Bilt Rewards Adds Alaska Mileage Plan As Transfer Partner, And More

Bilt Rewards Adds Alaska Mileage Plan As Transfer Partner, And More

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Bilt Rewards is the loyalty program of the no annual fee Bilt Mastercard® (review), which is quite lucrative. This is a proper transferable points currency, allowing 1:1 transfers to a variety of partners.

Several weeks back, Bilt Rewards and Alaska Airlines launched a partnership. At the time, we saw Mileage Plan added as a Bilt Rewards transfer partner. Now the second part of the partnership has launched, whereby those with an Alaska Visa Card can earn bonus miles when they pay rent (though at a cost). Let’s go over all the details.

Transfer Bilt Rewards points to Alaska Mileage Plan

As of March 15, 2024, Alaska Mileage Plan has been added as a 1:1 transfer partner of Bilt Rewards, opening up all kinds of great redemptions on Alaska Airlines, oneworld carriers, and other partner airlines.

Transfer Bilt points to Alaska Mileage Plan

I’d consider this to be a significant development, as Alaska Mileage Plan historically hasn’t partnered with any major transferable points currencies, so this is a first. This comes shortly after we learned that Bilt Rewards will lose American AAdvantage as a transfer partner as of June 2024.

We’ve seen Alaska Mileage Plan implement some major changes to award pricing. This is largely advantageous for short haul awards, while it’s bad news for long haul awards. Then again, award availability has been so limited on the best redemption options (like Cathay Pacific, Japan Airlines, and Qantas), so I’d consider the program to be moving from aspirational to practical. There are still lots of great uses of Mileage Plan miles.

I’m very curious to see how this evolves. Is this an exclusive collaboration, because Alaska Airlines sees benefits to tapping into Bilt Rewards’ customer base? Or is this a way for Alaska Airlines to test the waters with a transferable points currency? With the Mileage Plan changes that were recently implemented, maybe the economics of transferable points currencies works better. It would be great to see Mileage Plan miles become easier to accrue.

There’s an exciting new way to earn Mileage Plan miles!

Earn Alaska Mileage Plan miles for paying rent

The new partnership between Bilt Rewards and Alaska Airlines goes beyond the airline just being a transfer partner. Keep in mind that one of the selling points of the Bilt Mastercard® is the ability to earn points for paying rent at no additional cost. So the two companies have introduced an interesting twist on that concept.

As of May 15, 2024, those with the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature® credit card (review) can earn 3x Mileage Plan miles per dollar spent on rent through Bilt, on up to $50,000 spent annually (after that you earn 1x miles). So rent payments through Bilt have been added as a bonus category on the card, just as the card offers 2x Mileage Plan miles per dollar spent on eligible gas, EV charging station, cable, streaming services, and local transit purchases.

Earn Alaska Mileage Plan miles for rent payments

Essentially you’re able to link your Alaska Card to your Bilt account, and then Bilt will process the rent payment, and in turn you’ll be awarded bonus miles. This only applies for the personal version of the card, and not the Alaska Airlines Visa® Business card (review).

Now, the catch is that Bilt charges a 3% fee for third party credit card payments, and that applies here as well. So this is an opportunity to pick up Mileage Plan miles on your rent payment for one cent each — I think most people would consider that to be a great deal.

That’s not necessarily how you should approach the math, though — you can either earn 1x Bilt Rewards points for paying rent at no cost with the Bilt Mastercard®, or 3x Mileage Plan miles for paying rent at a 3% fee with the Alaska Airlines Visa Signature® credit card. Based on my valuation of different points, I’d rather earn 1x Bilt Rewards points at no cost than 3x Alaska Mileage Plan miles at a 3% fee.

Still, I think this will be an intriguing option for those who don’t want to get the Bilt Mastercard (for whatever reason), since acquiring Mileage Plan miles for a cent each is quite a deal.

Earn Mileage Plan miles for paying rent, at a cost

Bottom line

Bilt Rewards and Alaska Airlines have launched a partnership. As part of this, Alaska Mileage Plan has become a 1:1 transfer partner of Bilt Rewards, making Bilt the first transfer partner for Alaska. Furthermore, it’s also now possible to pay your rent with an Alaska Visa Card and earn 3x Mileage Plan miles, though there’s a 3% fee for doing so. Still, that could represent a great deal.

