Award Trip Breakdown: My Long Weekend in Seattle for Only $11.20

*Yes this is a review of how I used miles for a domestic weekend trip. I want to show that not everyone has to redeem miles for first class flights and 5 star hotels just to get the “best value per mile.” The experience of visiting a good friend and having a great time exploring a new city with them is worth more than any metric valuing miles.

Last weekend my wife and I visited a good friend of ours who moved out to Seattle and we successfully used points & miles to make our total travel & lodging costs $11.20 for the weekend. As much I love redeeming miles for premium cabin international tickets since that generally returns the greatest value on a cent per mile basis, I won’t hesitate to redeem miles for domestic trips even if I only get a penny or less in value. I’m sure some will argue that the below is a poor use of miles but for a trip like this, the value received can’t be calculated on a per mile basis since the value is the fun and memories of a good time with friends. Without points & miles, we were looking at shelling out over $1,700 for travel for this weekend and that wasn’t an option. Here is how we traveled to & stayed in Seattle for $11.20. Part 2 of this award trip breakdown will share some fun activities I recommend others do when visiting Seattle especially if you are an #avgeek.

Seattle3

Since we were going from Thursday to Sunday and I could only use one vacation day at work, it was imperative we left Thursday after work and returned in time for work Monday morning. This meant ideally finding non-stop flights Thursday after 6pm as I had no desire to land around 1am on a connecting flight as it would be 4am on my body at that point. For the return, a Sunday night red-eye was our goal to maximize our time in Seattle but our flights would be limited to a choice of JetBlue or Delta as we did not want to fly into Newark since we live on Long Island.

On the outbound to Seattle, we found flights on Delta leaving at 6:40pm and arriving in Seattle at 10:02pm for $162 each one way. We had $400 in Delta gift cards from using the airline credit on various Platinum cards so the outbound flights were no cost out of pocket. We even upgraded to Delta Comfort + for $99 each for free using part of my $300 annual travel credit on my Ritz Carlton credit card. Delta Comfort + provided free drinks, free entertainment and additional leg room – for our 5.5 hour flight it was worth it.

DeltaComfort+

For the return flight, our options were limited since we wanted a non-stop red-eye and Delta proved to be the best option from a mileage perspective. The Delta flight was ~$275 one way while the JetBlue flight was closer to $350! I chose to redeem 20,000 Delta Skymiles + $5.60 each for this one way flight – yes, I felt dirty not redeeming miles at the lowest level but it was still better using 40,000 miles for the two of us instead of paying $550.

The hotel was quite easy for us to figure out – my wife signed up for the Citi Hilton Reserve back in May 2014 and hit the spending requirement in June 2014 to get two free weekend nights which meant we had a year to use those free nights. Our goal was to use them in Italy at some point but for various reasons that trip fell through and I needed to use them before they expired in June 2015. I chose the Hilton Seattle which was centrally located downtown and retailing for $249/night + tax for the weekend. These free nights covered Friday and Saturday but I still needed to figure out Thursday night. While I could have stayed elsewhere and used fewer points, I decided that it wasn’t worth it to us to switch hotels on such a short stay. I made our hotel costs completely free by using 50,000 Hilton HHonors points for Thursday night. Upon checkout, our bill was $0.00 – absolutely no taxes or fees.

Hilton Seattle

In total, our airfare + hotel costs came to $11.20 which was the taxes on the return flight to New York. Was this my best redemption from a mileage perspective or the most exciting? Of course not but I want to illustrate that you should not be afraid to use your miles for a domestic trip that would otherwise be impossible without points & miles. This trip would have cost us over $1,700 in travel costs alone which is sort of crazy for a long weekend in the States.

In Part 2 of this post, I’ll review some of the exciting things we did and what I think is a perfect itinerary for a long weekend in Seattle.

Award Trip Breakdown: Aloha From Hawaii!

