American Airlines AAdvantage Overview
American Airlines AAdvantage is the loyalty program for American Airlines. Given American’s extensive reach within the United Sates and abroad, they are the loyalty program of choice for many. In 2022, American completely changed how elite status is earned with the introduction of Loyalty Points, making it possible to earn all the way up to Executive Platinum status without flying.
This guide has been updated to cover the ways to earn and spend American Airlines AAdvantage miles as well as the key details of elite status in terms of how to earn it and what benefits to expect.
American Airlines AAdvantage Pros and Cons
Pros
- It’s possible to earn systemwide upgrades, which can be quite valuable, via Priority Point Rewards (rewards earned when attaining various Loyalty Point thresholds).
- American has a unique relationship with Hyatt that allows for members of each program to earn while patronizing the other. American AAdvantage members can earn 1 mile per $1 spent at Hyatt hotels and resorts
- Basic economy flights earn toward status
- There are a number of supplementary ways to earn miles most of which now earn 1 Loyalty Point per mile earned, from credit cards with two different issuers to bank account bonuses, online shopping, SimplyMiles card-linked offers, and more. See more about what counts for Loyalty Points and what doesn’t in this section.
Cons
- Highly-variable pricing for AA flights. While the partner award chart still exists, there are no longer published prices for American Airlines-operated flights
- Fewer foreign airline partnerships than competitor United means slightly less reach in terms of award destinations (though note that you can still get to many, many destinations worldwide)
- Easier elite status may mean more difficulty getting upgrades (Loyalty Points totals are the tie-breaker for upgrades)
Earn Miles
Flights
Base members earn 5 miles per dollar on American Airlines marketed flights. Elite members earn more, depending upon their status level, as follows:
- No status – 5 miles per dollar
- Gold – 7 miles per dollar (40% bonus)
- Platinum – 8 miles per dollar (60% bonus)
- Platinum Pro – 9 miles per dollar (80% bonus)
- Executive Platinum – 11 miles per dollar (120% bonus)
Note that there is no longer a mileage cap as to the total number of miles you can earn on a ticket.
Also note that basic economy tickets issued on or after January 1, 2023 earn a base of 2 miles per dollar spent plus elite percentage bonuses (i.e. 2.8 miles per dollar for Gold / 3.2 miles per dollar for Platinum / etc.
Exceptions:
- The following types of tickets earn no miles:
- All tickets issued as AAdvantage® awards
- Charter flight tickets
- Companion tickets
- Infant tickets
- Items occupying a purchased seat
- Other free ticket promotions including free or reduced rate tickets
- Tickets purchased through a travel agency where the airline is not disclosed prior to purchase, such as Priceline or Hotwire
- Tickets issued subject to special provisions
- Travel agency/industry reduced rate tickets
- Special fares like bulk fares, cruise fares, consolidator fares, and vacation packages earn earn miles and loyalty points as a percentage of the distance flown (percentages vary by fare code and are increased with class of service bonuses). Note that in these “special fares” instances, basic economy will not earn Loyalty Points. See this page for more details.
- Flights on partner airlines earn redeemable miles and Loyalty Points based on a percentage of distance flown and class of service bonuses. See this page for rates on individual partners.
It is worth noting that flights on most non-alliance partners (other than JetBlue of Gol) will earn redeemable miles but will not earn Loyalty Points.
American Airlines AAdvantage credit cards
Miles can be earned from credit card welcome bonuses and from credit card spend. In general, while we recommend earning lots of miles through new-card welcome bonuses, earning from spend is not usually a good idea. There are many other cards on the market that offer much better rewards for everyday spend.
However, Citi in particular is known to periodically send targeted spending offers (by email or postal mail) and is also known to sometimes offer excellent retention offers, so there are times when everyday spend might make sense given such an offer.
Keep in mind that base miles earned from credit card spend also earn 1 Loyalty Point per base point earned. In other words, you’ll earn 1 Loyalty Point for every $1 spent on an AAdvantage credit card. Note that new cardmember intro bonuses and category or other spending bonuses do not count as Loyalty Points.
