United Closes Sneaky Million Miler Status Loophole

United Closes Sneaky Million Miler Status Loophole

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United MileagePlus has the most generous million miler program, and it’s a great incentive to stay loyal to the airline. Not only can you earn (ordinarily) invitation-only Global Services status with the program, but you can even nominate a companion to get that status as well.

United is closing an interesting loophole when it comes to million miler status, as reported by DansDeals, and flagged by View from the Wing. I wasn’t even aware this was a thing that people were doing, so I find it to be quite intriguing.

United updates million miler companion eligibility

For some background, United million milers can nominate a companion to have the same status that they have. The companion is supposed to be a spouse, significant other, or person who resides at the same home address, based on MileagePlus profile information.

The cool thing is that the companion gets the higher of either your annual earned status, or your million miler status. Just to give an example, say you earn Premier 1K status with United (the highest published tier), and you’re a one million miler. One million miler would ordinarily earn you Premier Gold status (the second lowest tier), but since you earned Premier 1K status, your companion would receive Premier 1K status as well.

The big update that United has made is that your million miler companion can’t already be the companion of another million miler. Or if they are also a million miler, they can’t have a companion of their own.

So, why does this policy change matter? Apparently many people created quite the conga line of high-tier million milers. Say you have Global Services status (United’s very highest elite tier), and you’re a million miler. Your companion would then get Global Services status, and under the old rules, if they were also million miler, they could also give someone Global Services status.

As you can see, this could create quite the interesting chain of status nominations. I guess enough people were abusing this so that the airline is now cracking down.

United is adding restrictions on million miler companions

I’m curious how widely this was used

As I said above, I wasn’t even aware this was a thing, so I find this to be quite interesting. I’m curious just how many people used this trick to secure higher status. United’s policy update seems fair, and I have to imagine this was motivated by an increase in people taking advantage of this.

The interesting angle here is that in order to make this conga line work, presumably you’d have to stretch the truth regarding your relationship with your companion. Unless you’re polygamous or have a ton of roommates (no judgment either way), odds are that these status “chains” involved a lot of people nominating people who didn’t actually live at the same address, and weren’t family or significant others.

This status conga line concept reminds me a bit of InterContinental’s invitation-only Royal Ambassador status back in the day. Those who earned Royal Ambassador could nominate someone else to get that status. Then the person who was nominated would also be able to nominate someone else to Royal Ambassador, creating a never-ending chain of people who could get that status.

Surprisingly that stuck around for many years, though the policy did eventually get updated, which is fair enough.

This reminds me of my InterContinental days!

Bottom line

United is making some changes to its million miler program, regarding how you can nominate companions. A million miler can’t nominate another million miler as their companion, unless that companion doesn’t have a companion of their own. The logic is that people may have been taking advantage of this a bit too much, creating opportunities for more people to earn higher tier elite levels, like Premier 1K and Global Services.

What do you make of United’s million miler policy change?

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  1. Buzz Guest

    Maybe I won't be number 47 on the upgrade list anymore.

  2. JetAway Guest

    @Andrew-the 22 year old might have a “relationship” with the GS individual.

  3. Andrew Guest

    Excellent. I'm always astonished by the number go GS's that board first ...sometimes twenty-somethings which never made sense (and no they were not traveling with someone else)...a 22 year old with GS status ???

    Happy UA is culling the ranks !

    1. Matt Guest

      Not all GS members are high-net worth individuals above a certain age.

      A friend of mine achieved GS at 25 while working at a non-profit making ~50k a year. The nonprofit was based in London and she had to make several last minute trips between IAD and LHR over the course of a year. At the time, corporate travel policy allowed J to all employees on all flights over seven hours. She didn't even...

      Not all GS members are high-net worth individuals above a certain age.

      A friend of mine achieved GS at 25 while working at a non-profit making ~50k a year. The nonprofit was based in London and she had to make several last minute trips between IAD and LHR over the course of a year. At the time, corporate travel policy allowed J to all employees on all flights over seven hours. She didn't even know what GS was (let alone the Premier program) until she got the membership kit in the mail. We joke about it now, especially as she never travelled again for work once she hit GS.

    2. Eli Guest

      Yep I am 25 years and will be getting GS this year

  4. Randy Diamond

    This crackdown certainly makes sense. Too many abuse the system. The benefit should likely be restricted to spouses (since all can marry anyone now).

  5. Eli Guest

    I'm surprised that you didn't know about it

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Eli Guest

Haha

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Buzz Guest

Maybe I won't be number 47 on the upgrade list anymore.

0
Eli Guest

Yep I am 25 years and will be getting GS this year

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