A big Aloha to all of you as we are currently en-route to Hawaii, flying Hawaiian first class JFK-HNL-KOA on our first big trip of 2015. This is our second time to the Hawaiian islands (after spending our second honeymoon here) and this time around we spending 3 nights on the island of Hawai’i (better known as the Big Island) followed by 6 nights in Maui.

Last year when we made this trip we flew Hawaiian in economy the whole way and back but we decided to splurge with our points and fly Hawaiian “First Class” for this trip. Before you said that’s a waste of points, I’ve read the reviews and I know Hawaiian “First Class” is more comparable to a domestic first class product with big recliner seats instead of lie-flat seats but it still beats economy for 11 hours on the JFK to Honolulu route. I’ll be sure to post my experience and if I thought it was worth the additional miles.

Hawaiian A330 First Class

Hawaiian A330 First Class

On the Big Island we are staying at the Hilton Waikokola Village. I had initially booked our 3 nights with Hilton HHonors points but on Cyber Monday there was a fantastic 50% off sale on all rooms. I decided to book a room in their new MAKAI rooms which offer an upgraded level of service and amenities. With the 50% off sale, it was only about $50 more a night for this room category compared to the base rooms (which were under $100 with this sale) and I’m interested to see if the premium is worth it.

The Massive Hilton Waikokloa Property

The Massive Hilton Waikokloa Property

For Maui, while the allure to stay at a new hotel was promising, it was actually more tempting for us to return to the Andaz Maui. We stayed here last year after staying a few nights at the Grand Wailea and we simply loved it. I booked a Points & Cash stay but unfortunately it seems like the hotel has stopped making these available (I actually booked this stay last year when points & cash awards were more available). It works out well for me that Hyatt’s promotion is ongoing in which I will get 20% of my points back. I did see on the Flyertalk thread for this property that people aren’t as enamored with the property recently so I’ll report back to see how it compared to my stay last year.

Andaz Maui

Andaz Maui

I highly recommend following me on Twitter and Instagram as I will be posting updates and pictures on those social media sites instead of the blog. I do plan on writing up a trip report on the blog that further documents our travels and how easy it was to do on points and miles. So while I’ll post some pictures and details on the flights and hotels in the trip report, you can expect much more analysis in how I booked these awards, what points/miles I used and my recommendations for others to replicate this. Blog posts will be a little less frequent while were away but I will be checking my email. So stayed tuned for more details on this trip and Mahalo!

Award Trip Breakdown: Planning Our 2nd Anniversary Trip to the Maldives! Part 2 – Hotels

Earlier I published how to fly to the Maldives using frequent flyer miles from several different programs, including the miles I used for a $17,000!!! ticket to the Maldives flying Etihad in Business and First class. This post will go over some of the hotel options you have in the Maldives, the hotel points you need for free nights and how we booked our hotel, the Park Hyatt Maldives.

Even though it is a distant, hard to get to tropical destination, there are several hotels you can use points at from the major hotel chains. Some of these options are much better than others with the Park Hyatt Maldives being the best option in my opinion. At a cost of 30,000 Hyatt points a night (25,000 points a night if you booked it before 1/22), this hotel seems to be the most affordable from a points perspective. The Park Hyatt is a true 5 star luxury hotel that encompasses its own private island – that’s right there is literally nothing else on the island except the hotel. See the photo below.

The Park Hyatt Maldives

The Park Hyatt Maldives

The Park Hyatt Maldives appears to me, at least based on the research I’ve done, one of the most luxurious properties in the Maldives you can use points at along with the W Maldives. So if your goal is true luxury, I recommend the Park Hyatt Maldives. Hyatt points are quite easy to obtain thanks to being a transfer partner of Chase Ultimate Rewards so any points earned from the Chase Sapphire or Chase Ink cards (hello 5x at office supply stores), can be transferred to Hyatt. This would also be an excellent place to use the two free nights you get for signing up for the Chase Hyatt Visa credit card. With room rates always over $1,000 (sometimes closer to $1,200) and this being a top tier Category 7 Hyatt hotel (there are only 6 others hotels in this category) this in fact might be the single best hotel in the Hyatt system to use your free night at. Free nights either via the credit card or points book into beach villas and you can upgrade to pool villas or over the water villas for $300-$450 a night.

