Most
airlines publish award charts, but JetBlue bases the amount of points needed for redemption on the fare and other factors.
Most
airlines publish an awards chart detailing the maximum number of points or miles you'll need for a given flight.
Not exact matches
Some
airlines like Southwest do not
publish a fixed
award chart; instead, the cost of an
award flight fluctuates to match the cash sticker price of the paid fare equivalent.
Unfortunately, Delta Air Lines does not
publish an
award chart, and instead provides the redemption rate based on a number of factors that the
airline decides.
American
Airlines»
award chart publishes prices to get from region A to region B.
The
airline does not
publish an
award chart, so the price of any
award can only be determined by searching on JetBlue's site and viewing the results.
Unfortunately, the
airline no longer
publishes award charts and applies dynamic pricing to many flights.
They
publish an
award chart for partner
airlines, but only offer a mileage calculator for their own flights.
Because Delta does not
publish an
award chart, it can be difficult to know when you have found the cheapest «saver»
awards that are made available to partner
airlines like Alaska.
In fact, Delta is the only major
airline that doesn't
publish an
award chart, so you never know in advance how much your miles are supposed to be worth.
The Delta SkyMiles program is known for being stingy, tricky to maximize and hard to understand since the
airline doesn't
publish award charts and uses variable, revenue - based pricing.