Fiji Airways Will Adopt American AAdvantage Miles As Its Currency

Fiji Airways, which has been an American Airlines partner for years, joined oneworld as a partial (‘connect’) member at the end of 2018. It was complicated, with unclear benefits for customers that varied by oneworld partner. Now they’re working towards joining the alliance as a full member.

And in somewhat surprising news, they’re adopting AAdvantage as their frequent flyer program at some point next year.

Expanding programs to cover only partially-related airlines is something we’ve seen before. For instance:

  • British Avios and other IAG airlines like Iberia and Aer Lingus use Avios as their currency. That’s been expanded to Qatar and Finnair, and they’re working to expand this even further.

  • We’ve seen airlines come and go from use of Flying Blue point as well.

  • And we’ve even seen work on American Airlines expanding AAdvantage, for instance South American low cost carrier Jetsmart has been working on this for three years and it’s expected to come to fruition later this year.

Fiji Airways doesn’t have a points program. They’re the primary carrier at their destination, and haven’t seen the need to invest for locals. For foreigners, if you’re going to Fiji it’s probably only once and you’re not going to stay loyal to the airline. There are passengers who connect over Fiji, of course, and where points could sway their choice of destination and therefore carrier. But they haven’t previously invested.

It’s unclear what the details of this will look like – whether earning rates on Fiji Airways will change – but it will help with oneworld integration, allow easier earn and burn, and will mean clearer standards for elite recognition. Perhaps at some point upgrades using AAdvantage miles or systemwide upgrades could even be possible?

However they’re a surprisingly useful partner, flying from Vancouver, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Honolulu and via Fiji to places like Auckland, Christchurch, and Wellington in New Zealand as well as Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, and Adelaide in Australia – plus Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore. I’ve had good luck, for instance, organizing business class awards from Australia to Japan.

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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Comments

  1. I booked australia trip with alaska miles, cheap mile price AND free stopover in fiji on the way to sydney

  2. FJ is a great choice to fly to Christchurch. Stop over and spend several days in the Yasawa islands.

    Availability on FJ award seats in coach is very good. You can usually find 1 or 2 business class award seats when the schedule opens, but they will gone if you wait a few days to book your post-stopover flight. Buy the extra legroom seat in coach.

  3. No business class for all of next year on Fiji
    American is asking 450k one way to akl from dfw
    Roll eyes
    For me hard pass I’m out
    Won’t pay or redeem good luck to them
    After 30 years with AA I’m done
    The pricing is predatory and extortionate

  4. Fiji airlines is a very sweet spot in oneworld, and largely unrecognized.

    If you book out to the end of the cycle as soon as it opens, and are a bit flexible with dates and departure cities, you can almost always put together a trip that’ll work. To Fiji, Australia, New Zealand for 8OK in business.

    I shudder to think of the devaluation will happen when they join AA’s program.

  5. I think this is a good development, hopefully more airlines join AAdvantage as well.

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