This is a creative and exciting partnership, and I’m looking forward to seeing how this evolves.

What do you make of this Bilt Rewards & Alaska Mileage Plan partnership?

Conversations (46)
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  1. JayJ Guest

    I can't qualify for the Bilt Card but have been using Bilt to pay rent with my Chase Freedom Ultimate. So for a $1000 rent payment, I get 250 Bilt points plus 3000 Chase points (1500 now, 1500 at end of my first year) for $30. When I get to the end of my membership year with Chase, I will switch to the Alaska card for 250 Bilt points plus 3000 Alaska miles for $30. I think I understand the math.

  2. Steve from LA Member

    This just seems like more horrible news for AS elites. The more AS miles pumped into the system the more scarce award availability is going to be. When AS invited all the disgruntled Delta flyers over to complementary 100K status, things really started going downhill. Allowing AS status to be bought with credit card purchases continues the death of what used to be a really good loyalty program.

    It is really simple, when everyone has...

    This just seems like more horrible news for AS elites. The more AS miles pumped into the system the more scarce award availability is going to be. When AS invited all the disgruntled Delta flyers over to complementary 100K status, things really started going downhill. Allowing AS status to be bought with credit card purchases continues the death of what used to be a really good loyalty program.

    It is really simple, when everyone has status and miles, status and miles become worthless. Time to move on from AS. Nothing lasts forever. I guess we will always have Paris, I mean Seattle.

  3. Sean Guest

    I'm surprised that nobody has called out the fact that *if* you manage to spend $50,000 on rent, you'd get de facto 20,000 elite qualifying miles at Alaska as well. While I agree that due to opportunity cost, you're really acquiring the miles at 1.5 cents each (slightly more than my personal 1.35 valuation for alaska, the difference is made up for significantly by the ability to earn elite qualifying miles. I'd pay the difference...

    I'm surprised that nobody has called out the fact that *if* you manage to spend $50,000 on rent, you'd get de facto 20,000 elite qualifying miles at Alaska as well. While I agree that due to opportunity cost, you're really acquiring the miles at 1.5 cents each (slightly more than my personal 1.35 valuation for alaska, the difference is made up for significantly by the ability to earn elite qualifying miles. I'd pay the difference (x2) for .3cents to earn or especially supplement Alaska MVP qualification if Alaska was valuable to me.

  4. Greg Guest

    i dont get all the hate for BILT, just cause it breaks the Status quo with churn/burn. The reward days 100%+ transfer bonus has been a great value add for me. Was worth a 5/24 slot for me, and to get 2x points on the first for my normal transactions is a huge plus also :)

    1. Jim Guest

      The hate comes from the bloggers pushing this so hard.

    2. 305 Guest

      Gary is the absolute worst Bilt shill out there. Constantly brags about his "top tier status" yet won't admit it's because he's gotten so many points via his sub link

  5. Andrew Diamond

    “[Mileage Plan opens up] all kinds of great redemptions on Alaska Airlines, oneworld carriers, and other partner airlines.”

    This is an educational thing for me - can someone tell me what is so hot about Alaska’s miles? When I look at the same west-coast JAL redemptions, AA is cheaper. When I look at the same west-coast DXB redemptions, AA is cheaper (and everyone still screws you through LHR on fees).

    The Emirates deals are long...

    “[Mileage Plan opens up] all kinds of great redemptions on Alaska Airlines, oneworld carriers, and other partner airlines.”

    This is an educational thing for me - can someone tell me what is so hot about Alaska’s miles? When I look at the same west-coast JAL redemptions, AA is cheaper. When I look at the same west-coast DXB redemptions, AA is cheaper (and everyone still screws you through LHR on fees).

    The Emirates deals are long gone. There’s El Al, but their route network is limited. I don’t get how Alaska is hot s**t anymore. Can someone explain where this alleged value is coming from.

  6. Chris Guest

    As a non-American I don't get what is special about rent. Here in the EU everyone just does a wire transfer for rent and that's it. Paying it by credit card assumes your landlord actually accepts credit cards, how does that work? Also how does the credit card company know a specific payment is for rent?

