How To Redeem American AAdvantage Miles For Best Value

How To Redeem American AAdvantage Miles For Best Value

24
In the interest of full disclosure, OMAAT earns a referral bonus for anyone that’s approved through some of the below links. Citi is an advertising partner of OMAAT. These are the best publicly available offers (terms apply) that we have found for each product or service. Opinions expressed here are the author's alone, not those of the bank, credit card issuer, airline, hotel chain, or product manufacturer/service provider, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities. Please check out our advertiser policy for further details about our partners, and thanks for your support! The offer for the Citi® / AAdvantage® Platinum Select® World Elite Mastercard® has expired. Learn more about the current offers here.

When it comes to the loyalty programs of the “big three” carriers in the United States, I tend to think that American AAdvantage offers the most value when redeeming miles for international premium cabin travel, both in terms of partner airlines and redemption rates.

There are plenty of markets where American AAdvantage has the best pricing for award travel among oneworld programs, while I’d argue the same can’t be said for Delta SkyMiles for SkyTeam awards, and United MileagePlus for Star Alliance awards.

In this post I wanted to go over the basics of redeeming American Airlines AAdvantage miles. I’ll cover all the details of redemption logistics, and will also share my favorite sweet spot awards.

How to earn American AAdvantage miles

If you’re looking to earn American AAdvantage miles, there are lots of ways to acquire these miles, beyond crediting flights to the program:

Keep in mind that with American’s Loyalty Points system, you can even earn elite status with credit card spending. So whether it’s Executive Platinum, Platinum Pro, Platinum, or Gold, you can rack up any tier, as well as a lot of bonus miles, through non-flying means.

American Airlines 777 business class

Basics of redeeming American AAdvantage miles

Before we talk about the best uses of American AAdvantage miles, let me cover the basic details when it comes to redeeming these miles, ranging from expiration policies, to change and cancelation fees.

American AAdvantage mileage expiration policy

When it comes to the mileage expiration policy, American AAdvantage miles expire after 24 months of inactivity. Any mileage earning or redemption activity resets the expiration of your miles by a further 24 months.

Furthermore, AAdvantage members under the age of 21, as well as primary cardmembers on a co-branded American Airlines credit card from Barclays or Citi, won’t have their miles expire, regardless of account activity.

American AAdvantage award change & cancelation fees

American AAdvantage has no award change or cancelation fees. This means you can lock in an award ticket in advance, and can then redeposit your miles any time until departure without paying any fees. Your taxes and fees will also be refunded to your original form of payment.

American Airlines 737 business class

American AAdvantage award booking window

Every frequent flyer program has a different policy when it comes to the timeline of opening award seats. American AAdvantage opens its schedule at most 331 days in advance. That’s not necessarily to say that there will always be award seats that far out, but that’s the earliest that you’ll find award space.

American AAdvantage award carrier imposed surcharges

Some frequent flyer programs are known for imposing hefty carrier imposed surcharges on award tickets. In the case of American AAdvantage, you’ll only pay those when redeeming on British Airways. Otherwise, you’ll just be on the hook for government taxes and fees.

British Airways 777 first class

American AAdvantage award stopover policy

American AAdvantage doesn’t allow stopovers on award tickets. If you do have a stopover, the ticket will just be priced based on the individual segments. For a long haul award, any stop of more than 24 hours would be considered a stopover. Meanwhile on domestic awards, the cutoff is typically six hours for something being considered a stopover.

American AAdvantage award hold policy

American AAdvantage has the industry’s most generous policy when it comes to holding award tickets. If you’re planning your travel 14 or more days in advance, you can hold your ticket for up to five days. Meanwhile within 14 days of departure, you can hold your ticket for up to one day.

American AAdvantage award airline partners

American AAdvantage allows you to redeem miles on all oneworld airlines. In addition to American, this includes Alaska, British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Finnair, Iberia, Japan Airlines, Malaysia Airlines, Qatar Airways, Royal Jordanian, Royal Air Maroc, and SriLankan.

