Skift Take

It's becoming easier for travelers on many airlines to use frequent flyer miles. That's the good news. But many airlines are only making the cheapest award tickets available on flights where the cash fare is low. In many cases, that means airline miles aren't as valuable as before.

Several once-stingy airlines now make more reasonably-priced free seats available to loyalty program members than a few years ago, perhaps to satisfy credit card companies who spend billions of dollars annually buying points for their best customers, according to a new study.

Worldwide, American Airlines showed the biggest jump in the annual CarTrawler Reward Seat Availability Survey, offering cheap reward seats on roughly 82 percent of flights, an increase of 27.8 points, year-over year. Other major gainers include Turkish Airlines (up 15.7 points to 95 percent) and United Airlines (up 10.7 points to 75.7 precent.)

It can be challenging to compare the world’s frequent flyer programs because all have their own rules, and each prices awards differently. Nonetheless, analyst Jay Sorensen of IdeaWorksCompany tries each spring to answer a simple question: “How easy is redemption for the basic and most popular reward type offered by the world’s top airlines?”

This year, as every year, Southwest Airlines ranked first, because it makes free seats available on every flight, a point of pride for the carrier.

Turkish Airlines, Air Canada, JetBlue Airways, Lufthansa Group and Qantas Group all also make reasonably-priced free tickets available on more than 90 percent of flights studied by IdeaWorks. Other strong performers include China Eastern, Norwegian Air and American, which all make available cheap redemptions on 80 percent of flights.

Sorensen’s data suggests it is getting easier on many airlines to redeem for the cheapest awards, though the trend may not be as favorable to customers as it appears. Increasingly, Sorensen noted in an interview, airlines tie award prices to fares.

Five or more years ago, passengers sometimes could redeem relatively few miles for what otherwise would have been an expensive ticket. Today, on many carriers, they may only may find cheap redemptions when the cash price of the ticket is discounted. It makes miles less valuable, but easier-to-use.

Of course, many infrequent flyers now earn fewer miles from travel than before. On many major carriers, mostly in the United States but increasingly in Europe, passengers earn miles based on how much they’ve paid for the tickets, not how far they fly. Business travelers may earn more in this system, while leisure travelers tend to lose.

Credit Card Game

Now, the average infrequent flyer may earn more miles from credit card spending than flying, a development that probably has changed how the programs operate. Each of the major card-issuers buys points from larger airlines, so banks can give points to their customers to reward spending.

This is a lucrative business for carriers. Last year, Delta Air Lines said it would reap roughly $3 billion from its relationship with American Express. But for consumers, those miles must be worth something, or customers will cancel the cards, and banks may not want to continue the relationships. That may be part of the reason airlines now offer more lower-level wards, Sorensen said.

“The advent of co-branded cards has had an absolutely huge effect on frequent flyer programs,” Sorensen said. “The bank relationships are really driving the economics of these programs right now.”

The credit card game isn’t new. But in an interview earlier this year, Andrew Watterson, chief revenue officer at Southwest Airlines, said banks began to take relationships with airlines more seriously after the 2008 recession.

“As the economy strengthened and the airlines went through the re-negotiations with the banks, it got to the point of critical mass,” he said.

Now, Watterson said, Southwest is expanding to fly to Hawaii in part because it suspects the new routes will “ignite” credit card applications, adding to the airline’s revenues.

Other airline executives are more coy in discussing the importance of credit card relationships. In a February interview, Bridget Blaise-Shamai, American’s vice president of loyalty, said American sought to increase the number free seats it makes available because customers requested it, not because of credit card relationships.

“We know that we have our responsibilities in terms of the partnership,” she said. “But I wouldn’t say it’s what we would talk about between the parties, anymore than we talk about what the APR is on the credit card, for example.”

Here are the airlines that make the most reward seats available, according to Sorensen’s study..

Rank Airline availability Yr-over-yr change
1 Southwest Airlines 100.00% No change
2 Air Canada 96.40% Up 6.4 points
3 Turkish Airlines 95.00% Up 15.7 points
4 JetBlue Airways 94.30% No change
5 Lufthansa Group 91.40% Up 0.7 points
6 Qantas Group 90.70% Up 9.3 points
7 China Eastern 89.30% New for 2018
8 Norwegian Air 84.30% New for 2018
9 American Airlines 82.10% Up 27.8 points
10 Air China 80.00% Up 5.7 points
10 China Southern 80.00% Up 5 points
11 Air Asia Group 77.10% Up 1.4 points
12 United Airlines 75.70% Up 10.7 points
13 Delta Air Lines 72.10% Down 2.2 points
14 Alaska Airlines 69.30% Down 12.1 points
15 Korean Air Lines 68.60% Down 2.8 points
smartphone

The Daily Newsletter

Our daily coverage of the global travel industry. Written by editors and analysts from across Skift’s brands.

Have a confidential tip for Skift? Get in touch

Tags: airline innovation, american airlines, frequent flier programs, loyalty

Photo credit: American Airlines is making far more award seats available than a year ago, according to a new study. Pictured is the interior of one of American's Boeing 777-300ERs. American Airlines

Up Next

Loading next stories