If you’re seeing Halloween decorations at the store, you should take that as a sign the holiday travel season is just around the corner. Cue the expensive flights! If you’re relying on points and miles to cover the cost, you might want to consider whether booking award flights for the holidays is the best use of your travel rewards.
But if fares are getting too expensive, you may choose to book award flights instead. The best airline for holiday award travel based on the value of its points is a four-way tie among American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines, and Frontier Airlines.
Aim for 1.4 Cents per Mile
NerdWallet examined nine major U.S. airlines and analyzed the prices of nearly 600 domestic flights in 2022. In this analysis, holiday flights were defined as those departing on Dec. 18 and returning on Dec. 29. Of the nine airlines examined, four airlines tied for the highest baseline value for miles spent on holiday flights, which was 1.4 cents per mile. If you fly American, Delta, Frontier or Southwest, you should aim to get about this much when you divide the cash price by the number of miles.For example, a $600 round-trip flight should cost about 42,857 miles (or less, if you’re getting an even better deal).
- Alaska Airlines: 1.2 cents (non-holiday valuation: 1.2 cents).
- American Airlines: 1.4 cents (non-holiday valuation: 1.5 cents).
- Delta Air Lines: 1.4 cents (non-holiday valuation: 1.5 cents).
- Frontier Airlines: 1.4 cents (non-holiday valuation: 0.9 cent).
- Hawaiian Airlines: 0.9 cent (non-holiday valuation: 1 cent).
- JetBlue Airways: 1.3 cents (non-holiday valuation: 1.5 cents).
- Southwest Airlines: 1.4 cents (non-holiday valuation: 1.5 cents).
- Spirit Airlines: 0.7 cent (non-holiday valuation: 0.8 cent).
- United Airlines: 1.1 cents (non-holiday valuation: 1.2 cents).
For the most part, 1.4 cents is slightly below the non-holiday valuation of these airlines’ miles; American, Delta and Southwest miles are usually worth about 1.5 cents each.
Avoid Using Miles When They’re Worth Less Than 1 Cent
This is a good rule at any time, but particularly during the holidays. A valuation of less than 1 cent per mile is abysmal considering you can often redeem credit card points for cash back at a standard rate of 1 cent each—and that’s low when compared with travel credit cards that let you redeem through their travel portals at 1.25 cents or 1.5 cents each.What to Do if You Don’t Have Enough Miles
NerdWallet’s data shows airline miles are generally worth slightly less when you use them to book holiday flights. That means you’ll probably spend more miles on holiday flights than you would on non-holiday flights. There are still a few ways you can save on holiday travel, though.- Book When the Flights Are Less Expensive
- Transfer Miles From a Credit Card
- Book With a Combination of Points and Miles
The value of your points and miles will depend on your redemption. Do the math and aim to get 1 cent to 1.4 cents per mile. If the value is lower than that, pay cash for your holiday flight and save your miles for any other month than December.