Via Frequent Flyer Bonuses, Alitalia is offering a status match program through October 31. Status lasts through the end of the year and details are here. In addition to a status match, you get 20,000 bonus miles after reaching 20,000 qualifying miles. And they’re throwing in reduced elite requalification criteria: 10,000 qualifying miles for the initial tier, 25,000 for mid-tier, and 40,000 for top-tier. If you aren’t already a member but are looking to take advantage of this promo, check out their member-get-member offer and find a buddy to refer you.
Monthly Archives
Monthly Archives for August 2009.
What’s On Your Packing List, Domestic Vs. International
Lucky discusses this morning the documents he prepares to take with him on his international travels. In sum: itineraries and receipts with seat assignments and operating carriers’ record locators (the ticketing carrier will give youa reservation number but each operating carrier will have their own, it’s useful because that’s the number that will let the airline pull up your reservation, you call each airline individually to get that number and usually call each airline indiivdually to get seat assignments or at least the best seats). hotel reservations and printed copies of any hotel correspondence. I’ve more than once arrived and a hotel couldn’t immediately find my resevation, back in April it was my fault as I had booked for the wrong date! But the printed confirmation let me through the relevant security door at the…
50,000 Continental Miles for 2 New Bank Accounts
Lucky writes about his experience opening a Chase checking account for 25,000 miles. It just takes a $100 deposit and 5 debit card transactions run as a credit card (i.e. without use of a PIN) to earn the 25,000 miles. Next he’ll go open a business account the same way, bam 50,000 miles. And this can be done each year, apparently. Believe it or not I still haven’t done this, I don’t have a nearby Chase branch although presumably I could go into one and open an account when I’m in a city where a physical branch is convenient. Sadly this is not a promotion for an online account.
Earning Almost Unlimited Free Miles Churning Citibank Checking/Savings Accounts
I’ve made some oblique references (and soe less oblique ones, it was my #2 way to earn miles here) to earning miles by funding Citibank online checking and savings accounts with a credit card. Many times in the past I’ve been asked not to post about the deal by folks who were benefiting from it, the theory was that extra exposure was likely to kill it because the deal was just so good and not sustainable. Citibank has been cracking down on many of the people taking uber advantage, and I suspect many of the folks who used to email me asking not to write about it are no longer able to use it themselves. Hence when I’ve written briefly about it on the blog here in the past few months I haven’t gotten such…
Business Class: Los Angeles – Bogota $148+tax on Mexicana
This must be a mistake, but take advantage of it while it lasts. The full fare business class roundtrip is $2581+tax, the discounted business is $148? Perhaps this was intended as $1480. (For comparison the discounted Mexicana business class fare departing San Francisco is $2865, from Chicago $2763, and from Newark $2731.) It’s a non-refundable fare, but without date or time restrictions, the only issue is that discounted business inventory needs for be available for the flights in question. This won’t last, jump on it if interested.
The Best Credit Cards, New Credit Card Offers, and Signing Up for Cards for Profit
Frugal Travel Guy‘s post for today was titled “Which Credit Cards for the US MInt Deal?” but it’s really a generalized comparison of credit cards. He likes the Starwood American Express and Citibank American Express Platinum which earns Thank You Points the best. Both are respectable choices. I recommend the Starwood American Express in my much larger discussion of how to choose the best credit card. I can’t really complain about the 5 points per dollar from the Citi Platinum Amex though I long for the days when those points were worth three cents apiece (or the days when they were worth even more…) rather than just one. Rick both recognizes and dismisses the Asiana American Express, an explanation of which I provided recently — 2 points per dollar on all spend, and a mileage-based…