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Holiday Travel: How to Earn Bonus Frequent-Flier Miles

Planning to shop online for holiday gifts? Remember to access a retailer's website via an airline's shopping mall website -- you could earn extra frequent-flier miles.

With holiday shopping around the corner, it's time to address one of the recurring tragedies of the season. (No, not your Aunt Sadie's annual fruit cake). Today I'd like to address the calamity of those millions of bonus frequent-flier miles that people forgo each year because they forget to buy from their favorite online merchants via links on the airlines' shopping mall websites.

Note that I said bonus frequent-flier miles. No, I am not talking about the paltry 1 mile per dollar that many people earn by using their airline-affiliated credit cards.

No. We're talking 4 miles per dollar here. We're talking 10 miles per dollar, or even more with some merchants.

Before I got wise, I would simply go to Apple.com to buy a new $3,000 iMac or a $1,000 piece of furniture from Crate and Barrel's website. Not a smart move. Now I get bonus miles for virtually everything I buy.

And through Nov. 11, 2011, United/Continental is offering 1,500 extra bonus miles for any purchase of $125 and 500 more if you also download the site's Shopping Assistant tool (currently Windows only; Mac OS coming "soon"). And some merchants even let you earn miles by shopping in store or by phone rather than online. You just have to register your credit cards with the store via United's site.

Is there a catch? No. The price you pay for a new iMac via Apple's website is exactly the same as the price via the airlines' sites.

Literally hundreds of online merchants participate in these mileage offers. Here are some current deals from various merchants and airlines, all of which are subject to change:

Delta Airlines

United (Continental) Airlines

  • 3 miles/$1 at Nordstrom
  • 3 miles/$1 at Sephora
  • 3 miles/$1 at Bluefly.com
  • 2 miles/$1 at Avon
  • 1 mile/$1 at Apple

American Airlines

  • 11 miles/$1 at Teleflora
  • 6 miles/$1 at The Body Shop
  • 5 miles/$1 at Nordstrom
  • 4 miles/$1 at Old Navy
  • 4 miles/$1 at Drugstore.com
  • 2 miles/$1 at Wal-mart

US Airways

  • 4 miles/$1 at Drugstore.com
  • 4 miles/$1 at Jos. A. Bank
  • 2 miles/$1 at Old Navy

JetBlue

  • 2 points/$1 at Nordstrom
  • 1 point/$3 at Apple
  • 1 point/$1 at Godiva
  • 200 points/new or renewed pre-paid service at Verizon Wireless

Everyday purchases, not just holiday gifts, qualify for miles, too. Do you regularly buy your contacts from 1800Contacts.com? Why not get extra miles for every dollar spent? Are you a frequent buyer at Drugstore.com? Petmeds? If you buy via their site directly, you get no miles; get there via an airline shopping mall page and you might get as many as 10 miles per $1 spent when there's an extra bonus offer.

And keep in mind that airline mall shopping is a painless way to keep your frequent-flier miles from going stale, since each purchase, even a 99-cent song at iTunes.com, extends your miles' expiration date.

It's important to shop around, however, because one airline might offer more miles with the same merchant than another airline. For example, United might be offering 3 miles for every $2 charged at XYZ.com whereas Delta might be offering 4 miles for every $1. And offers can change from time to time, so if your purchase can wait, jump when your favorite airline is offering a double miles deal or better.

And if you've been visiting an online merchant's site directly through their URL recently, it's a good idea to clear your cookies and then enter the site through the airlines' links to avoid any potential confusion as to where you came from.

For your shopping convenience, you can find links to the airlines' mall sites all in one place here.

Bookmark these sites and before you buy anything online, see if miles are being offered for your purchase.

Have a great time shopping this holiday season, and please be sure to gift yourself a gift, too, in the form of extra frequent-flier miles.

George Hobica is a syndicated travel journalist and blogger whose website, www.airfarewatchdog.com, tracks unadvertised airfare wars and fare sales, including the most helpful and always updated Top 50 Airfares.


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