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Get Free Flights With Your Credit Card!

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Published in Credit Cards on 6 March 2008

Fancy a free flight for your everyday spending? A reward credit card offering air miles may be right up your street...

Would you like to be rewarded for your everyday shopping?

Even better, imagine flying to New York, glass of bubbly in tow - all courtesy of your credit card.

Well, with a reward credit card offering air miles, a free flight could be just round the corner.

Credit cards which offer you reward air miles are very similar to cashback credit cards, only instead of points or cash, you collect miles for every pound you spend. These can be redeemed for rewards, including leisure activities, days out - and, of course, flights.

You don't need to be a frequent flier to benefit from these reward schemes, although it often does help. The key word here is loyalty. And if you are loyal, and savvy enough, it can pay.

Here's a selection of cards on the market at the moment:

Provider

APR

Reward

Notes

British Airways American Express Credit Card

17.9%

One BA mile for every £1 spent. 1,000 bonus miles on first spend.

 

British Airways American Express Premium Plus Card

37.8% (inc. fee)

1.5 BA miles for every £1 spent. Three miles for every £1 spent on a BA holiday. 6000 bonus miles on first spend.

Annual fee of £120 applies.

Virgin Atlantic White Card

17.9%

One Flying Club mile for every £1 spent. 3,000 bonus miles on first spend.

Spend £10,000 and qualify for an upgrade to premium economy. Earn double miles when booking Virgin holidays.

Virgin Atlantic Black Card

37.1% (inc. fee)

Two Flying Club miles for every £1 spent. 6,000 bonus miles on first spend.

Annual fee of £115 applies. Spend £5,000 and qualify for an upgrade to premium economy. Earn double miles when booking Virgin holidays.

BMI American Express Credit Card

15.9%

1.5 destinations miles for every £1 spent. 20,000 bonus miles when you spend £250.

Earn double miles for purchasing BMI flights at flybmi.com

Lloyds TSB Airmiles Duo Credit Card

15.9%

One Airmile for every £10 spent on the Lloyds TSB American Express Card. One mile for every £50 spent on the Lloyds TSB Mastercard.

Free 1,500 Airmile voucher when you first spend £10 or more.

Airmiles is probably the best known reward scheme offering flights as a reward, and is also the best way to collect miles on your everyday shopping.

Many retailers have signed up to the scheme, including Tesco, Shell and even eBay, allowing you to double the miles you collect by shopping at these stores and paying for these purchases with your credit card.

The Lloyds TSB Airmiles Duo card offers one mile for every £10 you spend using the American Express card, and one mile for every £50 you spend using the MasterCard. The cards are linked to one account, with the MasterCard essentially designed as a backup card where American Express is not accepted. You also earn double miles when using the card abroad.

In addition, if you sign up before the end of April, Airmiles will give you a free 1,500 Airmile voucher. This is enough for two return flights to any destination in Zone 1, meaning you could get two return flights to Paris or Amsterdam just by spending £10 on the card.

It is also worth highlighting that unlike some reward schemes, with Airmiles, there are no taxes, fees and charges to pay on top of your points. If you don't rack up the miles that quickly, there is also the option of paying a cash subsidy together with fewer Airmiles.

An idea of how quickly your Airmiles can build up can be found here.

Major Players

Two major airline players also have their fingers in the reward card pie.

Virgin Atlantic and British Airways both have similar credit card reward schemes, allowing you to collect miles towards a range of leisure activities or flights.

Loyalty really does pay with these cards, as frequently flying with these airlines or booking holidays through their holiday service will earn you extra miles. However, miles earned can only be redeemed against flights operated by them or their partner airlines, so may restrict your choices.

Come Fly With Me

If you are a very big spender, and want to accelerate the miles you collect, the BA American Express Premium Plus card offers 1.5 BA miles for every £1 you spend, compared to one BA mile for its standard reward card. You also get 6000 bonus miles on your first spend.

In addition, if you spend £10,000 in one year, you can get a free companion ticket when you redeem your miles for a BA flight (taxes and fees apply).

Virgin offers a similar scheme on its Black credit card. An annual spend of £7,500 will earn you a companion ticket, with two Flying Club miles earned for every £1 spent.

However, if you want the luxury of being able to collect miles more quickly, then be prepared to fork out a £120 fee for the BA card and £115 for the Virgin credit card.

This is quite a hefty charge considering that most credit cards have no standard charge, but may, and I stress the word, may be beneficial if you are a big spender looking to maximise the rewards on your card.

Companion tickets are also offered with the free cards, but you have to spend £20,000 and £15,000 respectively on the BA and Virgin standard reward cards to qualify.

Do The Maths

It's also worth weighing up how much you'll have to spend to qualify for a free flight, as different reward schemes require a different number of qualifying 'miles'.

For example, 750 miles will get you a free return flight to Paris including tax with Airmiles, whereas you would need a whopping 9,000 BA miles to qualify for a similar flight (excluding tax) with British Airways.

In fairness, the BA card does clock up miles more quickly. So for £10,000 of shopping you would get 15,000 BA miles with the BA Premium Plus card compared to 1,000 Airmiles with the Lloyds TSB Airmiles Duo.

A Word Of Caution...

As with all cashback or reward credit cards, you shouldn't apply for one unless you pay off your balance in full every month, as all the cards mentioned have a negative payment hierarchy. If you do let your balance roll over each month, then it's probably better to look at other 0% deals on the market.