In addition to oneworld airlines, you can redeem on Air Tahiti Nui, China Southern, Fiji Airways, GOL, Hawaiian Airlines (but not between the lower 48 and Hawaii), and Silver Airways (select flights to & from San Juan).

Air Tahiti Nui 787 business class

Best uses of American AAdvantage miles

Unlike Delta SkyMiles and United MileagePlus, American AAdvantage continues to publish an award chart for travel on partner airlines.

Below is what American AAdvantage’s award chart looks like for first and business class redemptions originating in the continental United States on partner airlines.

Contiguous 48 U.S. To:
Business Class
First Class
Contiguous 48 U.S. States
25,000
50,000
Canada & Alaska
30,000
55,000
Hawaii
55,000
80,000
Caribbean
25,000
50,000
Mexico
25,000
50,000
Central America
25,000
50,000
South America Zone 1
30,000
55,000
South America Zone 2
57,500
85,000
Europe
57,500
85,000
Middle East / India
70,000
115,000
Africa
75,000
120,000
Asia Zone 1
60,000
80,000
Asia Zone 2
70,000
110,000
South Pacific
80,000
110,000
American Airlines AAdvantage Premium Cabin Award Chart

While you can include American segments on awards with partner airlines, awards exclusively on American tend to have dynamic pricing. Let me share my favorite uses of AAdvantage miles, though let me of course acknowledge that award availability can often be the challenge.

Business class to the Middle East & India (70,000 miles)

One area where American AAdvantage miles continue to be among the most valuable is for travel to the Middle East & India. Per American’s award chart, this region includes everything from India to the Maldives to Oman to Sri Lanka. There’s so much beauty in this area, and it’s somewhere that’s otherwise tough to get to on miles.

Best of all, American partners with both Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways, and both of them have excellent business class products. Unfortunately at the moment, this award availability can be pretty tough to come by:

Etihad Airways A350 business class

Business class to Africa (75,000 miles)

This is an extension of the above concept of going to the Middle East. Africa is one of the toughest continents to get to using miles, and with Etihad Airways and Qatar Airways, you potentially have some great access.

While you could fly to Africa on British Airways or Iberia, that would mean you’d have to pay fuel surcharges, and/or wouldn’t get as much of a product. Instead I recommend flying Etihad and Qatar, which have great products and fly to lots of points in Africa.

Whether you’re flying to South Africa or Tanzania or Kenya or Rwanda, there are excellent options. Personally my favorite choice is Qatar Airways, and a couple of years ago I redeemed 75,000 miles to fly one-way from Cape Town to Dallas.

Qatar Airways A350 business class

Royal Air Maroc is also a oneworld member, so you can use American miles to fly to Morocco and beyond on the national carrier. Fortunately American considers Morocco to be Europe for the purposes of award pricing, so you’d pay only 57,500 AAdvantage miles for a one-way business class award between the United States and Morocco (which is fair, given what a short flight it is).

Royal Air Maroc 787 business class

Business class to Asia 1 & 2 (60,000-70,000 miles)

In Asia, American AAdvantage’s most useful partnerships are with Japan Airlines and Cathay Pacific. For just 60,000 miles you can fly business class to Asia 1 (including Japan and South Korea), while for 70,000 miles you can fly business class to Asia 2 (including China, Singapore, Thailand, etc.).

Unfortunately neither airline is that great about making award space available nowadays:

  • Cathay Pacific makes most award space available to members of its own Cathay Pacific Asia Miles program
  • Japan Airlines is more inconsistent, but if booking far in advance or close to departure, it’s not impossible to find award space
Japan Airlines 787 business class

Great partner award values between other regions

Above I’m focusing on redemption values to & from the United States. That’s because a majority of OMAAT readers live in the United States, so that’s going to be the most practical for many. However, I did want to highlight some other fantastic award values between other regions, as this is often where you’ll find the most value.

Honestly, AAdvantage’s redemption values are consistently the best for awards not touching the United States. Heck, even Delta SkyMiles has great award values outside the United States.

