May 22, 2009

Magsformiles Information

Information on airlines provided in alphabetical order by airline name. American, Continental, Delta, Hawaiian, Northwest, United and US Airways are covered in this post.

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AMERICAN AIRLINES----------Follow this Link

CONTINENTAL AIRLINES---- Follow this Link

DELTA AIRLINES-------------- Follow this link

FRONTIER AIRLINES----------Follow this link

HAWAIIAN AIRLINES
------ ---Follow this link

MIDWEST AIRLINES----------- Follow this link ( Alternate Link )
(they also have Mileage exchange, a useful program for converting to Hilton Or use points.com to swap)
    NORTHWEST AIRLINES------ Follow this link

    UNITED AIRLINES------------- Follow this link
    (zip code needed)


    US AIRWAYS------------------ Follow this link
    Magazines only with US Airways miles, for newspapers you have to use Points.com
    through the link Subscriptions for miles

    POINTS.COM-------------------- Follow this Link
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    Additional notes, reviews, comments etc.

    American [Link]

    In my opinion, The Wall Street Journal - 230 and Conde Nast are good deals. I have used this twice successfully.


    Continental [Link]
    Has magazines as well as some kind of discount deal (50% off) on other merchandise. About the 50% deals [Miles for Merchandise], compare prices before buying. I am not reviewing Onepass as I have earned Onepass miles.

    Delta ([Link]
    Comparable to the deal you get with AA miles.

    FRONTIER [Link]
    Not reviewed

    HAWAIIAN [Link]
    I have not used Hawaiian so I am not reviewing it here.

    NORTHWEST [Link]
    Same deal as AA or Delta miles (Note: NW is going to merge with Delta soon but websites remain separate)

    UNITED AIRLINES [Link] (zip code needed)
    I have not used this service as I use my UA miles for travel rewards usually.

    US AIRWAYS [Link]
    (please turn off your pop up blocker on the US Airways website)
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    MAGAZINES AT POINTS.COM website
    Points.com is an online portal that lets you convert airline miles and hotel reward points to useful items or swap them into other programs. You can also get Amazon certificates at points.com using your airline miles. This is yet another way to get magazines for airline miles. For miles of these carrriers: Hawaiian, American, US Airways you can get magazines via the POINTS.COM website. The downside of using a service like points.com is that the conversion losses are considered steep by some people.

    But still, you have some additional flexibility to convert miles or points with which you cannot fly, but want some value out of (it). At points.com you can also convert those miles to amazon.com cash. You would need certain minimum miles depending on the program to get anything useful on points.com. So make sure you have a few thousand miles at least.

    Points.com may give you more flexibility in spending the final amount. The approximate conversion rate to amazon.com gift certificate value* is discussed here. Currently (Jan 09) it is free to sign up with points.com.

    My experience at Points.com: I converted some 13,000 US airways miles (near expiry) from my mom's Dividend miles account to Amazon gift certificates (~$11?). At points.com, you can convert miles at rates ranging from 0.8 cent/mile to as low as 0.4 cent/mile , which is way lower than my cost basis of 1c/mile).


    If you want any other Airlines to be covered or have info on other airlines, please leave me a comment and I will add that to this list. Thank you! A similar post on this topic is here.
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    Looking for cheap paid subscriptions to magazines? You can visit the following Amazon.com link Magazine Subscriptions From Amazon
    Maybe people are trying to use up their accumulated miles for something, rather than letting them go waste. Considering how hard it has become to redeem miles for award tickets nowadays, converting them to magazines or Amazon cash (more on that in another page) is very welcome.

    May 5, 2009

    Change Travel Plans

    THE SWINE FLU STORY
    AIRLINE FLIGHT CHANGE INFORMATION

    CDC TRAVEL ADVISORY

    To change your travel plans access the website link provided or call the reservations number of the airline. All information provided was checked for accuracy but if any errors are present please post a comment and we will try to fix it asap.

    AIR TRAN AIRWAYS (800 AIR TRAN) || AMERICAN AIRLINES (800 433 7300) || ALASKA AIRLINES (800 252 7522). HORIZON AIR (800-547-9308)| | CONTINENTAL (800.525.0280) || DELTA (800-221-1212) || FRONTIER (800-432-1359) || HAWAIIAN (1-800-367-5320) || JETBLUE (rebook online w/o fee) MEXICANA || MIDWEST (No MX flights) AEROMEXICO || US AIRWAYS || UNITED Travel Waiver (800 864 8331) (Schedule Changes)|| NORTHWEST (800 225 2525) ||

    Air France Customer Service: Not Good

    It is very simple, I stopped liking Air France in 2002 and the sentiment has not changed yet. And this is mainly because their customer service sucks, big time (will explain more below). On the other hand, I have had positive experiences with United, American Airlines, Continental - among US Airlines and extremely positive experiences with All Nippon Airways (japan) and Singapore Airlines.