Transfer from other points programs
Bilt Mastercard
While you will not earn Loyalty Points through the Bilt Mastercard, it is worth noting that Bilt Rewards points transfer 1:1 to American Airlines AAdvantage. This means you can effectively earn 1 mile per dollar spent on rent, 3 miles per dollar spent on dining, and 2 miles per dollar spent on travel. Given that the Bilt card has no annual fee, this can be a useful tool for generating more American Airlines miles. See more under the credit cards section below.
Marriott Bonvoy
Marriott points can be transferred to American Airlines at a rate of 3 Marriott points to 1 American mile. Additionally, when you transfer 60,000 Marriott points at a time, you get 5,000 extra American miles. So, the best you can do is transfer 60,000 Marriott points to 25,000 American miles.
For more, see: Marriott Bonvoy Complete Guide.
Non-flight options for earning miles and loyalty points
Now that American Airlines is awarding Loyalty Points for each mile earned through many of its partners, the many ways of earning American Airlines miles beyond flight activity have become much more interesting. For instance, see some of our previous pursuits of status without flying: AA’s Loyalty Point Pursuit game: Earn status w/out flying
The following options earn both redeemable miles and loyalty points:
- Online Shopping: You can earn both redeemable miles and Loyalty Points when you shop through the AAdvantage eShopping portal. Note that you’ll generally earn 1 Loyalty Point per redeemable mile earned through these channels except when the shopping portal is offering a general spending bonus like “spend a cumulative $500 through AAdvantage eShopping from Date A to Date B and get 2,000 bonus miles”. While the miles earned from your purchases themselves will count as Loyalty Points, the additional 2,000-mile bonus will not. In cases where the reward is a set number of miles (i.e. subscribe to the Wall Street Journal and get 2,500 miles) you will earn that number of redeemable miles and Loyalty Points.
- In-Store and Online Shopping: SimplyMiles is a unique card-linked program offered to all US members with a valid Mastercard (note that it does not need to be an American Airlines Mastercard). These offers often provide a fixed number of miles for meeting a specified spend threshold and can sometimes represent a significant return. Many of these offers can be completed in-store or online. For stacking opportunities, see: (Updated) Card-Linked Programs & The Networks They Run On (AKA Which Programs Stack).
- Dining: You can earn miles for dining at local restaurants via the AAdvantage Dining program. Note that you may even be able to stack these bonus miles with rewards earned in another card-linked program. See: (Updated) Card-Linked Programs & The Networks They Run On (AKA Which Programs Stack).
- Credit card spend: One mile per dollar spent on the Citi and Barclays co-branded cards. Note that welcome bonuses, category bonuses, and temporary spending bonuses will not earn Loyalty Points — you’ll just earn 1 mile per dollar spent on your card (some cards issued in foreign countries earn 1.5 or 2 base miles per dollar spent and in those cases Loyalty Points will be earned based on the base earning rate of the card).
- Rocketmiles: This could be an attractive deal given that the mileage payouts can sometimes be generous. You won’t earn elite credit or hotel points through Rocketmiles, but I’d certainly consider Rocketmiles in a situation where I’d be looking at an independent boutique hotel or a property where I don’t care about earning elite credit or hotel points.
- Hotels credited to American Airlines: Many hotel programs let you forgo hotel earnings to credit to an airline program. That usually isn’t an attractive deal, but it could be useful when you don’t care about hotel rewards. An exception here is Hyatt, which shares a unique partnership with AA. See below.
- Hyatt stays: American Airlines AAdvantage members can earn 1 AAdvantage mile per $1 spent on qualifying Hyatt stays and experiences in addition to earning World of Hyatt points for the stay. This partnership could be useful for those with a lot of paid Hyatt stays since you can earn both Hyatt points and 1 AA mile per dollar spent with Hyatt up to 10,000 miles per year. See more detail here.
- Hotels booked through BookAAHotels.com. This booking portal appears to be powered by Rocketmiles.
- Rental Cars: You can book rentals through American Airlines or book through most of the major US companies and credit the rental to American, earning both redeemable miles and Loyalty Points.
- Vacations and cruises booked through American Airlines. We’ve written before about how vacation packages can sometimes be a great way to build your own business class fare sale. Now you can earn Loyalty pPoints, too.