    1. Joe Jones Guest

      It's usually the same in the US. Some landlords accept credit cards for rent but there's usually a surcharge that eats up any points benefit.

      Bilt gives you points if you make the monthly rent payment through them and make a certain number of other transactions on the card each month. Rent payments through Bilt are not subject to a surcharge because they wire transfer to the landlord on their end. This is the key value proposition of the card.

    2. Chris Guest

      How do they know the transfer is rent and not say, a points laundering scheme with a relative?

  7. Lee Guest

    My wife and I both have had the Bilt Card for just over two years and pursued every angle. We paid rent. We moved spending for double earn rate on Rent Day. We did 3x plus 5x bonus on dining. We ended up with 1 million points then transferred at 2.5x. Some people figure it out and some people don't.

    1. Biglaw V10 Partner Guest

      My wife and I are equity partners at two of the most prominent law firms in the country. We met as 1Ls at our T14 law school. Two decades into our careers, we each make $8,500,000 annually which is dollar cost averaged into SPLG. My wife and I earn in one month what the average American earns in three decades. Some people figure it out and some people don’t.

    2. Reasonable Prudent Person Guest

      People like you are why I left biglaw for banking. Your average banker is (far) less insufferable than your average biglaw partner…

      NB: The fact that you’re name dropping T14 and “two of the most prominent law firms” like it means anything reeeeeeeeks of Kirkland.

    3. Unimpressed Guest

      This is why people hate lawyers. Such condescending classist bullshit in a points and miles blog. Smh...

    4. Weekend Surfer Guest

      I’m thinking this is more a sarcastic reply rather than a real one…

    5. DSK Member

      Actually, I'm trying to figure it out and I can't make any sense out of it. At one point, I thought you claimed to be in your 30's and now if you are two decades into your career, that would put you in your 40s. I read somewhere that you and your wife were Philly based, and Philly partners don't earn anything near NYC partners. $8.5 million annually would put both you and your wife...

      Actually, I'm trying to figure it out and I can't make any sense out of it. At one point, I thought you claimed to be in your 30's and now if you are two decades into your career, that would put you in your 40s. I read somewhere that you and your wife were Philly based, and Philly partners don't earn anything near NYC partners. $8.5 million annually would put both you and your wife above the average profits per partner at Wachtel (the highest PPP of any law firm in the USA to my knowledge), which I find to be hard to believe. Plus, you post like crazy on Lucky's articles, and if you and your wife are really bringing in $17 mil per year, how do you have the time for that, and why would you care, since this would be small potatoes to you? As far as T14, that's great but not sure why that even remotely matters, especially since I went to the number 1 law school on that list of T14--so what? So yeah, I call BS on all of this. What exactly are you trying to accomplish here, other than creating a false narrative about yourself and bringing discredit to our profession?

    6. W Diamond

      I agree with DSK. He is constantly posting on Ben's articles throughout the day, when most people would be at work.

  8. Mantis Gold

    1x Bilt points on rent with Bilt card and lose 5/24 slot, 3x AS on rent with 3% fee, or the equivalent of 10-20x on rent by putting spend towards a new SUB. Hmmm, math is so hard.

  9. eponymous coward Guest

    The twist is that I would guess using your AS Bank of America card should also get you spend towards the 2-4-1 companion certificate at 6k and EQM at 4k per 10k spend (maxes out at 50k) as well as the 3x AS miles, so that would be additional value (if you paired it with other Alaska and partners flying you could be getting 75k status with your fave, OneWorld Emerald, and a 50,000 RDM bonus).

    1. Greg Guest

      Yes indeed, and Alaska users are pretty heavily skewed to those cardholders. Don't underestimate that companion cert for cash strapped renters.

  10. Mark Guest

    Not sure what value is being added since we can already book one world flights via avoid.

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Mark -- Just because programs belong to the same alliance doesn't mean they have the same value proposition. Different programs have different redemption rates. Furthermore, Mileage Plan has lots of partner redemptions outside of oneworld, like Icelandair, Singapore, Starlux, and more.

    2. Jacob Guest

      Good luck finding anything in business class for a decent point value with any of those carriers. 165K each way with Starlux is a joke.

    3. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Jacob -- Speaking of Starlux, yes, long haul award space is abysmal. But the airline is good at releasing business class awards on flights within Asia, so there's quite a bit of value there.