Just to give some examples of other great AAdvantage redemption values:

  • You can fly between the Middle East and Asia 1 or Asia 2 for just 40,000 AAdvantage miles in business class; this could include a 10-hour flight in business class on Qatar Airways or Etihad
  • You can fly between the Middle East and Europe for just 42,500 AAdvantage miles in business class or 62,500 AAdvantage miles in first class; this could also be used for a flight on Qatar Airways or Etihad
  • You can fly between the South Pacific and Asia 1 or Asia 2 for just 40,000 AAdvantage miles in business class; you could use this for a 10-hour flight on Japan Airlines, Qantas, Fiji Airways, or Air Tahiti Nui
  • You can fly between Asia 1 and Asia 2 for just 30,000 AAdvantage miles in business class; this could include quite a long flight between Japan and Southeast Asia

Those are just a few examples, but if anything, you’ll find the value with redeeming AAdvantage miles outside of North America is even better.

Fiji Airways A350 business class

American first & business class flight awards

While AAdvantage continues to publish an award chart for travel on partner airlines, the program now has fully dynamic award pricing for travel on American. American doesn’t release much award availability that’s also bookable through partner programs (generally referred to as “saver” availability), though the airline does often have reasonably priced long haul first and business class flight awards through AAdvantage.

Frankly with how limited a lot of partner award availability is, I think many of the best redemption opportunities nowadays are for travel on American.

Note that you’ll almost always find the best value for connecting itineraries. American usually prices significantly higher if traveling nonstop, while a connection could drastically lower the award cost. Furthermore, note that most of these cheap awards can’t be booked in conjunction with an award on a partner airline.

Just to pull up some examples, you could fly between the United States and Europe in American first class for 72,000 AAdvantage miles, or in American business class for 62,000 AAdvantage miles.

Great American award pricing

You could fly between the United States and South America in American business class for 55,000 AAdvantage miles.

Great American award pricing

You could fly between the United States and India in American first class for 75,000 AAdvantage miles, or in American business class for 65,000 AAdvantage miles.

Great American award pricing

You could fly between the United States and Australia in American first class for 75,000 AAdvantage miles, or in American business class for 65,000 AAdvantage miles.

Great American award pricing
American Airlines 777 first class

The great values aren’t just for long haul premium cabin awards. In many cases you’ll find attractively priced economy awards in short haul markets, similar to the pricing you’ll find with programs like Alaska Mileage Plan and British Airways Executive Club.

Great American award pricing
Great American award pricing

Bottom line

Of the “big three” carriers in the United States, I tend to think the American AAdvantage program has the most valuable award redemption opportunities, especially for someone with a diversified mileage portfolio. There are all kinds of awards where American has the best redemption values, especially for travel to the Middle East, Africa, India, etc.

On top of that, American has no change or cancelation fees for awards, which gives members lots of flexibility when locking in awards. Hopefully the above is some inspiration for the next time that you’re planning an adventure.

What are your favorite ways to redeem American AAdvantage miles?

Conversations (24)
The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.
Type your response here.

If you'd like to participate in the discussion, please adhere to our commenting guidelines. Anyone can comment, and your email address will not be published. Register to save your unique username and earn special OMAAT reputation perks!

  1. Al Guest

    I’m a huge AA flyer — The mileage examples noted in this article for business and first are way off for American Airlines. They are even less than mileage needed for coach so not sure what to make of this article.

  2. Frank hidalgo Guest

    I have been booking mia to Doha in business class one way for 70k on American but now American only offers one way in their nonstop from Philadelphia to Doha fro 300k one way. Yet I was able to get it on British airways for the 70k. So I don’t think it is Qatar, I think it is American that is causing this, no?

    Of course with British they want to charge ridiculous taxes and...

    I have been booking mia to Doha in business class one way for 70k on American but now American only offers one way in their nonstop from Philadelphia to Doha fro 300k one way. Yet I was able to get it on British airways for the 70k. So I don’t think it is Qatar, I think it is American that is causing this, no?

    Of course with British they want to charge ridiculous taxes and fees while American is very reasonable here. I have been trying to get rid of my miles with them and even on their terrible business or first class they want to charge $700 round trip for taxes and fees. And they send me notifications to buy more of their miles. Do they think their customers are that stupid??????