Another option though significantly more expensive now after the big Hilton devaluation is the Conrad Rangali Island Resort. As a top tier category 10, this hotel costs 95,000 points a night! While it’s true that Hilton HHonors points are worth a lot less than Hyatt points and HHonors points can be acquired more easily and quickly, that is still a ton of points. If you have any form of Hilton elite status (and you definitely should if A) you are planning on staying here to get free breakfast and B) how easy it is to get status from one of their credit cards), you can get the 5th night free on award redemptions, dropping the cost to 76,000 points a night on a 5 night stay. Free nights book into a beach villa and you can upgrade for similar amounts like the Park Hyatt. Cash rates can fluctuate between $550-$800 a night.

Conrad Maldives

Conrad Maldives

The Starwood options include the Sheraton Full Moon and W Maldives but neither is a great option on points. The Sheraton Full Moon is a category 6 hotel that costs 20k to 25k SPG points a night. While I obviously haven’t stayed there, the reviews aren’t too great on this hotel and it costs a ton of SPG points for this level of hotel. The W Maldives, which by all accounts seems like a fantastic hotel, is a limited participant Starwood hotel, which means its costs a boatload of SPG points (upwards of 90k points a NIGHT!). With SPG points so hard to acquire, I don’t think either hotel is a viable option and other hotels in this post offer better value.

The IHG option in the Maldives is the Holiday Inn Resort Kandooma Maldives. This is definitely a lower tier hotel compared to others in this post but costs only 35,000 IHG points a night. Paid rates seem to range from $250-$300 for base level rooms. While not for me, this could be an attractive option for some looking to save money or save more valuable Hyatt or SPG points.

There are no Marriott nor Ritz Carlton hotels in the Maldives so you cannot use Marriott or Ritz Carlton points here. There were rumors of a Marriott property opening in 2015 but I can’t find anything on this.

Supposedly in July 2015, there will be an option to use Club Carlson points at the Radisson Blu Maldives Hulhumale but the projected opening date of the hotel has been pushed back many times already so I wouldn’t plan on this option until it actually opens (if ever).

As mentioned previously, we decided to book the Park Hyatt Maldives for our 2nd anniversary trip since I had abundance of Hyatt points and two free nights from Andrea’s application for the Hyatt credit card. While we don’t need luxury on every trip we take (we’re quite content to stay in 3 star hotels), this is a special trip so I splurged points-wise for both the flights and hotel to have a more luxurious trip. If I didn’t have Hyatt points, I would most likely focus on earning Hilton points and getting free nights from the Citi Hilton Reserve credit card to stay at the Conrad.

Award Trip Breakdown: MLK Weekend in Aruba and an Escape from the NY Winter!

For the long Martin Luther King weekend, my wife and I joined a few friends and jetted down to Aruba to escape the New York winter for a weekend. Thanks to an amazingly cheap airfare and some hotel points, we were able to escape to the Caribbean for only $300 a person. Normally a trip this time of year, in the height of winter around a holiday weekend, can easily cost a few thousand dollars if you were paying for flights and hotels. Here is how we did it for only $300 a person.

Aruba

Airfare:

While I like to use miles instead of paying for my flights, sometimes when the airfare is cheap enough, it doesn’t make sense redeem valuable frequent flyer miles for airfare. Back in April, US Airways had a sale on fares to the Caribbean that included travel dates for early 2015 for around $300 roundtrip. The best part was long weekend trips around MLK and Presidents Day Weekend were included! For that time of year, those flights should easily cost $500-$600 (or more) from the East Coast. A roundtrip flight to the Caribbean generally requires 35,000 miles so I would have been getting only around about $.008 cents a mile in value which isn’t even the basic a penny per mile so for this trip, buying the airfare made much more sense. On top of that, it was unlikely to even find award availability over a holiday weekend to a peak destination like this.

