If you’re engaged in the AAdvantage program and have any upcoming flights, then this promotion is worth looking into and registering for (thanks to View from the Wing for flagging this)…
In this post:
Earn up to 5,000 bonus AAdvantage Loyalty Points
Nowadays Loyalty Points are the metric by which you earn elite status in the American AAdvantage program. You can earn Loyalty Points through a variety of methods, ranging from flying, to credit card spending. Sometimes American offers targeted promotions to earn more Loyalty Points.
While not the highest value offer in the world, the airline has just launched a new promotion to earn bonus Loyalty Points for upcoming flying, which is worth registering for, if eligible. To find this offer, log into your AAdvantage account through aa.com or the American Airlines app, go to your main account page, and click on the “Promotions” tab. Note that it’s possible that this offer is targeted, but it at least seems to be pretty widely targeted.

The idea is that you can earn up to 5,000 bonus Loyalty Points, with any of the following activity (each bonus is per segment):
- Earn 500 bonus Loyalty Points for every eligible flight segment
- Earn 1,000 bonus Loyalty Points for flight segments departing from and/or arriving to select airports in Mexico and the Caribbean
- Earn 1,000 additional Loyalty Points for flight segments booked by business travelers participating in AAdvantage Business or traveling on Corporate/Accredited Representative Tickets (CART)

As you’d expect, there are some terms to be aware of:
- Eligible flights must be booked after registering, and registration and travel must be completed by April 30, 2026
- Only flights booked with cash that are eligible for mileage accrual qualify, and basic economy doesn’t count toward this promotion
- Loyalty Points will post within 14 days of an eligible flight segment posting to an AAdvantage account
- This promotion only applies to flights marketed and operated by American or American Eagle, so codeshare flights on other airlines wouldn’t qualify
As a reminder, here are the current requirements for earning elite status with the program:
- AAdvantage Gold status requires 40,000 Loyalty Points
- AAdvantage Platinum status requires 75,000 Loyalty Points
- AAdvantage Platinum Pro status requires 125,000 Loyalty Points
- AAdvantage Executive Platinum status requires 200,000 Loyalty Points
This offer is better than nothing, might as well register!
Admittedly this is hardly the most exciting promotion on earth, since at most you can earn 5,000 bonus Loyalty Points, which gets you 12.5% of the way to Gold status, or 2.5% of the way to Executive Platinum status.
But hey, if you have any travel planned anyway, there’s no reason to leave Loyalty Points on the table, so be sure you register. Admittedly the window here seems pretty short, in terms of travel needing to be completed by the end of April, and bookings needing to be made after registering.
Obviously the hope is that this will lead to an increase in demand for flights in the coming months…
Bottom line
American AAdvantage has a new Loyalty Points promotion, which seems to be pretty widely targeted. With this, members can earn up to 5,000 bonus Loyalty Points, with three different ways to unlock bonus Loyalty Points. If you have any travel to book and complete by the end of April, this is a good opportunity.
Do you plan on taking advantage of this Loyalty Points promotion?
Rebooked at same prices for all my planned flights…changed two from a two segment itinerary to a three also.
Looking forward to reading about the Miami to Bimini LP run.
Already had 14 segments booked in this time frame. I will check prices and if the same then cancel the flights and rebook them.
Often these promotions are geared towards stimulating demand in the short term. I've already have flights booked for the remainder of this month and April. Doubtful I'd need to travel outside of that.
Ben says: "if you have any travel planned anyway" ...but: "bookings needing to be made after registering" ...So, if you literally already had flights booked, you'd need to cancel, register, re-book. Sometimes that goes well; other times, the price doubles. Beware.