    Also cathay used to have a lot of fc seats if you booked way in advance and it used to rival Singapore in service but now they don’t offer anything but economy seats on any route. Once I transferred miles to them and they cancelled my first class round trip ticket during the pandemic and told me I had to use the mikes within 60 days or my miles would expire. I finally was able to get a round trip fc on Japan airlines thru them even though I don’t particularly like Japan airlines. It could be that Cathay is soon going under, but I just think they are playing games.

    As for delta and United they are totally useless as they wanted to charge 600k round trip to Sao Paolo from Atlanta on their terrible business class! United is similar!

  3. Caledonian52 Guest

    I too find AA the most generous when it comes to award redemption. Biggest bang for the points, I find, is off season or at least on the shoulder. With no cost cancellation you can continue to shop for the best award use even if you are already booked.

  4. PointsFlyer New Member

    OneWorld is NOT One world. All these alliances are playing one member airline program off another with different inventory, and, as someone suggested, probably occulting availability. With outrageous amount of AA miles needed for AA metal to the ME and beyond, American will offer an obscene one way 400K BC ticket on their own metal and, meanwhile, there is availability on Qatar flights evident on Qatar, BA, iberia websites. And yes the workaround (spend a...

    OneWorld is NOT One world. All these alliances are playing one member airline program off another with different inventory, and, as someone suggested, probably occulting availability. With outrageous amount of AA miles needed for AA metal to the ME and beyond, American will offer an obscene one way 400K BC ticket on their own metal and, meanwhile, there is availability on Qatar flights evident on Qatar, BA, iberia websites. And yes the workaround (spend a little more) is to grab those Qatar flights with AVIOS from Qatar's program where I was able to get KOC-DOH-JFK for 85K AVIOS because it just doesn't come up for the 70K it should on AA. UGH is right!!!

  5. Joe Jones Guest

    80k for first class to Asia 1 is also an amazing deal if you can find availability on JL (which is harder these days but not impossible). Most other programs charge at least 100k for such an award; I believe the only cheaper option for F is booking ANA through VS...

  6. Paul Davis Guest

    I've had remarkably good luck with AA awards. I always start looking before the window opens at the 331st day. Sometimes I can only grab one seat in business or first but I'm usually able to pick up a second seat closer in. The best thing to do is have piles of points in a number of different places so you can pivot to the airline that has the best deal at the time. Booking...

    I've had remarkably good luck with AA awards. I always start looking before the window opens at the 331st day. Sometimes I can only grab one seat in business or first but I'm usually able to pick up a second seat closer in. The best thing to do is have piles of points in a number of different places so you can pivot to the airline that has the best deal at the time. Booking to Doha on Qatar I chose not to take a chance to wait for availability on American and instead transferred points into avios and book directly on Qatar because their window opens much further out. Got Qsuites!

  7. Jettoajet Guest

    Agreed on all fronts but one must be added: a true unicorn award. Cairo-Doha (Q Suites First)- Al Safwa Lounge- QR A380 First Doha-BKK- First Class Lounge BKK- JAL 777-300 First Class BKK-HND all for 50K points. Everything has to align but my oh my if you can score this, buy a lottery ticket.

  8. Elaine Guest

    I'm certainly not seeing those awards that you are showing. We've had some nice business-class trips with American partners in the past to SE Asia, Africa, and Nepal including Q suites, and I spent a lot of time, often because I needed specific dates. Since I recently added two American credit card bonuses, I decided to look for destinations showing reasonable bc award space. There were none. The number of miles needed for long-haul flights...

    I'm certainly not seeing those awards that you are showing. We've had some nice business-class trips with American partners in the past to SE Asia, Africa, and Nepal including Q suites, and I spent a lot of time, often because I needed specific dates. Since I recently added two American credit card bonuses, I decided to look for destinations showing reasonable bc award space. There were none. The number of miles needed for long-haul flights is in the hundreds of thousands. It would take about a million miles for two people to take a trip. Have all of the airlines joined together to make business class awards unavailable? Would it help to use a service? Or is it time to give up?

