Nuts: Asiana Refuses To Honor Existing Award Tickets After Star Alliance Exit

Nuts: Asiana Refuses To Honor Existing Award Tickets After Star Alliance Exit

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In late 2026, the Asiana Airlines brand will disappear, given that the airline has been acquired by Korean Air, as part of some major consolidation in the South Korean airline industry. With the brand disappearing, we knew that Asiana would leave Star Alliance, meaning the entire combined airline will become part of SkyTeam.

While that’s not news as such, what is noteworthy is the ridiculous way the airline plans to treat those with already ticketed award reservations, as those policies have just been published. I don’t ever recall seeing an airline take such a customer unfriendly stance.

Asiana screws over those with Star Alliance award tickets

Asiana Airlines has put out a formal notice about how it’s leaving the Star Alliance, and this contains all kinds of details regarding how the transition will work. Most of the details are roughly what you’d expect, regarding the end of the ability to earn and redeem miles, and no more elite perks when traveling on Star Alliance partners.

However, as noted by LoyaltyLobby, something in the FAQs is surprising:

I already ticketed a Star Alliance award flight using Asiana miles for travel on or after December 17, 2026. Since this falls outside the flight dates listed above, am I unable to fly?

Even if already ticketed, these tickets will no longer be valid for travel following our exit from Star Alliance. We recommend contacting the Asiana Airlines Reservation Center to review your reservation and discuss cancellation or alternative itinerary options. Affected tickets will be fully refunded and miles reinstated without penalty.

Asiana Airlines’ ridiculous award ticket policy

Just to clarify, this specifically seems to be for those redeeming Asiana Club miles for travel on other airlines, while there’s no indication that redeeming Star Alliance miles from other programs for travel on Asiana would cause tickets to be canceled. But who knows, maybe we’ll also see that, given this bizarre approach.

This is an unprecedentedly stingy policy

Generally when airlines leave an alliance, they lose access to award availability as of the exit date, which is fair enough. However, I can’t think of a single time we’ve seen an airline change alliances (or something along those lines) where already ticketed reservations weren’t honored.

This is unnecessarily punitive, because there’s no reason the policy needs to be this way. To be clear, it’s normal to not allow ticket changes to another flight operated by that alliance in these situations, but to not even honor existing tickets as booked? There’s simply no logic for this.

One wonders if this is actually what Asiana intends, or if someone who doesn’t actually understand this stuff was put in charge of coming up with these policies. How generous, though, that they’re promising to redeposit these tickets without penalty, eh?

It seems to me like this policy is even of questionable legality in some jurisdictions, given that the airline is just choosing to not honor already ticketed reservations without good reason.

Asiana is screwing over Star Alliance award passengers

Bottom line

Asiana Airlines will be exiting Star Alliance as of late 2026, which isn’t a surprise, given the integration into Korean Air, which belongs to SkyTeam. The implications here are mostly what you’d expect, with one exception — Asiana won’t honor already ticketed award reservations for travel on Star Alliance partners. I don’t recall an airline ever taking such a stance, and at best, this is extremely customer unfriendly.

What do you make of Asiana not honoring partner award tickets?

Conversations (9)
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  1. GRKennedy Guest

    Do they think they're running a hotel chain, or what?

  2. Maxi New Member

    Basically a big nothingburger. Since this is already planned out far in advance, with redemptions in either direction blocked after the merger date. Even though the policy does indeed sound atrocious.
    I will miss the opportunity to redeem 40k miles for EY First class EU-AUH.

  3. frrp Diamond

    For any flights departing from europe, they would be required to provide an alternate flight at no additional cost. Under no circumstance accept a refund as that would absolve them of their responsibility to rebook.

    1. GRKennedy Guest

      Is that also true if you depart in more than 15 days?

  4. exzee New Member

    This policy is unlikely to affect anyone since star alliance redemptions for travel beyond Dec 17 had been blocked already. See notices dated 2026.01.14 and 2025.12.23

  5. Macaron Guest

    Same goes for hotels when rebranding, why hotels or airlines should honor benefits if they don't participate in a program anymore ?

    the company will probably offer solutions to rebook prior to exit or refund

  6. Samo Diamond

    At the same time, Q6 on the same page suggests that you can redeem miles for flights on A3, AV, OU and TK until 16 December 2026 for travel until 16 December 2027. Which doesn't make sense since award tickets post 16 December 2026 are supposed to be cancelled.

  7. Explorer Guest

    I look forward to the lawsuits.

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exzee New Member

This policy is unlikely to affect anyone since star alliance redemptions for travel beyond Dec 17 had been blocked already. See notices dated 2026.01.14 and 2025.12.23

1
GRKennedy Guest

Is that also true if you depart in more than 15 days?

0
GRKennedy Guest

Do they think they're running a hotel chain, or what?

0
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