After only a few minutes of searching different islands and flight times, we settled on a great itinerary to Aruba that left Saturday and came back on Tuesday. I quickly posted the findings on this blog and my personal Facebook/Twitter accounts and lucky enough, we got some friends to join us a long weekend of fun in the sun.

To take advantage of these limited time fares or even mistake fares by an airline, I recommend following The Flight Deal or following the Mileage Run forum on Flyertalk. Additionally, follow me on Twitter as I tend to post quick tweets on some great fares I see that I may not have time to blog about.

Hotel:

There seems to be two major sections of hotels in Aruba (the low rise and high rise) along the west coast of Aruba, north of the airport. This area of the island has the better beaches in Aruba, including the world famous Eagle Beach. With most major hotel chains present in the Palm Beach area (except for Hilton), you can easily use hotel points to stay in Aruba.

View from our room at the Holiday Inn

View from our room at the Holiday Inn

Our first choice was to stay at the Radisson Aruba due to my wife and I having a balance of over 500,000 Club Carlson points and the ability to get one award night free due to having the Club Carlson credit card. Unfortunately, when I tried to book this hotel, they were completely sold out and this was back in April!  I even called the hotel to confirm what I saw online and it was confirmed you could not book any room, either points or cash – kind of crazy for 9 months in advance! I never followed up but I wonder if any rooms ever opened up right before the cancellation period.

Plan B was the Hyatt Regency Aruba but unfortunately this didn’t make sense for all our friends who were going with us and as such, we didn’t book it. We are in the midst of planning a trip to Costa Rica to stay at the Andaz Peninsula Papagayo Resort so we didn’t want our friends to burn their Hyatt points since there were many other point options in Aruba but not as many in Costa Rica.

Eventually, we settled on the Holiday Inn Aruba which is only a few hotels down from the Radisson and Hyatt along the same stretch of beach. While a step down in the luxury compared to the Radisson and Hyatt, we cared more location and just wanted a clean, functional hotel for our stay so the Holiday Inn fit our needs perfectly for this trip. In fact, the Holiday Inn had been recently renovated so I was pleasantly surprised by our stay (review to follow in a future post). The cost was only 25,000 IHG points a night and there were no resort fees. In fact, when we checked out on Tuesday, our checkout bill came to only $92 for three days of drinks and one lunch we had by the pool. For the value, I would certainly return here in the future for a long weekend.

I’ll cover some of the dining option we took advantage of and the activities we did when I do a trip report but we had an awesome weekend in Aruba as it was 85 degrees and sunny the whole trip. I heard it rained/snowed back home when we were gone which makes me even happier we decided to go away for the weekend. I commented on Twitter I think Aruba is my new favorite Caribbean island and I would love to return one day in the near future.

Aruba

Totally empty beach we found by the natural pool

 

 

 

Award Trip Breakdown: Planning Our 2nd Anniversary Trip to the Maldives! Part 1 – Flights

Since getting married in 2012, I’ve used points & miles to take an awesome honeymoon or anniversary trip each year. Our honeymoon was in Moorea & Bora Bora followed by our one year anniversary trip to Bali and Thailand (I really need to work on that trip report by the way…). These were both trips that we could not have taken if I had to pay cash for them even if we flew economy and stayed in budget hotels as each of those trips would have amounted to several thousand dollars! With the expectations growing for this year’s anniversary trip (its getting harder to top those two trips!), I decided to take my wife to the Maldives for our 2nd anniversary! This post will go over how many miles you need for flights to the Maldives and how we got the miles necessary for this trip while my next post will cover booking the hotels.

The Maldives!

The Maldives!

Park Hyatt Maldives

Park Hyatt Maldives

For those that don’t know, the Maldives is an island nation made up of 26 atolls in the Indian Ocean that is situated about 250 miles southwest of India. By both land mass and population, the Maldives is the smallest country in Asia. Coming from the East Coast of the US, this is not an easy nor quick place to get it but that is part of the allure of it – the remoteness and feeling you are isolated from the rest of the world.