- Fueling up: Members can earn miles for filling up their gas tanks via the Shell Gas partnership
- Sharing your opinions: American Airlines offers the chance to earn both redeemable miles and Loyalty Points through Miles for Opinions.
- Other earning options: American lists other options for earning miles through partnerships here.
Non-flight options for earning miles that do not count as Loyalty Points
Bank accounts
Bask Bank offers American Airlines AAdvantage miles instead of cash interest on savings. They currently award 2 miles per dollar saved annually (note that this can vary with interest rates). This is how Bask explains it:
The Bask Savings Account awards two AAdvantage® miles for each dollar saved annually. Miles are accrued daily and awarded monthly based on your average monthly balance.
Depending on how you value the miles, that may not be a bad deal. For tax purposes, Bask values the miles at 0.42c per mile, meaning that every 1,000 miles earned counts as $4.20 in interest income. Read more and open an account at Bask Bank.
Note that Citi has also periodically offered up to 60,000 American Airlines miles for opening a checking account, though these offers are sometimes targeted.
In either case (Bask Bank or Citi), miles earned from bank accounts will not earn Loyalty Points.
Spend miles
Booking flights with American miles is easy. On AA.com, simply check the box to “Redeem miles” when searching for flights. American defaults to showing results for a week at a time, but you can then click “View Calendar” to see results for a month at a time.
Award Booking Tips
Here are a few miscellaneous tips:
- No round-trip advantage. While Delta often charges fewer miles for round-trip awards, we don’t see the same pattern with American.
- Scroll down or sort. American won’t always show the best priced award at the top, especially when partner flights are involved.
- Even Web Specials can be cancelled for free. Note that while Web Specials can not be changed, they can be cancelled and redeposited for no fee.
- Sometimes adding an extra leg can drop the price. See this post for more detail.
Best Uses of Miles
In our experience, most domestic U.S. economy award flights offer only about 1 cent per mile in value (see this post for details). It is possible to do significantly better, though. American has some solid sweet spots, including:
- The US to Europe in business class for 57.5K each way
- The US to Asia in business class (60K each way to Japan or Korea or 80K to most of the rest of Asia)
- The US to Japan or Korea in first class for 80K each way
- The US to the Indian Subcontinent in business class for 70K each way
We sometimes see “web specials” with exceptional deals on American Airlines flights. See this as an outlier example.
The highest value for American Airlines miles in terms of dollars and cents will be found using miles for premium cabin award travel on partner airlines.
Award Partners
Flights on partner airlines can be booked with American Airlines AAdvantage miles as long as the partner has saver-level award space available for the given flight. See the American Airlines partner award chart here. Note that not all partner airlines can be booked online; you will need to book via a call center for award flights on some partner airlines. Note also that in some cases, foreign AAdvantage call centers may be better equipped to assist. For example, the Australian call centers have often been able to book Etihad award flights that US agents were unable to see as available. Google Voice can be a cheap way to phone overseas call centers when necessary.
Here are American’s partner airlines:
- American Airlines
- Alaska Airlines
- British Airways
- Cathay Pacific
- Finnair
- Iberia
- Japan Airlines
- Malaysia Airlines
- Qantas
- Qatar Airways
- Royal Air Maroc
- Royal Jordanian Airlines
- S7 Airlines
- SriLankan Airlines
- Air Tahiti Nui
- Cape Air
- China Southern Airlines
- Etihad Airways
- Fiji Airways
- GOL Airlines
- Hawaiian Airlines
- Seaborne Virgin Islands
Award Change & Cancellation Fees
American Airlines no longer charges award change or cancellation fees. Keep in mind that if your new award is more expensive, you will pay any difference in terms of miles or taxes, but there is no fee for making the change itself.
Note that Web Specials can be cancelled and redeposited but can not be changed.
American Airlines Elite Status
Most airlines offer extra benefits to their most valuable customers. This is usually handled through elite status. If you fly enough with an airline, you can become “elite”. Of course, not all elites are equal. Most airlines have multiple elite tiers to differentiate their valuable customers from their really valuable customers. And, of course, airlines offer the best perks to their highest tier elites.
