re targeted for a 50% bonus, there’s a strong case to buy so long as you have travel plans and aren’t buying them speculatively. A 50% bonus is as good as it gets for Mileage Plan miles.
Mileage Plan is one of my favourite FFPs because you can…
- Get a free stopover, even on one-way awards (which allows you to do a rather unique JAL trick)
- Get access to unique partners that you wouldn’t normally be able to access in Singapore, like Hainan Airlines, Icelandair and Fiji Airways
- Get great value first and business class award redemptions out of Singapore with certain airlines
Not a lot has changed since the last Mileage Plan sale, so apologies for the copypasta below:
What do I do with them?
Mileage Planโs key strength is the sheer variety of options you have for premium cabin redemptions.
Remember that for a mere 25,000 Mileage Plan Miles you can do a โround tripโ journey from Singapore to Tokyo in business class, which works out to US$493 if you buy miles at 1.97 US cents each. Thereโll be a further ~US$60 of taxes on top of that, and you’ll need to buy a one-way ticket to or from KUL, but all in youโre still looking at a sub US$600 โround tripโ business class journey.
You can also redeem great value Cathay Pacific awards at 50,000/70,000 Mileage Plan miles each way for business/first class from Singapore to the USA. Or you could do Hong Kong to Europe at 42,500/70,000 miles each way for business/first class (you can’t start from Singapore if you’re flying to Europe)
Note that you cannot book Cathay Pacific awards online and will need to call up Mileage Plan customer service to get this done. You should be able to use the British Airways award search engine to check what space is available on CX Business and First before calling up Mileage Plan-ย have a read of that tutorial here.
You could redeem Hainan Airlines business class awards to the USA at 50,000 Mileage Plan miles in business class (but youโd need to position yourself to Bangkok first because they donโt serve Singapore).
You could redeem Korean Airlines business class awards from Singapore to the USA at 120,000 miles round trip (one-ways are not allowed)
What card should I use?
Alaska Mileage Plan purchases are processed by Points.comย in USD, so here’s the cards I’d use
- BOC Elite Miles World Mastercard– 5.0 mpd, no cap
- UOB Visa Signature- 4.0 mpd, min S$1K max S$2K of foreign currency spending in a statement period
- Citibank Rewards Visa or Citibank Rewards Mastercard- 4.0 mpd, max S$1K a month
- DBS Woman’s World Card- 4.0 mpd, but requires that you write in to DBS to get the bonus 7X credited (3X, or 1.2 mpd will be awarded as base points)
- Standard Chartered Visa Infinite– 3.0 mpd, minimum S$2K spending a statement period
Other important things to note
Alaska chargesย a US$125 fee for changes or cancellations, regardless of how far away you are from departure.
Some people have reported issues with purchasing miles if their Mileage Plan account is new. It used to be that your account had to be at least 10 days old to buy miles, but I get irregular reports as to whether this rule is actually enforced. An email to customer service may sorts out the problem, but if the transaction fails you won’t get charged anyway.
If youโve found this article useful,ย please consider using this link to purchaseย which helps to support the site.
I checked how much bonus I get. I get only 40%…
Let me add the “up to” caveat in the title
Hi Aaron,
Why is it that using the WWMC card requires a write-in to DBS? Is it for all cases when it comes to transactions made in FCY or because this is specifically toward this purchase?
Thank you!
Because points.com trxns sometimes code funny on the back end
What is the DBS email to send to for the appeal?
Use the ib secured mailbox to send
“copy pasta” typo
why is there 4mpd for Citibank Rewards card? points.com transactions normally fall within shoes, bags, clothes category?
sad only got 40%
wait for black friday sales?
Cathay premium awards have been much harder to get since June. Not nearly so much availability as before. Virtually no availability in CX J for ASIA-EUR and vice versa. Also Iโve noticed you might be able to find the j award in CX on the outbound leg and then not at all for the return leg. Otherwise it would be a good deal.
Also the change fee is quite restrictive so you have to be sure you really want those dates before booking if you do find an award.
Definitely. i’d probably think of using the miles more for jal, less for CX.
Is it just me or does CX have lesser availability even when I search through BA’s engine?
Tried a number of dates but each time, no cigar…
Should be 22dec 4am singapore time. Not 4pm singapore time.
4pm Singapore time- 2359 Pacific time on 21st dec
Just bought 40k+20k bonus miles at SIN 9.40 a.m. 22nd Dec.
Still works ๐