ā·ļø TRENDING TRAVEL NEWS ā·ļø
ā¢ Free: Ski free with your Alaska Airlines boarding pass.
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ā¢ Instagram Reel: Easily the most humbling pictures to exist.
ā¢ Easy Earning: Weddings are great, but free honeymoons are better.
Good morning and welcome back to Daily Drop, brought to you by DayQuil - the only thing keeping me alive right now. šŖ
While I desperately try to stop being sick, hereās some travel stuff:
š³ Earning a crap load of UR Points
On Friday, I wrote about Flying Blueās new Promo Rewards and how you can combine them with a transfer bonus from UR Points to fly to Europe on the cheap.
The newsletter was met with rave reviews. People shouted from the rooftops about how eloquent and life-changing the short editorial was.
But I did get one question a number of timesā¦
How the heck do you even have UR Points left to transfer? You always talk about using them for Hyatt and all of these transfer bonuses. How do you do it??
And the answer is quite simple: credit cards. And no, Iām not talking about signing up for enough of them to fill up an entire sock drawer.
In fact, you really just need one. And it continues to be the way I personally rack up a TON of points year after year.
When people ask me what my āgo-toā card is, I ALWAYS tell them itās this one.
Hereās why:
First of all, the high annual fee is easily offset by a $300 travel credit that can be used on any merchant and is credited automatically.
It also comes with a Priority Pass membership and really solid travel insurance (which saved me $1,600 this year after I had to cancel a trip because of my surgery).
But none of that gets you UR Pointsā¦ so hereās what does:
This card earns 3x UR Points per dollar on all travel and dining. That alone is a HUGE return on spend given how valuable UR Points are.
But whatās even better is that you can earn 10x points per dollar on hotels booked through the bankās portal.
This portal isnāt just flashy luxury hotels, eitherā¦
Letās say you want to book a trip to Japan. After booking your flights, budgeting for food and activities, etc., you might think that hotels will be the most expensive part.
But this hotel right in the heart of Tokyo only costs $55 per night (including all taxes) when booked through the portal with this card.
Not only is that a great rate for a hotel, but youāll earn 550 UR Pointsā¦ per night!!
If you spent a week in Tokyo, youād earn 3,850 UR Points in return.
Thatās already enough to transfer points to Hyatt and book a free night at a different hotel in Japan like this one:
Since that hotel costs $144 per night, youāre effectively getting a 37% return on spend from your week in Tokyo.
Not bad, eh?
But it gets betterā¦ š
Sometimes, you can even get offers from the travel portal. For example, last month, I got an offer to get 10,000 bonus UR Points after spending $400 on hotels with this card.
Letās break that downā¦
If I booked a 4-night stay in Los Angeles at this hotel, it would cost $407 after taxes and fees.
Is it super glamorous? Hell naw. Does it give you a place to crash to explore the city? Sure thing.
And after itās all said and done, Iād earn a total of 14,070 UR Points from the 10x multiplier and offer.
Thatās enough to book FOUR MORE NIGHTS at a Hyatt Category 1 hotel like the one I just showed you earlier, or this one in Nashville:
Four free nights after staying four nightsā¦ sounds pretty good, right?
As I mentioned earlier, the card also earns 3x on all dining and travel.
So every time I stay in a hotel (which is basically every night of the year), buy lunch and dinner (which I do for every meal of the day), or take a train, bus, subway, book a tour, or any other travel-related expense, Iām earning 3x from a single card.
Now thatās a little extreme, but if you crunch the numbers for how much you spend in these categories, Iām sure youāll see how powerful that multiplier is.
Finally, I rack up thousands of points every year from referrals. Every time I refer someone to either this card or this card, I get 10,000 UR Points, regardless of which one they sign up for.
Iāll even give a friend $50 if they use my personal link. It offsets some of their annual fee and gives me over $200 worth of points for a quarter of the price. š¤·š¼āāļø
So if you read Daily Drop and want to rack up a ton of UR Points like I do, consider applying for this card OR upgrading from this card (which I know many of you already have).
āļø Save thousands of dollars on business-class flights
It might feel like Christmas is over, but not for Aeroplan.
Because just today, they dropped a surprise bonus on purchased points, up to 100%.
While this deal might not appeal to everyone, itās definitely one of the best deals weāve seen for buying airline miles.
Let me break it down:
Until January 14th, Aeroplan members will receive tiered bonuses based on the number of points you purchase.
Itās also worth noting that everyone seems to have different offersā¦ some members are targeted with a maximum 85% while others are seeing 100%.
Personally, I was targeted with a maximum of 85% on buying 40,000 or more pointsā¦ but I recommend you go check your account to see what yāall got.
So. Is it worth it?
Given Aeroplanās massive list of partners, solid sweet spots, and the ability to add stopovers for 5,000 extra points, it might just be worth it.
Letās say you want to fly on ANAās āThe Roomā business class across the pacific, like I did last year.
You could book this 10-hour flight for just 75,000 Aeroplan points.
If you buy 40,000 points and get an 85% bonus, youāll end up with 74,000 points for a total cost of $1,400 CAD, or about $975 USD.
Youād need to transfer over another 1,000 points from somewhere to get to 75,000, of course.
Still, for a 10-hour flight in one of the best business-class seats in the world, that might be a GREAT deal for many of you, given the fact that the flight sells for over $3,000 on a good day or upwards of $5,000 or $10,000 dollars on a bad day.
But Aeroplan also has some amazing sweet spots going across the other pondā¦ to Europe.
You can fly on Singapore Airlines from New York to Frankfurt for just 60,000 Aeroplan points in business class.
If you get the 100% bonus from Aeroplan, you could effectively buy this flight for $731, which is a CRAZY deal considering the typical cash rate of anywhere from $3,000 to $6,000 when paying cash.
š” Pro Tip: If you do buy points, make sure youāre using a card like the Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card to maximize your earnings on non-categorized spend like this.
So hereās the bottom line:
Check out the Aeroplan site and see what youāve been targeted for.
There are a million other niche ways you can use this offer to save money on flights in business or economy, in North America, or well beyond.
If youāre willing to pay some money in order to book flights that would otherwise cost a LOT more money, this could be a steal.
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š¤£ Meme
Dangā¦ I donāt speak up often, but I WILL speak up for missed snacksā¦ā¦.
Thatās all for today, kiddos. I hope you enjoyed some nitty gritty points talk today, and I look forward to seeing you again tomorrow for some more points and miles strategizing.
Cheers,