American does the same. They offer published elite tiers ranging from Gold status to Executive Platinum status (and they also offer an invitation-only Concierge Key status). Gold status perks are only slightly better than those you get from holding a American Airlines branded credit card. Executive Platinum perks, though, can be very nice.
In addition to benefits you get from holding a level of elite status, AA offers benefits (“Loyalty Point Rewards”) whenever you earn targeted numbers of Loyalty Points during the status qualification period (e.g. March through Feb). Benefits range from Preferred seating all the way to lounge access to systemwide upgrade certificates.
American Airlines elite status requirements
American Airlines offers elite status based on Loyalty Points. Generally speaking, Loyalty Points are earned 1:1 along with redeemable miles, which is to say that in most cases, when you earn 1 redeemable mile, you also earn 1 Loyalty Point. There are some exceptions, like shopping portal bonuses (like “Spend $500, get 2,000 miles”) do not count (the base miles earned for the purchase count, but not the bonus 2,000 miles for meeting a promotional spending threshold).
Required Loyalty Points for each status tier are as follows:
- Gold: 40,000 Loyalty Points
- Platinum: 75,000 Loyalty Points
- Platinum Pro: 125,000 Loyalty Points
- Executive Platinum: 200,000 Loyalty Points
The American Airlines elite year runs from March through the following February rather than by calendar year as with most other programs. In other words, you’ll need to earn the required points for your desired status between March and the following February to have status for the upcoming year.
Elite Benefits
AAdvantage elite status | Gold | Platinum | Platinum Pro | Executive Platinum |
---|---|---|---|---|
Loyalty Points Required | 40K | 75K | 125K | 200K |
Mileage Bonus | 40% | 60% | 80% | 120% |
Preferred Seating | Y | Y | Y | Y |
Main Cabin Extra Seating | Upgrade at Check In | Y | Y | Y |
Domestic First Class Upgrade | 24 hour window | 48 hour window | 72 hour window | 100 hour window |
Upgrade on Alaska Airlines | N | N | Y | Y |
Free checked bags | 1 | 2 | 3 | 3 |
OneWorld Status | Ruby: Access to biz class check-in, preferred seating | Sapphire: Access to OneWorld Business Class lounges | Emerald: Access to OneWorld First and Business Class lounges |
Loyalty Point Rewards
Independent from elite status levels, benefits are earned when reaching various Loyalty Point levels during the status qualification period (e.g. March through Feb):
Loyalty Points Earned | Loyalty Point Rewards |
---|---|
15K | Automatic Benefit: Group 5 Boarding Choose 1: • Priority privileges & Group 4 boarding for a trip • 5 Preferred seat coupons |
40K | Automatic Benefit: AAdvantage Gold Status |
60K | Automatic Benefits: • 20% Loyalty Point Bonus (AA Vacations, SimplyMiles, AAdvantage eShopping, AAdvantage Dining, and AA Hotels) • Avis Preferred Plus |
75K | Automatic Benefit: AAdvantage Platinum Status |
100K | Automatic Benefits: • 30% Loyalty Point Bonus (AA Vacations, SimplyMiles, AAdvantage eShopping, AAdvantage Dining, and AA Hotels) • Avis President's Club |
125K | Automatic Benefit: AAdvantage Platinum Pro Status |
175K | Choose 1: • 2 systemwide upgrades • 20K bonus AA miles (25K w/ AA credit card) • 6 Admirals Club One-Day Passes • $200 Trip Credit ($250 w/ AA credit card) • Carbon offset • $250 donation to select nonprofit organization • 15% award rebate • 2 gifts of AAdvantage Gold status • 35K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
200K | Automatic Benefit: AAdvantage Executive Platinum Status |
250K | Choose 2: • 2 systemwide upgrades • 20K bonus AA miles (30K w/ AA credit card) • 6 Admirals Club One-Day Passes • $200 Trip Credit ($250 w/ AA credit card) • Carbon offset • $250 donation to select nonprofit organization • 2 gifts of AAdvantage Gold status • Bang & Olufsen product (requires 2 choices) • 1 Flagship lounge single visit pass (2 passes w/ AA credit card) • 35K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
400K | Choose 2: • 1 systemwide upgrade • 25K bonus AA miles • Admirals Club membership (requires 2 choices) • $200 Trip Credit ($250 w/ AA credit card) • Carbon offset • Gift of AAdvantage Platinum status • Bang & Olufsen product (requires 2 choices) • 1 Flagship First Dining pass • 40K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
