In February, American Airlines announced that tickets booked through many third parties would no longer earn miles starting May 1 – but they wouldn’t announce the list of sites whose bookings would become ineligible to earn miles until late April.
- They didn’t know which sites would become ineligible!
- This was all about getting agencies to move to ‘new distribution technology’ that lowers American’s costs, while having agencies sell ancillaries like bags and seats assignments – not just the tickets
Much drama ensued, and American has put off the date where certain tickets will no longer earn miles to July 11, 2024. On that date you’ll only earn miles for tickets if you:
- book directly with American and eligible partner airlines
- book non-basic economy fares through preferred travel agencies
This policy won’t apply to AAdvantage Business members and corporate contract travelers, and non-preferred agencies can add your AAdvantage Business number to a booking (though you won’t earn in the AAdvantage Business program for the travel.
This is all about getting agencies to adopt American’s preferred technology, which many complain is clunky and not fully functional. The airline has also cut staff who support agency bookings as well.
American is big enough that many agencies are doing their best to figure out the best way to comply. In some cases that means technology adoption (and shifting booking volumes onto the platform). In other cases it means working with a compliant host agency.
There’s enough confusion, this is taking longer than the original unrealistic timeline, so it’s no surprise here to see American push back the deadline.
Will the list of travel companies be released this month or is that being delayed too?
This destroys the AA brand. People who are not up to speed with the change will book AA flights and find they got cheated out of miles. A better and compromise way might have been to lower the percentage of miles earned but when flying AA, one should always get some AA miles.
Peoples’ travel, like their income fluctuates. With income, there are many who will earn a lot but only for some years. To have predictably high income for your entire career and life is not that common. Likewise, travel patterns vary. Not much now but maybe a lot later. AA shouldn’t burn all of its bridges.
I feel like a number….
Or is it a sardine kept in the dark…
This from an AA Million miler…
I’m just glad they finally caught up and posted loyalty miles two days ago.
Another brilliant plan by Vasu the visionary shows its pimpled backside. Truly amazing this guy still has a job.
Cmon AA. Get this functional.
Time to stop OPM flyers from clogging up the elite ranks.