    4. Peter Guest

      A few months ago I booked LAX to PPT for 60k in J on Air Tahiti Nui.

      This week, I just booked Condor FRA to MLE for 60k in J. I think that rate stays the same or goes down after the new award program is active.

      The new rates look reasonable for Singapore's JFK-FRA in J and that has reasonable availability (in waves).

  11. Alex Guest

    I'd love some information on how much Bilt pays you points bloggers. You're all obsessed with it and tend to gloss over the catches and gotchas of the program.

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Alex -- I get a commission when someone applies for a Bilt Card through my link (as is the case with most kinds of cards), but that's it. I don't have any relationship with the company beyond that, unlike many other bloggers.

      But I'm curious what you think I'm glossing over? And I also don't know how I'm "obsessed" with Bilt? I report on the transfer bonuses, and I like the ability to earn...

      @ Alex -- I get a commission when someone applies for a Bilt Card through my link (as is the case with most kinds of cards), but that's it. I don't have any relationship with the company beyond that, unlike many other bloggers.

      But I'm curious what you think I'm glossing over? And I also don't know how I'm "obsessed" with Bilt? I report on the transfer bonuses, and I like the ability to earn points at no cost for paying rent or an HOA. It's not my everyday spending card, and I don't suggest it should be.

    2. Alex Guest

      Is that commission more or less than the other cards?

    3. 305 Guest

      I'd love some information on how much competitors pay all you complainers. You're all obsessed with "how bad Bilt is" and tend to gloss over the uniqueness and benefits of the program

      Seriously, I don't get the hate. It's a no annual fee card that lets a person earn points on their largest expense/an expense no other provider offers points for

    4. Greg Guest

      On cue, the Bilt paid / partner shill that appears in most threads

    5. Greg Guest

      LOL I get that vibe too sometimes, not necessarily here, but generally. Guess the free trips to Branson's island for some got them feeling connected.

      AS fliers who already know the program have less of an incentive to go Bilt if they like using their card for earning elite status or companion fare. Some may go Bilt to earn option value for AS miles while having flexibility to xfer to other programs.

      Overall...

      LOL I get that vibe too sometimes, not necessarily here, but generally. Guess the free trips to Branson's island for some got them feeling connected.

      AS fliers who already know the program have less of an incentive to go Bilt if they like using their card for earning elite status or companion fare. Some may go Bilt to earn option value for AS miles while having flexibility to xfer to other programs.

      Overall a win for AS accruers with more choice two places, loss for AA accruers. There are a lot more AA accruers out there. I'd guess it was up there with Hyatt or more in terms of point transfer frequency for Bilt.

  12. Tony Guest

    "...the catch is that Bilt charges a 3% fee for third party credit card payments, and that applies here as well. So this will be an opportunity to pick up Mileage Plan miles on your rent payment for one cent each — I think most people would consider that to be a great deal."

    That's NOT the right way to look at it. A Bilt Rewards point should be worth at least as much as...

    "...the catch is that Bilt charges a 3% fee for third party credit card payments, and that applies here as well. So this will be an opportunity to pick up Mileage Plan miles on your rent payment for one cent each — I think most people would consider that to be a great deal."

    That's NOT the right way to look at it. A Bilt Rewards point should be worth at least as much as an Alaska mile since it can be transferred 1:1, so using Alaska Visa to pay rent generates 2 (not 3) additional miles. The decision is whether those 2 miles are worth buying for $0.03 (and losing the option to transfer to other mileage currencies).

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Tony -- I think we're saying the same thing. In the paragraph below what you quote, I wrote the following:
      "That’s not necessarily how you should approach the math, though — you can either earn 1x Bilt Rewards points for paying rent at no cost with the Bilt Mastercard®, or 3x Mileage Plan miles for paying rent at a 3% fee with the Alaska Airlines Visa® credit card. Based on my valuation of...

      @ Tony -- I think we're saying the same thing. In the paragraph below what you quote, I wrote the following:
      "That’s not necessarily how you should approach the math, though — you can either earn 1x Bilt Rewards points for paying rent at no cost with the Bilt Mastercard®, or 3x Mileage Plan miles for paying rent at a 3% fee with the Alaska Airlines Visa® credit card. Based on my valuation of different points, I’d rather earn 1x Bilt Rewards points at no cost than 3x Alaska Mileage Plan miles at a 3% fee."

