This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia’s quality standards.
Please improve this article if you can. (November 2007)
This article needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (September 2007)
For other uses, see frequent flyer (disambiguation).
A frequent flyer program (FFP) is a loyalty program offered by many airlines. Typically, airline customers enrolled in the program accumulate points corresponding to the distance flown on that airline. Accrued points (also known as frequent flyer miles) can be redeemed for free air travel; for other goods or services; or for increased benefits, such as airport lounge access or priority bookings.
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Points accrual
- 3 Customer status
- 4 Value of a point
- 5 Bankruptcy
- 6 Accounting issues
- 7 See also
- 8 References
- 9 External links
//
History
The first modern frequent flyer program was AAdvantage, initiated in May 1981 by American Airlines; it was a modification of a never-realized concept from 1979 that would have given special fares to frequent customers. It was quickly followed later that year by programs from United (Mileage Plus) and Delta (SkyMiles), and in 1982 by British Airways (Executive Club).
Points accrual
The primary method of obtaining points in a frequent flyer program is to fly with the associated airline. Most systems reward travellers with a specific number of points based on the distance travelled (such as 1 point per mile flown), although systems vary. Many discount airlines, rather than awarding points per mile, award points for flight segments in lieu of distance. In Europe, for example, a number of airlines offer a fixed number of points for domestic or intra-European flights regardless of the distance (but varying according to class of travel). The calculation method can become complicated, with additional points given for flying first or business class, and often fewer points given when flying on discounted tickets.
With the introduction of airline alliances and code-share flights, frequent flyer programs are often extended to allow benefits to be used across partner airlines.
Many programs also allow points to be obtained not just through flying, but by staying at participating hotels, or renting a vehicle from a participating company. Other methods include credit cards that offer points for charges made to the card, and systems which allow restaurant diners to earn miles by eating at participating restaurants.
Programs differ on the expiration of points. Some expire after a fixed time, and others expire if the account is inactive for an extended period (for example, three years).
Customer status
Many frequent flyer programs identify travellers who fly more than a few times per year by awarding them different status levels, which in turn give a number of benefits that cannot otherwise be purchased. Status levels vary from scheme to scheme, but benefits can include:
- Access to business and first class lounges with an economy ticket
- Access to other airlines’ lounges
- Increased mileage accumulation (such as doubling or tripling)
- Reserving an unoccupied adjacent seat
- The ability to reserve specific seats, such as exit row seats with more leg room
- Free or discounted upgrades to a higher travel class
- Priority in waitlisting or flying standby
- Preference in not being bumped if a flight is oversold
- Ability to grant status to another person
Some programs even permit elite members to reserve space on sold-out flights, giving members the ability of bumping regular passengers. In the US, member status is based on elite qualifying miles (or flight segments), not redeemable miles. Typically one elite qualifying mile is earned for each mile flown on a paid ticket, although there may be a percentage bonus for flying full-fare economy, business, or first class. In addition, the airline may offer opportunities to earn elite qualifying miles in non-flying ways, often in connection with their branded credit card. There are usually many more non-flying ways to earn redeemable miles which can be redeemed for free tickets and other benefits. Some airlines will recognise a customer’s status with a competing airline, and grant them the same benefits.
Some airlines offer accelerated admission to their elite programs through special promotions, such as flying 25,000 miles within one month gains a top-tier membership normally reserved for passengers flying 100,000 miles per year.
Value of a point
Travellers frequently debate how much accumulated points are worth, something which is highly variable based on how they are redeemed. A typical ballpark figure is approximately 2 cents per mile based on discount (rather than full fare) economy class travel costs
In contrast, calculating the value of a point based on full-fare business class travel costs can yield a figure several times higher, but only if the customer would personally be willing to pay the multiple thousands of dollars such tickets would cost otherwise. However, a person paying a full business fare will be able to change flights on short notice without extra cost; a person flying business class on a free award ticket may find that last minute minutes changes result in no award seat availability with the result that a ticket must be bought.
Increasing limitations on the availability of seats for point redemption, increases in services fees that airlines charge for redemption, and limitations on the transferability of redeemed tickets together have caused the value of points to customers to decrease with time.
Bankruptcy
In the wake of the September 11 attacks, some airlines have faced financial difficulties, raising concerns among frequent flyers that their points could be lost or devalued. All airlines include provisos in their program agreements reserving the right to modify or eliminate them on relatively short notice. But since miles are a strong customer incentive, troubled airlines avoid their elimination in bankruptcy proceedings, and indeed may expand them or make them more generous to elite members and high fare passengers in order to win sales.
