You can also earn KrisFlyer miles through the Chase Ultimate Rewards Program and the Citi
ThankYou Rewards Loyalty Program.
You can also earn Cathay Pacific Asia Miles through cards that are part of the American Express Membership Rewards Loyalty Program or the Citi
ThankYou Rewards Loyalty Program.
You can earn KrisFlyer miles through the Chase Ultimate Rewards Program, American Express Membership Rewards Loyalty Program, and the Citi
ThankYou Rewards Loyalty Program.
You can also earn Cathay Pacific Asia Miles through the American Express Membership Rewards Loyalty Program and the Citi
ThankYou Rewards Loyalty Program.
You can also earn KrisFlyer miles through the Chase Ultimate Rewards Program and the Citi
ThankYou Rewards Loyalty Program.
Not exact matches
Unlike bank - established
loyalty programs (e.g. Citi
ThankYou Rewards), you don't need an affiliated credit card to start earning points!
Unlike bank - established
loyalty programs (e.g. Citi
ThankYou Rewards), you don't need an affiliated credit card to start earning points!
Some of these cards are co-branded by a specific airline or hotel, while others are part of a network that allows points to be transferred to airline or hotel
loyalty programs, such as Chase Ultimate
Rewards, Citi
ThankYou and Amex Membership
Rewards.
You can book flights directly through the Citi
ThankYou Travel
Reward Center, or transfer points to participating airline
loyalty programs.
Compared to other
loyalty programs, Ultimate
Rewards points fall in the middle - of - the - pack — they are outmatched by miles - based programs, such as AAdvantage and MileagePlus, but they beat the value of similar points - based programs, such as American Express Membership
Rewards and Citi
ThankYou:
Unlike bank - established
loyalty programs (e.g. Citi
ThankYou Rewards), you don't need an affiliated credit card to start earning points!
Yes, Citi
ThankYou points can be transferred to more airline
loyalty programs than Chase Ultimate
Rewards points....
Last week I took at look the transfer partners of the four major transferable
loyalty currencies — Chase Ultimate
Rewards, Citi
ThankYou, American Express Membership
Rewards and Starwood's Starpoints.
Last week I took at look the transfer partners of the four major transferable
loyalty currencies - Chase Ultimate
Rewards, Citi
ThankYou, American Express Membership
Rewards and Starwood's Starpoints.
Airline and hotel
loyalty programs, as well as banks that offer their own
reward systems (American Express Membership
Rewards, Chase Ultimate
Rewards, and Citi
ThankYou), maintain online shopping malls where you can link to hundreds of online retailers.
Recently I've taken a look at look the transfer partners of the four major transferable
loyalty currencies — Chase Ultimate
Rewards, Citi
ThankYou, American Express Membership
Rewards and Starwood's Starpoints and, as a follow up to those articles, I'm now taking a look at the best ways to earn the four transferable
loyalty currencies and hopefully giving you some idea of what you can do to earn more points and to boost your balances quickly and / or frequently.
Over the past week or so I've taken a look at look the transfer partners of the four major transferable
loyalty currencies - Chase Ultimate
Rewards, Citi
ThankYou, American Express Membership
Rewards and Starwood's Starpoints and, as a follow up to those articles, I'm now taking a look at the best ways to earn the...
The results page also has icons next to each
loyalty program to represent transfer partners such as Starwood Preferred Guest, Chase Ultimate
Rewards, Amex Membership
Rewards, and Citi
ThankYou Rewards.
Citi
ThankYou Rewards points transfer over to 14 different airline
loyalty programs and, just like with Chase Ultimate
Rewards,
ThankYou points transfer over to all of Citi's airline partners at a 1:1 ratio.
No, the image below is not a mistake, Citi
ThankYou Rewards points really only transfer over to one hotel
loyalty program — Hilton HHonors — and as of 13 December 2017 they won't even transfer there.
The good news is that Singapore Airlines is already a transfer partner with several other bank
loyalty programs including Chase Ultimate
Rewards, Amex Membership
Rewards, and Citi
ThankYou Rewards.
Most travel hackers take advantage of the
loyalty programs of foreign airlines through flexible points currencies, like transfers of Chase Ultimate
Rewards points to British Airways Executive Club Avios, American Express Membership
Rewards points to Singapore KrisFlyer, or Citi
ThankYou points to Air France KLM Flying Blue.
Meanwhile, banking giant Citi announced that JetBlue's TrueBlue has become the 14th travel
loyalty program to link up with its
ThankYou Rewards program.
That's true if it's a part of a general
rewards program, like Chase Ultimate Rewards or Citi ThankYou, or associated with a specific airline or hotel loyalty program, such as Hilton Honors or Delta Sk
rewards program, like Chase Ultimate
Rewards or Citi ThankYou, or associated with a specific airline or hotel loyalty program, such as Hilton Honors or Delta Sk
Rewards or Citi
ThankYou, or associated with a specific airline or hotel
loyalty program, such as Hilton Honors or Delta SkyMiles.
You also want a high credit score so you can fully participate in the lucrative hobby of collecting frequent flyer miles, hotel
loyalty program points, or bank points (such as American Express Membership
Rewards, Chase Ultimate
Rewards, or Citi
ThankYou points).
For this reason I think they are best compared to Citi's
ThankYou points rather than Chase's Ultimate
Rewards points (which can be transferred to other
loyalty programs).
Why it's worth it: Citi
ThankYou Rewards isn't the most impressive
loyalty program when it comes to transfer partners, especially since it no longer has a hotel partner after Hilton moved to an exclusive relationship with Amex.
This is a first in the history of
ThankYou Rewards unless you count transferring to Hilton HHonors, which you've been able to do for a few years now but which no one does since Hilton took a machete to their
loyalty program a while back, effectively sending the message to customers not to even think about showing their face around HHonors again if they know what's good for them.