Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

American Airlines slashes BA earning rate – do NOT credit BA flights to AA in 2016

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

Ever since the Avios devaluation in April, crediting long haul economy flights on British Airways to British Airways Executive Club has been a slightly crazy thing to do.

You were only earning 0.25 Avios per mile flown on discounted economy tickets.  If you credited the same flight to an American Airlines AAdvantage account, you would earn 1 AA mile per mile flown.

I wrote more about this odd situation in this article.

That game is now ending – but there is a loophole for some.

American Airlines announced yesterday that it is cutting the earning rates on British Airways and Iberia flights taken after 1st February 2016.

The new American Airlines chart for British Airways is here.

As you can see, when you scroll down the new chart, discounted economy tickets from 1st February will now earn just 0.25 AA miles per mile flown.  This means that there is no particular reason to credit to American Airlines.

The 1st February date applies irrespective of when you booked your ticket.  Even if you booked before the announcement yesterday for travel after 1st February, you will still receive the lower amount.

There is a loophole ….

Flights on British Airways to North American with an American Airlines flight code will continue to earn miles as if they were AA planes.

This means that you will continue to earn 1 American Airlines mile per mile flown.

If, for example, you are flying to San Francisco and want to fly on BA in World Traveller, you should book via Expedia or aa.com.  This should bring up the same BA flight with the AA flight number, hopefully for the same price, and it will continue to credit at 100% of miles flown.


How to earn American Airlines miles from UK credit cards

How to earn American Airlines miles from UK credit cards (April 2024)

American Airlines no longer has its own UK credit card.

There is, however, still a way to earn American Airlines miles from a UK credit card

The route is via Marriott Bonvoy. Marriott Bonvoy hotel loyalty points convert to American Airlines miles at the rate of 3:1.

The best way to earn Marriott Bonvoy points is via the official Marriott Bonvoy American Express card. It comes with 20,000 points for signing up and 2 points for every £1 you spend. At 2 Bonvoy points per £1, you are earning (at 3:1) 0.66 American Airlines miles per £1 spent on the card.

You can apply here.

Marriott Bonvoy American Express

20,000 points sign-up bonus and 15 elite night credits each year Read our full review

Comments (13)

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

  • Idrive says:

    Goodmorning it seems for once i may be lucky! i booked an ex eu supercheap open jaw for Easter a while ago via aa.com and 3/4 flights are operated by BA but all flights are under a AA code. I did not remember…you get 1/4 of the miles flown irrespective of status…on discounted economy…

  • Guesswho2000 says:

    Only a matter of time before this happened I guess, my return flight to Australia in discount Y last November got me over 40,000 AA miles, including the 100% elite bonus for AA Platinum! That’s half of a one way first class redemption back there!

  • Rohan says:

    What about redeeming AA miles on BA metal ? Is that changing ?

  • konagirl says:

    I think the blanket statements “do not credit BA flights to AA” and “This means that there is no particular reason to credit to American Airlines” are misleading. It entirely depends on each person’s travel routine which frequent flyer scheme is best for them to accrue with. A Flyertalk contributor pointed out that, with 5 economy return flights UK-West coast USA, with BA you might make OneWorld Ruby but with AA you should make OneWorld Sapphire. This is particularly true for those of us whose work require employees to travel in economy but that we may book into “low” economy booking classes rather than the “lowest”, for example.

    Thanks for pointing out the loophole re codeshares.

    • Rob says:

      That is true. I hesitated when I wrote that, because obviously there are reasons to do it – but for simplicity the phrase worked.

      • idrive says:

        Honestly, it is totally up to you, your trips path and strategy.
        I personally am now focussed on to getting Silver for the new year starting 08Nov..then credit all the rest to AA, as I am Avios rich at the moment and there is no other particular benefit when flying Eco short haul..remember that taxes on AA and ways to top up are limited…

        • James67 says:

          You might lso wang to consider Alaska, depending how you want to redeem your mikes.

  • Paul says:

    I have RT flight booked for 31st Jan – 06th Feb. Can I credit outbound to AA and inbound to BA?

    • Antonio says:

      I believe so; just change your frequent flyer number at check in for the return journey.

  • Win says:

    This is what happens when you continue to Game the System, you spoil it for every traveller who then gets punished for the few who score and brag about it , as a full fare paying passenger on my own Dime and not on a Company expense account I travel Twice a year R/T Long Haul on World Traveller Plus & Business when it is on SALE I end up getting shafted by the cheats of this World , Shame on all of you !
    All points earned on Company paid travel should go to the Company Travel Dept, to be distributed throughout the Company as a reward to the Employees that never get to travel , use it as a reward incentive scheme for a job well done .

    • Brendan says:

      How is any of that relevant? These changes won’t even affect you.

    • nick says:

      I hate it when I get drunk during the daytime and post nonsense on messageboards too.

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.