10,000 Extra Miles And 10 Upgrade Certs, Sign Up To Be Notified About New Air Canada Credit Card

Details on the new Air Canada Aeroplan credit card from Chase will come out in December. As a result of the co-brand relationship, Air Canada is already a transfer partner of Chase’s Ultimate Rewards.

Over the summer they launched a ‘wait list’ for the new credit card. Signing up for the wait list by November 8, 2021 and applying and getting approved for the card by February 15, 2022 will give you an additional 10,000 miles on top of the regular signup offer.

They’re adding a new benefit for joining the wait list: 10 eUpgrade credits, and they’re hinting at details of the card by saying this “will be particularly useful when combined with the benefits that come with the card.” The eUpgrades are in addition to an extra 10,000 miles when you’re approved, and everyone already on the wait list as well as those who join now will get both.

It makes sense to join the waitlist which is really just signing up for them to market the card to you, even if you don’t expect to apply, because if you turn out to get the card this gives you incremental benefits. The only reason not to bother, I suppose, is if you’re LOL/24 and ineligible for Chase cards period.

Details on the card haven’t been released yet, though we know it’ll be a Mastercard. Chase issues almost exclusively Visa products (they lease Visa’s network for a flat fee) and Visa helped fund Air Canada’s reacquisition of the program from Aimia. Air Canada co-brands are Amex and Visa cards in Canada. Mastercard must be offering a lot to break in with Air Canada and further with Chase.

The new card should pair nicely with the offer U.S. members can jump on for an easy Air Canada elite status match. There’s no reason for an elite frequent flyer in the U.S. not to become an Air Canada elite with cobrand, except of course for the dreaded 5/24.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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  1. I believe that credit card right there will give Citibank, Bank of America, and American Express all combined a real run for their money.

  2. It’s 10 upgrade credits towards an upgrade, not 10 upgrade certs as that implies each one of the 10 certs=certificates can get you one upgrade. Separately, I’m interested to see if they let people get *A silver while holding back on gold otherwise United clubs would get flooded and Chase’s club card signups might decrease.

  3. This is good news and al, but disappointed to not hear about how it relates to American Airlines. That’s an important part of this blog!

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