Yup that's far!

Yup that’s far!

Coming from the United States, the best miles to use for a trip to the Maldives are American Airlines miles or Alaska Mileage Plan miles. Using American miles, you can fly Etihad, Qatar and/or Cathay Pacific though flying Cathay Pacific will cost more in miles due to technically having to book two awards as a result of routing restrictions from AA. Here is the cost in miles if you flew Etihad or Qatar:

  • 45,000 American Airlines miles for economy class (one way)
  • 67,500 American Airlines miles for business class (one way)
  • 90,000 American Airlines miles for first class (one way)

Flying Cathay would result in two awards since you cannot route to the Maldives via Asia (this is a routing rule enforced by AA). The total cost of two awards would be as follows and you can stopover for as long as you want in Hong Kong. You can also use British Airways Avios to book the Hong Kong to Maldives leg.

  • 35,000 American Airlines miles for economy class to Hong Kong then another 22.5k miles to the Maldives (one way)
  • 55,500 American Airlines miles for business class to Hong Kong then another 30k miles to the Maldives (one way)
  • 67,500 American Airlines miles for first class to Hong Kong then another 45k miles to the Maldives (one way)

Using Alaska miles, you can fly Emirates or Cathay Pacific.

42,500 Alaska Airlines miles for economy class on Emirates (one way)
50,000 Alaska Airlines miles for economy class on Cathay Pacific (one way)
62,500 Alaska Airlines miles for business class on Cathay Pacific (one way)
72,500 Alaska Airlines miles for business class on Emirates (one way)
70,000 Alaska Airlines miles for first class on Cathay Pacific (one way)
90,000 Alaska Airlines miles for first class on Emirates (one way)

You can also use United miles for this trip as well as British Airways Avios but I am not going to cover those options as those options are too expensive for premium cabin travel and American & Alaskan miles offer the best, most convenient routings to the Maldives in my opinion.

Here is what I booked for our trip in October to the Maldives:

Flights: Etihad Business Class JFK-Abu Dhabi-Male (Maldives). For the return, Etihad Business Male-Abu Dhabi then Etihad First Class Abu Dhabi-JFK. We wanted to book first class on the outbound to the Maldives but there was no first class availability. The flights from Abu Dhabi to Male only features business and economy class so even on a first class booking, we are sitting in business class on those flights.
Retail Cost: $15,000-$17,000 per person for all flights.
My Cost: 157,500 American Airline miles + $62 in taxes+ $70 in unavoidable American Airlines phone booking fees per person.

Yikes!

Yikes!

Etihad Business Class

Etihad Business Class

Etihad First Class Suite

Etihad First Class Suite

I used American Airlines miles for two reasons: 1) They are a lot easier to obtain via credit card signup bonuses than Alaskan miles and 2) As such, we didn’t have enough Alaska Airlines miles so by default we had to use American miles :). I acquired the majority of the miles last year when the Citi American Airlines Executive card offered a 100,000 mile signup bonus that could be churned over and over. If you need AA miles, there are currently 50,000 mile signup offers on the Citi American Airlines Platinum Select for both the personal and business credit cards.

This will go down as one of my best redemptions of American miles followed by using American miles to fly Air Tahiti Nui to Tahiti for my honeymoon. Some people prefer to redeem their miles for domestic and/or economy flights which is great if that’s your goal. And to be honest, when I first started collecting miles years ago that was my goal to get trips to Las Vegas and Los Angeles for free. Now, I use miles for flights that I 100% could never EVER pay for, such as a business class or first class ticket to the Maldives. Even an economy flight on this route would cost over $1,500 which I wouldn’t pay for. But to use only 157,500 miles instead of paying $17,000 for this same ticket for a bed in the sky for a special trip that will we remember forever still amazes me – this is the beauty of points and miles.