Ok, so I have to book a r/t flight for later this year from NYC to California for three people, myself being one of them. We will be flying coach, and to get to our destination we need at least one connecting flight.
My options to pay for this flight are as follows (all prices/points are per person):
$557 on AA
40,000 miles on AA (Economy Anytime, there are no mileSAAvers)
47,246 Crystal (CNB) points
44,696 TY points
Which would you choose, and why?
Now, let's say I can MS AA miles & TYP at roughly $150 / 25000 AA. Would that change your answer, and if so, why?
1. The transcons, if purchased with anything other than AA miles, should earn about 5k AA miles for the round trip. So it basically makes the AA miles option cost an extra 5k AA miles. If you're looking at several close options, that could make a difference.
2. The best solution is one that uses up points that you already have, especially if you have no other use slated for them. That may mean using one ticket using CNB, one using TYP, and one using AA miles. Since I know nothing about CNB points, I would tend to use whatever I had of those first. Since the rates are so high, I'm assuming this is either close in or a high-demand season, so you may need to act quickly to lock in the rates you found.
3. Why can't you use the TYP to book at 1.6 cpp on AA? $557 on AA should cost 34.8k TYP. At the very least, even if you don't have a 1.6x Citi card, you can transfer the points to a friend and have them book for you at 1.6 (or 1.5 if they're not a really good friend.
)
4. I'm really curious about the route and dates, if you can share those. There may be a travel hacking solution you are missing, like perhaps splitting the trip into a cheap transcon and a short-haul.
5. If you are searching for 3 people on AA.com, you should double check and see if Saver awards are available for just one or two people. That could cut the cost significantly. Similarly, if there are only one or two seats in a lower fare bucket, booking engines will quote a more expensive fare for all three people. So searching for just one person can make a difference there, too.