    I have had neutral experiences with Delta, US Airways, Northwest and Frontier Airlines. Never had a chance to use Jetblue, Southwest, Midwest or other carriers yet.

    This rant is all about why I still don't trust Air France and due to that underlying reason, most of the Skyteam group in general.

    Some of you might have gotten here searching for "how to redeem ff miles on Skyteam", or "Delta-Northwest merger" or "Air France sucks" etc. In the past several months, I have not been bashing any organization outright, except perhaps AIG or the super spendthrift policies of the US Govt. However, Air France, after giving me some bad experiences and challenging customer service situations in 2002, is now gloriously back in the picture.

    In 2008, I had tried using up my soon to expire 30,000 Flying Blue Miles to book a free ticket, only to be presented with extremely restrictive choices on departure airports as well as available dates. In fact, I had to go over to continental.com to get a preview of available award tickets, because the Flying blue website nor the agents were not very helpful in that regard. Anyhow I had somehow managed to book a ticket in May 2009 to fly to San Juan Puerto Rico [which the agents mistake as San Jose every one of the 3 times I/ or they had called about it). I wonder what their accuracy of booking is when it comes to sending people correctly to Puerto rico instead of the Silicon valley. I ramble.]

    Flying Blue changed the tickets themselves because it seems CO changed flight numbers. Flying Blue had charged a humongous 78.30 on taxes and surcharges and would not explain the break up until I have had conducted multiple "interrogation" sessions on the phone [Fuel charge: ~32.30 Taxes: 35, Unexplained: $ 10].

    Finally when I called to change the dates, there were conflicting details on the change fee: the website shows 45 euros. But the Ontario office mentions a USD 70 fee. Finally when I decided enough is enough and with the H1N1 flu advisory, decided to cancel my no essential travel, Flying Blue would not refund my $8.30 directly. They wanted to charge $70 first to some credit card and then after 4-5 business days (euphemism for you will be left hanging) their ticketing would refund my 78.30 it seems. The agent also kept referring to the entire amount as taxes, when it clearly is not. The fuel surcharge is clearly not a tax. Why try to shift the blame on the goverment, when it is Air France that is pocketing the fuel surcharge? Anyhow the agent was not willing to do simple math and issue me a $8.30 refund, insisting that they need a CC for placing a $70 debit.

    So as of now I have just let things lie as they are, and sent an email to Flying Blue Customer Care in Florida on Monday:

    Hello __________
    I had called to cancel an award ticket issued by Flying Blue (locator: BLANKED OUT) for a flight on May XX leaving EWR going to San Juan PR and returning on May XX on Continental Airlines. The taxes & surcharges added up to USD 78.30 when I purchased the ticket. Now I want to cancel the ticket due to (insert any reason here).

    When I called the representative in the North American office (located in Ontario Canada), the cancellation fee was explained to me as USD 70. I agree with that amount although it was not explicitly stated in my initial ticket agreement (emailed to me as a pdf).

    Even considering that I am owed $8.30 by Flying Blue. However, the agent I spoke to insisted on requesting a new credit card to apply a $70 fee and then have a refund of $78.30 applied to my old card. I am calling to simply request a refund of $8.30 charged back to my original card.

    This is a very simple request and does not require any new debits of $70. I fail to see why a new fee needs to be added just because of the lack of interconnection in Air France's reservation & ticketing departments. Please cancel my award ticket, and reissue a refund of $8.30 to my CC account and I will consider this matter closed.
    Thank you,
    ____________________ (customer)

    As of Wednesday I have not even received an acknowledgement, let alone a resolution of the issue. I am thinking that AF will probably make away with the taxes without giving any to the government and yet at the same time not even bother to return me my rightful $8.30.


    The update: Flying Blue Customer Service replied, but basically neither are they being frank about saying that their transaction system sucks, nor are they willing to modify their system to pay the difference. It is a copy paste from their std policy. Now you tell me, why would n't most customers get annoyed with policies like these?

    Thank you for contacting Flying Blue.

    We have received your enquiry concerning changes to an Award ticket.

    Changes to your ticket may be made to the dates and the route within the validity period of the Award and in the same Award Zone. Any change requests must be received by Flying Blue before the flight has been taken. The modification fee is 70.00CAD/USD per reissue. (They are not able to make up if it CAD or USD, why not the 45 Euros as listed on AF website??) Once a portion of the ticket has been flown, you may only change the date of travel. No routing changes are permitted on partial used tickets.

    The cancellation fee and reimbursement of taxes are two separate transactions therefore we are not able to waive the collection of the fee to reimburse the difference.

    Please contact Flying Blue center at 1 800 375 8723 to finalize the cancelation process of your reservation BLANKED OUT.

    Please consult the web sites www.airfrance.com or www.klm.com for complete information and conditions regarding our programme and your account.

    Please feel free to contact us again in the future should you need further assistance.

    Sincerely,
    _____________
    Flying Blue Team