Still, if you fancy jetting off into the sun courtesy of the airline, are a big spender, and would like to maximise the benefits of your credit card - then a reward credit card may just be right for you.

More: The Best 0% Balance Transfer Credit Card In Town | Be Careful With Your Credit Card Overseas

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

spud77 06 Mar 2008, 2:10pm

Just for added info - the AirMiles credit card from Lloyds TSB is also available as a 'Premier' card. For a £50 annual fee you get 1.25 miles for every £10 spent on AMEX or £50 with Mastercard (as opposed to 1 mile on the standard card). If you spend £15,000 p.a. on the card you also get a voucher for a free companion ticket when you book a British Airways flight with your airmiles, kind of a BOGOF offer.

I upgraded to the Premier Airmiles card from Lloyds TSB and also double up the the spends points through using Tesco clubcard and Shell drivers club points. So my airmiles are really accumulating fast.

joesher 07 Mar 2008, 7:13am

The Easyjet card was not mentioned. If you have one of these you get £40 off a flight if you spend £250 in the 1st 3 months. After that you get 1p for each £1 spent in the UK, 2p for spending abroad & 3p for spending with Easyjet. It's worked pretty well so far.

AlansCoachDriver 07 Mar 2008, 7:19am

ALso, if you have a Amex Blue card for a qualifying period you can get that BA annual fee down to £30 a year as long as you spend £500 a year on that Blue card.

Additionally spending £10,000 in a year on the BA card qualifies you for a free partner flight in any class when spending your BA miles which is valid for a year.

Looks like you need to research this article a little bit more.

yocoxy 07 Mar 2008, 10:13am

Other additions to the story..

The 'standard' BA Amex card also gives a free companion voucher but you need to spend £20K within 12 months. I've used one of these very successfully for a few years and used 100K miles with a companion voucher to get two business class tickets to Sydney (worth £7000).

I've just switched to the Flybe Mastercard as it suits my travel plans better and earns flights faster. 20 'points' (meaning one way flights with flybe) earns you a free return flight but you can earn a point by spending £250 on the card, so a £5000 spend earns you a flight (not a companion voucher). So with the £20K annual spend required for a BA companion voucher I can get four free European flights with Flybe. Of course the BA voucher is valid to go anywhere globally but you have to pay for, or have miles for, the other seat as it's only a companion voucher.

wabpcs 07 Mar 2008, 11:51am

Air miles are fine for out of the way places, but if the route is popular, it is often very difficult or impossible to get the flight or date you want.

AlansCoachDriver 07 Mar 2008, 7:51pm

ALso, if you have a Amex Blue card for a qualifying period you can get that BA annual fee down to £30 a year as long as you spend £500 a year on that Blue card.

Additionally spending £10,000 in a year on the BA card qualifies you for a free partner flight in any class when spending your BA miles which is valid for a year.

Looks like you need to research this article a little bit more.

findli 08 Mar 2008, 12:08am

Does anyone know how the availability of Airmile seats are on BA or virgin flights compared with the airmiles seats offered by BA or Virgin themselves. No point in having proper AIRMILES if can't get on the plane

spud77 09 Mar 2008, 2:52pm

Airmiles say that if the seat ticket is available to buy with cash, then it's available to but with airmiles.

BA owns Airmiles so most Airmiles offers are on BA and the companion ticket available on the Lloyds Premier airmiles card is only applicable to BA flights.

Not had a problem booking a seat on BA using airmiles myself.

spud77 09 Mar 2008, 2:56pm

don't agree with wabpcs comment. Booked a flight, two tickets, from Manchester to New York with BA about 2 months before travel. No problem booking and it was a full flight (generally is) so proves even busy flights to major destinations are freely available.

As with everything always try and book as far in advance as possible to get the greatest choice.

010953 18 May 2008, 9:21am

I USED TO WORK FOR BA AIRMILES AND THEY ONLY ALLOCATE A VERY LIMITED NUMBER OF SEATS PER FLIGHT BUT NOT EVERY FLIGHT, IT USED TO BE 6 SEATS.
ALSO I WAS ENTICED AT MANCHESTER AIRPORT TO
SIGN UP FOR A BMI BABY CREDIT CARD AND AFTER MY FIRST PURCHASE WOULD BE ENTITLED TO A FREE EUROPEAN OR DOMESTIC FLIGHT.
AS I DO FLY QUITE REGULARLY I SIGNED UP.
I RECEIVED AN EMAIL SAYING CONGRATULATIONS YOU CAN NOW BOOK YOR FREE FLIGHT! YEH RIGHT! ONLY OUT OF MANCHESTER AND EAST MIDLANDS NOT HEATHROW..I LIVE IN LONDON.
SO THIS WAS A WASTED EXCERSISE, ICHECKED THE SMALLPRINT ON MY AGREEMENT AND IT SAID NOTHING ABOUT RESTRICTIONS OF WHERE I COULD GET MY FREE FLIGHTS FROM.

smerfdoobrie 03 Jun 2008, 12:13pm

Disappointed with the BMI baby card as the free flights turned out to be mid week -one way only to 3 destinations Edinburgh, Glasgow and Belfast.
Plus the ubiquitous tax and charges.
I probably expected too much:-(

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