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Hawaiian among airlines offering flier mile pools

It is nearly a given in the world of loyalty programs that things can only get worse. Every change that a travel company or a retailer refers to as an enhancement, it seems, will actually mean that you earn fewer points, need more of them to earn rewards or have less flexibility in redeeming them.

So let us pause to consider an unheralded effort at a few of the smaller airlines that helps customers earn free seats many times faster than they used to, and without charging them for the privilege.

Known variously as pooling or sharing, the programs allow customers of Hawaiian Airlines, Sun Country Airlines and JetBlue Airways to give their frequent-flier miles to others or team up with a group to get a free ticket faster. Families, for instance, can combine all their miles so that a foursome can earn a single free ticket much more quickly. And children who might take five or 10 years to earn a free trip on their own through once-a-year flights can contribute to a joint account that helps the family save money sooner.

THE POLICIES ON POOLING

Want to share your frequent-flier miles with a friend or a family member? It might cost you. Here are the pooling policies at some of the biggest U.S. airlines. Some might have minimum or maximum transfer amounts per transaction or per year. Taxes could also be an added cost.

Alaska Airlines: Customers can transfer miles for $10 per 1,000 miles, plus a $25 fee per transaction.

American Airlines: Customers can transfer miles for $12.50 per 1,000 miles, plus a $15 fee per transaction.

Delta Air Lines: Customers can transfer miles for $10 per 1,000 miles, plus a $30 fee per transaction.

Hawaiian Airlines: The carrier’s Share Miles program lets people transfer miles free, as long as the miles go to someone who has a Hawaiian co-branded credit or debit card and is the primary cardholder. Miles can also be transferred for $10 per 1,000 miles (2,000-mile minimum), plus a $25 fee per transaction.

JetBlue Airways: The carrier’s free family pooling program allows up to two adults and five children to pool some or all of their points. It also allows transfers for $12.50 per 1,000 points.

United Airlines: Customers can transfer miles for $15 per 1,000 miles, plus a $30 fee per transaction.

American, Delta, Southwest and United offer nothing of the sort for the moment. To figure out why — and whether it might ever change — consider the details of the smaller carriers’ offerings.

Hawaiian Airlines’ Share Miles program came first, in 2001. While participants can give as many miles as they want to anyone they would like, the recipient has to have a Hawaiian co-branded credit or debit card and be the primary cardholder.

In 2013 Sun Country started offering point pools. The airline, which has many scheduled flights between Minneapolis-St. Paul and warm-weather locations, allows up to 10 people to form a pool and contribute some or all of their points.

Larry Chestler, executive vice president for business development at the airline, has worked for bigger carriers and contrasted his operation with those at companies that fawn over frequent business travelers.

“We are a very leisure-oriented airline,” he said. “Our intention in creating pooling was to recognize that a lot of leisure travel involves family, and sometimes it’s not very frequent. It’s acknowledging a different kind of loyalty.”

JetBlue, the biggest of the three carriers that favor free sharing, also does big business in warm-weather leisure markets. Its family pooling service allows up to two adults and five children to pool, though the airline said it might expand the number of adults at some point.

When JetBlue began allowing pools three years ago, it was also quite explicit in telling customers that they could define “family” however they wanted. Significant others, best friends — anyone was welcome.

“We didn’t want to be prescriptive,” said Scott Resnick, the airline’s director of loyalty marketing. “Who are we to know? I can’t presume to know what your family looks like.”

Scheming parents might see the pools as a terrific way to confiscate their children’s miles, bring in relatives to baby-sit and fly off free on their own. Nothing wrong with that. The carriers report other common uses, too: grandparents and grandchildren teaming up, or parents using pooled points to fly college kids to school and back.

So what is the case for mile-hoarding selfishness among the bigger carriers?

When people without a lot of miles give up on collecting or tracking them or trying to cash them in, it can be a highly profitable event for an airline. After all, if it sold some of those miles to a third party that then awarded them to its own customer, the airline would never have to redeem anything and would keep the payment for the miles even if that customer gave up on the loyalty program. Any pooling program has the potential to reduce the abandonment of loyalty points, since sharing makes them easier to redeem.

JetBlue and Sun Country, however, said they hadn’t seen much change in this “breakage,” as it’s known in the industry. This might be because only a small number of people are finding their way to the pooling programs, or they might be the sort of people who never would have abandoned their miles in any event.

Moreover, American, Delta, Southwest and United all happen to have programs in place that allow people to transfer miles for a fee. These airlines are probably reluctant to give up that revenue.

Delta does allow elite members of its frequent-flier program to share in other ways, by upgrading a travel companion when space is available and by letting top-tier customers grant a year’s worth of elite status to one person each year. And many airlines allow people to donate random lots of miles to charity or spend them on subscriptions. For just 3,200 American miles, you can get 304 issues of The Wall Street Journal, for instance. That’s $32 if you value each mile at a penny, a fraction of what the newspaper costs on its own website.

So there are plenty of easy ways to get at least a little value out of your miles and points, and no need to throw up your hands and orphan them. But infrequent travelers who want the standard free trip will continue to have a tough time earning one just by flying the major airlines.

2 responses to “Hawaiian among airlines offering flier mile pools”

  1. inlanikai says:

    What this article leaves out is the fact that inventory availability for redeeming miles for awards (at the lowest award levels) and upgrades have become more and more restrictive and harder to find. Whatever inventory is leftover is opened up for awards closer and closer to departure instead of months in advance as it used to be. Also, those wanting to use their miles for upgrades, or elites who qualify for free upgrades, now have to compete with “upgrade auctions” or promotions to coach customers to upgrade at the last minute. Airlines have a right to maximize their revenue and that’s fine, but don’t at the same time tell me how much better their frequent flier programs are getting. They’re getting worse.

  2. Mike174 says:

    Yea, these frequent flyer miles are more and more difficult to redeem. And the idea of holding a Ha CC for $75 a year is ridiculous with all those free cards out there.

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