  9. Fleece Johnson Guest

    I have found AA really useful for last minute economy and even first class domestic redemptions in the US. I often find flights at 9k or so miles each way on AA vs 35k or more on Delta and similar on United.

  10. Andrew Barron Guest

    Don’t know what you are talking about
    Trying to book 2 round tickets from SAN to MIA next December and they want 400000 miles in First
    Absolutely insane
    Used to be able to fly one way from SAN to LHR for 52,500 in Business now over 200000

  11. Salathiel Guest

    Try as I may, and I try very hard, I can never, ever find these redemption values. It would be helpful to know how close-in these screenshots are.

  12. Morgan Guest

    Hi! I have a question and wonder if anybody has any idea. I recently redeemed AA points to book an all-AA-metal business class award (62k) from US to Europe. It consists of two legs with a connection at ORD. It is a very long (15 hr) connection at ORD. AA actually offers multiple flights of the first (domestic) leg of this itinerary, but none of the other domestic flight options were available for award booking...

    Hi! I have a question and wonder if anybody has any idea. I recently redeemed AA points to book an all-AA-metal business class award (62k) from US to Europe. It consists of two legs with a connection at ORD. It is a very long (15 hr) connection at ORD. AA actually offers multiple flights of the first (domestic) leg of this itinerary, but none of the other domestic flight options were available for award booking at the time.

    There is still a few weeks before the trip, so how can I change the first (domestic) leg and get a shorter layover at ORD? Thanks.

  13. Bill n DC Diamond

    I’ve been traveling well using AA miles!

    Last Week
    CHC – SYD - QF 1st Lounge - QR First – DOH -Al Safwa – jacuzzi – 6 hour nap – board from lounge – AUH 100.000 AA Miles
    AUH – EY B787-9 Seat 2K - IAD 115,000 AA Miles

    January Beach Trip
    IAD -EY seat 2A – AUH 115,000 AA Miles
    AUH – A380 Seat 4K -LHR – FRA 62,500 AA Miles Cool adding FRA on BA since ticketed by AA :-)

    Last year GRU – MIA – DCA 91,000 AA Miles dynamic 3x Cancel and Rebook

  14. JetSetFly Guest

    Key word here is Opportunity with capital O. Social media had demystified ways to earn miles and redeem award tickets, everyone is competing with limited award tix on any given flights. Together with programs like seat aero, point me, etc., really democratized searching for award tickets. What this means is that people who were good at searching for award seats five years ago, are in the same level playing field as someone who started with...

    Key word here is Opportunity with capital O. Social media had demystified ways to earn miles and redeem award tickets, everyone is competing with limited award tix on any given flights. Together with programs like seat aero, point me, etc., really democratized searching for award tickets. What this means is that people who were good at searching for award seats five years ago, are in the same level playing field as someone who started with this hobby few months ago. Unless you are flying to places that are off the beaten paths, you will have harder time finding reasonable/ cheap award tickets going forward. Flexibility is the key to score f/j tix. But most people have 9/5 jobs so unless you are retired or make your living off social media, you are not likely to score that JL F from Tokyo to NYC.

  15. NYflyer Guest

    I have been fortunate enough to utilize my AA miles for travel in BC on JAL, Cathay and Qatar to Asia, Southeast Asia, Africa and the Middle East for years, frequently grabbing my tickets the 331 days ahead. Recently I see virtually no availability on AA's site for these routes. What gives? So what gives....Are BA, Qatar, JAL and Cathay not sharing their FF inventory with AA or is AA suppressing them> Maybe AA doesn't...

    I have been fortunate enough to utilize my AA miles for travel in BC on JAL, Cathay and Qatar to Asia, Southeast Asia, Africa and the Middle East for years, frequently grabbing my tickets the 331 days ahead. Recently I see virtually no availability on AA's site for these routes. What gives? So what gives....Are BA, Qatar, JAL and Cathay not sharing their FF inventory with AA or is AA suppressing them> Maybe AA doesn't want you getting BC on one of their 3 daily JFK Qatar flights for 70 or 75K one way and want you to blow hundreds of AA miles on AA to Doha and beyond via Philadelphia? And why is no one blogging about this? Or maybe there are too many bloggers, journalists and others publicizing these sweet spots, bringing them to the attention of the airlines who then devalue and reign in their programs: Turkish Miles&Smiles for example? So many miles and so much more limitation of getting great mileage out of them. I feel like the golden era is over. UGH!!!