550K | Choose 2: • 1 systemwide upgrade • 25K bonus AA miles • Admirals Club membership (requires 2 choices) • $200 Trip Credit ($250 w/ AA credit card) • Carbon offset • Gift of AAdvantage Platinum status • Bang & Olufsen product (requires 2 choices) • 2 Flagship lounge single visit passes • 1 Flagship First Dining pass • 40K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
750K | Choose 2: • 1 systemwide upgrade • 25K bonus AA miles • Admirals Club membership (requires 2 choices) • $200 Trip Credit ($250 w/ AA credit card) • Carbon offset • Gift of AAdvantage Platinum status • Bang & Olufsen product (requires 2 choices) • 2 Flagship lounge single visit passes • 1 Flagship First Dining pass • 40K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
1M | Choose 1: • 4 systemwide upgrades • Carbon offset • Gift of AAdvantage Platinum Pro status • Up to 100K miles back on award redemptions • 150K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
3M | Choose 1: • 6 systemwide upgrades • Carbon offset • Gift of AAdvantage Executive Platinum status • Up to 300K miles back on award redemptions • 350K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
5M | Choose 1: • 10 systemwide upgrades • Carbon offset • Gift of AAdvantage Executive Platinum status • Up to 500K miles back on award redemptions • 550K AA miles towards a Mastercard Priceless Experience |
Elite earning on flights
On American marketed flights, elite earnings are straightforward: you earn 1 Loyalty Point per 1 mile earned. Typically, this meanings you earn at least 5 Loyalty Points per dollar spent on American Airlines fares with additional bonuses based on status. Basic Economy fares only earn 2 base Loyalty Points per dollar spent (and the additional status boosts).
Exceptions to mileage earning based on ticket price:
- Special fares like bulk fares, cruise fares, consolidator fares, and vacation packages earn earn miles and loyalty points as a percentage of the distance flown (percentages vary by fare code and are increased with class of service bonuses). Note that in these “special fares” instances, basic economy will not earn Loyalty Points. See this page for more details.
- Flights on partner airlines earn redeemable miles and Loyalty Points based on a percentage of distance flown and class of service bonuses. See this page for rates on individual partners.
- Note that members will not earn Loyalty Points for flights on non-alliance partners except with JetBlue and Gol.
Credit cards
Both Citi and Barcalys offer both business and consumer American Airlines credit cards. The following are current bonus offers, card benefits, and earning structures. Keep in mind that bonuses do not count as Loyalty Points. Base earnings (1 mile per $1 spent) do count as Loyalty Points.
Note also that Bilt Rewards can be transferred 1:1 to American Airlines AAdvantage. Those miles will not count as Loyalty Points, but this card does provide a useful way to earn AAdvantage miles for paying your rent or for dining (3x) or general travel (2x) and it carries no annual fee.
Consumer
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Business
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I went on a.com and tried many different dates and months and the minimum for business class was 377k points round trip.
This has to be a joke? Where do you see 60-80k ?
Going to Mexico from Chicago with change of planes in PHX. Does it qualify for free bags since it changes domestically with American Platinum card? Thanks
What about transferring Hyatt points to American? Worth it?
[…] updated 2022 American Airlines AAdvantage Complete Guide. Start getting used to “loyalty points”. Which no other airline has […]
[…] AAdvantage Complete Guide: With so many airline loyalty programs out there, it’s difficult to know what the rules for each are. What airlines can I use these miles on? Do I pay for fuel surcharges? What are the sweet spots? Here’s a great guide for the American Airlines AAdvantage program. […]
Marriott->AA won’t count as loyalty points, correct….not sure if I am missing this above? I see Bilt doesn’t count but Marriott 60k->25k won’t count towards loyalty points, correct?
Are AA flights booked with partner miles and with your aadvantage number added, counted towards 30 segments for choice benefits?