Furthermore, since most airline miles are never claimed, the programs represent a relatively small liability, and indeed can represent a profit center, including United Airlines (Chase), US Airways (Juniper Bank), Delta Air Lines (American Express), Northwest Airlines (US Bank), American Airlines (Citibank) and Copa Airlines (Visa).
Historically, the record is mixed. U.S. airlines have usually honored miles held in the accounts of acquired airlines. For instance American Airlines converted members of TWA’s “Aviators” program to its own, as did Air Canada for Canadian Airlines’ “Canadian Plus” program members. Sometimes, miles were honored by a close partner; Continental Airlines assumed Eastern Air Lines’ program when it failed, as did Delta of Pan Am’s. Bankrupt Swissair miles were transferred to Swiss International Air Lines TravelClub who were transferred to Lufthansa’s Miles and More after the acquisition of the Swiss carrier.
Members are at greatest risk of losing their miles when an airline liquidates. All miles and privileges were lost, without recognition from any other carrier, in the cases of Midway, Braniff, and Ansett Australia.
Accounting issues
Business travellers typically accrue the valuable points in their own names, rather than the names of the companies that paid for the travel. This has raised concerns that the company is providing a tax-free benefit (point-based rewards) to employees, or that employees have misappropriated value that belongs to the company, or even that the program acts as a kind of bribe. The U.S. Internal Revenue Service has not as yet made any move to tax mileage programs, though for instance the Canadian taxation authorities consider mileage redeemed for free travel to be a taxable benefit.
In some counties, some reward points can be donated to charity. While the Canadian government will honour these donations as a charitable gift, the difficulty here is getting a tax receipt for those points from the company itself. This policy also appears to conflict with the position that reward points are taxable in the first place.
On the airline side, the points represent potential non-revenue travelers on its books. These must be carried forward on balance sheets as an outstanding contractual debt for an indeterminate time, although the actual value (or loss) may be difficult to determine for any particular period.
See also
- List of frequent flyer programs
- FlyerTalk
- Mileage run
- David Phillips, who received 1.25 million frequent flyer miles by buying pudding.
References
- ^ Ben Beiske (2007). Loyalty Management in the Airline Industry. GRIN Verlag, p. 93. ISBN 3638777170.
- ^ http://www.miles-and-more.com/cdautils/mediapool/media_479895.pdf
- ^
- ^ APS Values and Code of Conduct in practice
- ^ Frequent-flyer points donation a tricky tax issue
External links
- FlyerGuide Wiki
- FlyerTalk forums
- Frequentflyerbonuses.com
- Freefrequentflyermiles.com
- Frequent-flyer partner database
- Award Wallet, frequent flyer point tracking
Commercial air travel
Airlines
List of all airlines • List of passenger airlines
Industry associations
IATA • ICAO • ISTAT
Airline alliances
Oneworld • Star Alliance • SkyTeam
Ticketing
Airline Reservations System • Airline ticket • Airline timetable • Boarding pass • Codeshare agreement • Continent pass • Electronic ticket • Frequent flyer program • Government contract flight • Open-jaw ticket • Red-eye flight • Round-the-world ticket • Standby •Travel agency •Travel search engine •Warsaw Convention
Airport
Airline hub • Airport • Airport lounge • Domestic airport • International airport • Regional airport
Luggage
Bag tag • Baggage allowance • Baggage carousel • Baggage claim • Baggage handler • Checked baggage • Lost luggage
Check-in
Airstair • Airport Check-in • Airport security • Boarding • Gate
Seating
Airline seat • First class • Business class • Premium Economy class • Economy class • Travel class
In flight
Aircraft lavatory • Airline meal • Airsickness bag • In-flight entertainment
Crew
Deadheading • Flight attendant • Pilot
Immigration
Arrival Card • Departure Card • Passport
Safety
Air traffic control • Aircraft safety card • Airline security • Airport authority • Airport police • Civil Aviation Authority • Flight data recorder • In-flight safety demonstration • Overwing exits
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequent_flyer_program”
Categories: Travel | Customer loyalty programs | Airline terminology | Credit cardsHidden categories: Cleanup from November 2007 | All pages needing cleanup | Articles needing additional references from September 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since August 2007