Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Should you redeem your Emirates Skywards frequent flyer miles on easyJet?!

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Emirates has a lot of high quality partnerships such as its established deal with Qantas.  It also works with many other well regarded legacy airlines such as JAL and Air Canada, giving members of the Emirates Skywards frequent flyer scheme more options for earning and spending miles.  We looked at the best Emirates Skywards airline partnerships here last December.

Emirates Skywards also has a partnership with easyJet.

Whilst you may be thinking ‘I’m never going to redeem my miles on easyJet’, you need to remember that Emirates Skywards has tough expiry rules for its miles.  You may find a small amount needs to be used quickly.

There are other options for expiring Emirates Skywards milesYou can convert Emirates Skywards miles to Heathrow Rewards, for example, which lets you cash out for Heathrow Airport shopping vouchers.  A ring fencing deal means that you cannot move miles from Emirates to Heathrow Rewards and then on to Avios.  This is strictly enforced.

You should also look at using expiring Emirates Skywards miles as part-payment towards a hotel booking or for some Arsenal football tickets.

We published a complete guide to earning Emirates Skywards miles from UK credit cards which you can find here.

The Emirates Skywards and easyJet partnership

The two airlines are not directly comparable, I admit.  Compare the picture below of the Emirates Boeing 777-300ER First Class suite (review here) ….

…. with a 186 seat Airbus A320:

How are Emirates redemptions priced on easyJet?

There is no complex award chart to get your head around.  See this page of the Emirates website for full details of the deal.

As Emirates is basically buying you an easyJet ticket for cash using your miles, your tickets are non-refundable and non-changeable just like a normal easyJet ticket.

The good news is that you can redeem Emirates miles for the full cost of your flight.  There are no taxes to pay.  You can also pay for seat selection, baggage etc with miles as long as it is booked as part of the original transaction.

Here are some typical prices I looked up, comparing the miles required versus the easyJet cash price:

  • £37.99 or 14,409 miles
  • £75.99 or 25,586 miles
  • £47.99 or 17,350 miles
  • £73.99 or 24,998 miles

In these examples you are getting 0.26p, 0.29p, 0.28p and 0.29p per mile respectively.  This is a terrible deal, to put it mildly, unless your miles are on the verge of expiry.

The upside, of course, is that you can book any easyJet flight, on any day.  No black outs, no restrictions.  Except, of course, that the busier flights will need more miles.

The only rules to note are:

  • there is a minimum redemption of 8,000 miles (around £25 of flight value)
  • apart from a 24 hour cooling off period, you cannot cancel your booking

easyJet flights are one exit route for anyone stuck with expiring Emirates Skywards miles – although certainly not a good enough reason to go out of your way to accumulate Emirates miles in the first place.


How to earn Emirates Skywards miles from UK credit cards

How to earn Emirates Skywards miles from UK credit cards (March 2024)

Emirates Skywards does not have a UK credit card.  However, you can earn Emirates Skywards miles by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards.

Cards earning Membership Rewards points include:

Membership Rewards points convert at 1:1 into Emirates Skywards miles which is an attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 1 Emirates Skywards mile. The Gold card earns double points (2 per £1) on all flights you charge to it.

Comments (13)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

    This article = Angie’s moment in the sun

  • Nick says:

    I’ve done this. I inherited a load of expiring emirates miles a few years back and used them to book 5 easyJet flights. I always knew it wasn’t the best value but it was 5 genuinely free flights and was right for me at the time. Much better than being wasted!

  • Christian Searle says:

    I got 40k miles from a cancelled flight with Emirates. Not really that useful as normally fly Virgin or BA. This might be a good way of getting rid. 38k London to Spain return is ok.

  • zapato1060 says:

    Thanks. Love this little quirky redemptions.

  • Jonathan says:

    Rob you might’ve forgotten to mention how your wife once picked up 560 Tier points from flying Emirates with QF numbers on…
    A number of years ago now yes, but it’s still useful information for some !

    • Rob says:

      There is an article on that we dig out every couple of years 🙂

  • Sardar says:

    Hello, I am frequent flyer on Emirates and also have AMEX as Platinum cash back card for 4 years now. I would like to know which card would suit me the best for both emirates and European flights. Was told by a friend that Amex would be compatible with 90% airlines. could you please guide Thanks

  • Peter says:

    Any info on redeeming on TAP Portugal?

  • David says:

    I wanted to redeem my soon to expire Emirates miles for an easyjet flight. Unable to use them on easyjet as the miles are pooled in our Emirates family account, even though I wanted to book for one of the named family members. Spoke with Emirates to ask if there is anything that can be done…politely told nothing.

    • Peter says:

      Wait… So you can’t book if they are in a family account??

      • Rob says:

        There are restrictions on how Emirates family account miles can be used, yes. Not sure exactly what.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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