I have been reading a lot about how people plan to achieve AA status this year but I haven’t seen anyone, including blogs, discuss what monetary value they would attach to each elite status tier and what they would be willing to spend to reach that tier.
“No round-trip advantage. While Delta often charges fewer miles for round-trip awards, we don’t see the same pattern with American.”
I’m quite sure this is no longer true, at least not for Web specials.
There is a limited promo to convert flight credit to trip credits until 3/31. Anyone have success?
I would like to know this as well
The link for the aviator business card says the offer has expired. And looks like they aren’t offering the card anymore.
That’s correct. It’s currently unavailable, but according to a spokesperson that View From The Wing spoke to it will return in “early 2022” https://viewfromthewing.com/disappearance-of-barclays-american-aadvantage-business-card-is-only-temporary/
I’ve read several posts but it’s still not clear to me. Where do you see how many loyalty points you’ve earned thus far in 2022?! Or is that only visible starting in March even though we started earning them Jan 1?
You can see how many you’ve earned by logging into your AAdvantage account and clicking “Your Activity”. Each addition of miles there will have a breakdown of Base Miles and Bonus Miles. I believe that anything posting as Base Miles will count as Loyalty Points.
I understand it will be March 1st. Until 2/28 we can also earn under the old system and those PQPs, PQMs and PQSs will count towards the *2021 status. And the flight miles will also count as LP for 2022 (double dip opportunity).Base miles x status multiplier = loyalty points. Loyalty points started to count from 1/1/22 and will show 3/1/22. https://exploreamerican.com/newaadvantage/
Sorry. From Jan 1-Feb 28 whatever dollars are spent on flights are multiplied by the status multiplier and that would be the number of Loyalty Points for 2022 for those flights. I wrote flight miles, but that is wrong. A lot simpler, lol. It should be simpler after March 1st.
AAdvantage® AviatorTM Silver World Elite MasterCard®
This card also offers 10,000 EQM with $40,000 spend. 5,000 EQM with the first $20,000 spent and an additional 5,000 with the next $20,000 spent. This is in addition to the $3,000 EQD with a $50,000 spend.
Important benefit!
Hi Nick,
How do I use the preferred boarding benefit that comes with the barclays aaviator business card?
You just make sure that your American Airlines AAdvantage number is on the reservation. American will automatically recognize that you’re a card holder and your boarding pass will print with the proper boarding group and say on the boarding pass that you’re a card holder.
[…] Good for reference: American Airlines AAdvantage Complete Guide. […]
would be helpful if you added a column of which partners can be booked online next to the list of partners.
while we’re at it I have been looking for a while for a resource with lists of which programs can be used to book a particular airlines metal. the alliances are pretty straightforward, but i get the feeling we often overlook other partners.
Does anyone know if $5.60 taxes are refunded if you cancel and reinstate miles on a web special?
Yes, taxes are refunded with the miles. Tickets booked online can also be canceled online and the refunds will automatically process in less than an hour, in my experience.
I mean, you should probably have something in here about their expiration policy since AA still has one.
My favorite sweet spots on aa has to be middle east to asia and north america to peru in business. The former is really useful if you are piecing together a round the world trip.
Agreed! That’s an awesome sweet spot. I flew Cairo to Abu Dhabi to Tokyo a couple of years ago for 45K in first class (now 50K). I only included sweet spots to/from the US since those are most widely applicable to most readers, but there are a number of inter-regional options outside of the US that are quite good (like Japan to/from Australia or to/from anywhere in Asia 2 and your ME to Asia sweet spot).
Great piece Nick!
Hey for the systems wide upgrade which is up to 3 segments – do you know if you can space out the ticket over a few weeks? I suspect not but worth knowing as I have to burn a few.
Very useful compendium.
Do double-check:
Transfer from other points programs
Marriott Bonvoy
Marriott points can be transferred to American Airlines at a rate of 3 Marriott points to 1 American mile. Additionally, when you transfer 60,000 Marriott points at a time, you get 5,000 extra Delta miles. So, the best you can do is transfer 60,000 Marriott points to 25,000 Delta miles.
Thanks! Fixed that!