Since Marriott and Starwood accounts can now be linked, and you can transfer points back and forth between accounts, I was curious about the process to see how it would work in practice. I learned three things when I made a transfer of 1000 Starwood points into 3000 Marriott points.
Fly Premium Economy to Europe for Less than Coach, and Stack With Amex Savings
The cheapest coach roundtrips between New York and London on Virgin America are running $658 – $780 per person depending on the day of travel. Meanwhile Premium Economy is available for the same price or less, it’s $658 even when coach is more.
This deal is available from other East Coast Virgin Atlantic cities as well, for instance I’ve found it from Washington Dulles. This gets even better. If you’re buying two tickets, you can get $200 back…!
One Thing That Improves Your Chances of an Upgrade and the Worst Thing to Do If You Miss a Flight
A roundup of the most important stories of the day. I keep you up to date on the most interesting writings I find on other sites – the latest news and tips.
Delta Just Killed It With Their New Safety Video
I like American’s new safety video even though (perhaps because of) I’m not much of a fan of cheesy or over-the-top safety videos. I think it’s a solid effort, and I give it high marks precisely because it’s not the most wild and creative thing out there. It’s modern, and does the job.
However I have to give real kudos to Delta’s new safety video which debuts onboard October 1.
How to Link Your Starwood and Marriott Accounts — and Get Elite Status Instantly
Marriott has acquired Starwood, and on day one they’re already making it possible to link frequent guest accounts, match status, and transfer points between programs.
Marriott and Starwood are still separate, the programs are still independent — you earn and redeem Starwood points at Sheraton, Westin, etc. and you earn and redeem Marriott points at Marriott, Renaissance, etc. — but you can move your points back and forth and elite customers of one can be treated as elites with both.
5 Great New Opportunities Created by the Marriott-Starwood Merger
Now that Marriott’s acquisition has closed, and they’re already letting you link accounts, match elite status, and move points between programs, there are fantastic arbitrage opportunities created.
However long the period lasts where the Marriott program and Starwood program retain their separate identities while letting members move their points and status back and forth between the two — whether only a little over a year, or for two years — this period may wind up as one of the real golden ages of hotel loyalty programs.
The Marriott-Starwood Merger Closed and You Can Already Status Match and Transfer Points Between Accounts
Marriott’s deal to acquire Starwood has closed. And they’re seriously ahead of the curve with member benefits.
They are ready to let members link Starwood and Marriott Rewards accounts. Starwood and Marriott elites can have status matches, and members can move points between programs at will.
American Airlines Has a Brand New Safety Video – I Like It
This will take some time to roll out, for instance my flights on American last night still aired the older videos that American has been playing for years (which featured different crew members speaking different parts but that was generally corporate and straight-forward). I expect my American flights today will still have the older video as well, and of course MD80s don’t have inflight video at all.
However the new video is more modern, it has a little bit too long of a lead-in in my opinion, but is more ‘fun’ without being too cheesy either.
Surprising Way to Great Hotel Prices and Starwood Gets Even Better Before Music Stops
A roundup of the most important stories of the day. I keep you up to date on the most interesting writings I find on other sites – the latest news and tips.
Hawaiian Airlines Wants to Be the First US Airline to Fly Airbus A380s, Because Why Exactly?
Japan’s Skymark Airlines was scheduled to take the A380, but it went bankrupt. ANA won Airbus’ support as a creditor to take control of Skymark — all they wanted was Skymark’s slots at Tokyo Haneda — by agreeing to accept the Skymark A380s. ANA says they’ll operate the planes to Honolulu.
No US airline has taken an A380. Many airlines regret theirs. It’s a big plane, expensive to operate, although cost-effective if you can fill it. The idea was to fly routes at slot-congested airports, like Tokyo Narita and London Heathrow, where an A380 could replace two smaller planes. But an airline that does that loses frequently, and becomes less convenient for time-sensitive business travelers. And adding seats to a market drives down the price the carrier can sell those seats for.