    2. Giri Guest

      That's incorrect, because you're assuming said person already has a Bilt card.

      If you already have a Bilt card, yes, it's an incremental 2x for 3% fee, but if you do not, it's still getting a mile per cent.

  13. eds183 Guest

    Quibbling correction. The way I read it is that you get a total of 3 AS miles each $ for paying rent with the AS card.
    Since you get 1x Bilt points/AS miles for free paying rent with the Bilt card you are actually only getting 2 extra AS miles by paying the 3% with a AS card via the app. Therefore you are paying 1.5 cents per mile for the AS miles instead...

    Quibbling correction. The way I read it is that you get a total of 3 AS miles each $ for paying rent with the AS card.
    Since you get 1x Bilt points/AS miles for free paying rent with the Bilt card you are actually only getting 2 extra AS miles by paying the 3% with a AS card via the app. Therefore you are paying 1.5 cents per mile for the AS miles instead of 1 cent.

    If you get a total of 4 AS miles a dollar somehow by paying through the App, then of course the 1 cent/mile is correct.

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ eds183 -- The one cent per mile math is for those who don't want to get the Bilt Card, and I think I explain that in a bit more detail in the next paragraph. But I totally agree with your math, of course.

  14. Redacted Guest

    Good to have Alaska as a partner but I still don’t see BILT as advantageous enough to warrant my non-rent spend.

    Unless anything dramatic changes with this card, it’s just going to be a monthly rent plus four $5 gift cards, rinse and repeat, situation for me and many others.

    1. Ben Schlappig OMAAT

      @ Redacted -- That's not too far off from my strategy. However, if the 75-150% transfer bonuses continue in the long run, then I do think that helps with the math on everyday spending.

    2. Greg Guest

      Kind of a high bar given many active points earners have at least one intro bonus offer going on about half the time, earning 10x miles per dollar or more.

    3. Redacted Guest

      Agreed, Ben. And to be fair to BILT, it *is* a no-annual fee card. That fact alone can make it very appealing for folks who either don’t like paying annual fees out of principle, or simply those who don’t spend enough on CC (or utilize perks) to clearly justify the fee.

      Honestly if I was forced to only use non-fee cards…. this, Venture One, and Amex ED would be strong contenders for the primary card position.

    4. pstm91 Diamond

      Same here, but instead of gift cards it's a quick walk to CVS and 4 individual purchases of the cheapest thing I can find; usually snickers or bottles of water...

    5. UnitedEF Guest

      $1 amazon gift card you can buy from your couch?

  15. Jacob Guest

    Being punished for having a mortgage and building equity instead of paying rent. Yay me.

    1. Zach Guest

      I’ll trade you the points for your tax break on mortgage interest…

    2. Peter Guest

      For folks who own their home, are there 3X bonus points cards for home equity loan payments? Karma Wallet tells me opening this type of credit card could improve one's credit rating which took a ding due to a lack of outstanding loans.

Featured Comments Most helpful comments ( as chosen by the OMAAT community ).

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DSK Member

Actually, I'm trying to figure it out and I can't make any sense out of it. At one point, I thought you claimed to be in your 30's and now if you are two decades into your career, that would put you in your 40s. I read somewhere that you and your wife were Philly based, and Philly partners don't earn anything near NYC partners. $8.5 million annually would put both you and your wife above the average profits per partner at Wachtel (the highest PPP of any law firm in the USA to my knowledge), which I find to be hard to believe. Plus, you post like crazy on Lucky's articles, and if you and your wife are really bringing in $17 mil per year, how do you have the time for that, and why would you care, since this would be small potatoes to you? As far as T14, that's great but not sure why that even remotely matters, especially since I went to the number 1 law school on that list of T14--so what? So yeah, I call BS on all of this. What exactly are you trying to accomplish here, other than creating a false narrative about yourself and bringing discredit to our profession?

1
W Diamond

I agree with DSK. He is constantly posting on Ben's articles throughout the day, when most people would be at work.

0
Weekend Surfer Guest

I’m thinking this is more a sarcastic reply rather than a real one…

0
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