  16. Ted Guest

    I recently redeemed 21k miles for a round trip in economy from Washington, DC to/from Vancouver with connections at DFW. I needed to travel for business and dates were inflexible, so I considered this a good value as cash prices were at least $500, sometimes much more.

  17. AaronP Guest

    Flying MIA-JFK-LHR-IST on 4.02 in business AA/AA/BA for 57.5k miles +$54 fees! If I flew BA MIA-LHR, fees >$500...

  18. Marcus Guest

    Practically speaking what’s valuable is programs with award space. Theoretical values for award travel are just that. BA routinely cancels flights and downgrades. I did book an American F award LHR -DFW only to find I had been downgraded at the airport. Never got the difference in miles back despite spending hours on the phone with various AA agents. My guess is points are worth about half of what Lucky values them at for most...

    Practically speaking what’s valuable is programs with award space. Theoretical values for award travel are just that. BA routinely cancels flights and downgrades. I did book an American F award LHR -DFW only to find I had been downgraded at the airport. Never got the difference in miles back despite spending hours on the phone with various AA agents. My guess is points are worth about half of what Lucky values them at for most of us who might travel half a dozen times a year but with limited flexibility.

    What I would love for example is an alert (should be a Point.me feature!) any time on any day if an F award on NH is available on a specific route (SFO-NRT/HND) something I do around half a dozen times a year with lots of flex on dates. Maybe some day…

  19. Jacob Guest

    Sounds great on paper until you realize availability is pretty much non-existent when it comes to business class on AA partner airlines.

  20. D3kingg Guest

    They had website special fares before the pandemic for like 51k in flagship first between LAX and TYO.

    Q Suites for 75k is the greatest deal for sure between US and Middle East/ Indopak etc.

    These 450k one way fares in J to Asia are getting on my nerves.

  21. James Guest

    Very helpful. The saddest part of the American redemption picture is for me the ridiculous “carrier imposed, surcharges” on British Airways. Because BA is so often critical to making an itinerary. Work, this, in my opinion dramatically reduces the real value of AAdvantage miles.

  22. gideyup11 Member

    Good summary of AAdvantage redemption opportunities. I did take aadvantage (pun intended LOL) of an intra-Asia Japan Airlines biz award last year Osaka-Tokyo-HCMC Vietnam for 30K AA miles. That said, I rarely see availability for long haul premium cabin awards on AA metal that you pulled screenshots for. How closed in are these screenshots to departure date?

    1. Timtamtrak Diamond

      Agreed. This post is very sadly useless without travel dates as examples.

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

The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

Jettoajet Guest

Agreed on all fronts but one must be added: a true unicorn award. Cairo-Doha (Q Suites First)- Al Safwa Lounge- QR A380 First Doha-BKK- First Class Lounge BKK- JAL 777-300 First Class BKK-HND all for 50K points. Everything has to align but my oh my if you can score this, buy a lottery ticket.

3
Salathiel Guest

Try as I may, and I try very hard, I can never, ever find these redemption values. It would be helpful to know how close-in these screenshots are.

3
Paul Davis Guest

I've had remarkably good luck with AA awards. I always start looking before the window opens at the 331st day. Sometimes I can only grab one seat in business or first but I'm usually able to pick up a second seat closer in. The best thing to do is have piles of points in a number of different places so you can pivot to the airline that has the best deal at the time. Booking to Doha on Qatar I chose not to take a chance to wait for availability on American and instead transferred points into avios and book directly on Qatar because their window opens much further out. Got Qsuites!

2
Meet Ben Schlappig, OMAAT Founder
5,163,247 Miles Traveled

32,614,600 Words Written

35,045 Posts Published