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Book review: Mileage Maniac by Steve Belkin, the man who earned 40 million miles

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This is my review of Mileage Maniac, the story of how Steve Belkin acquired 40 million frequent flyer miles.

Regular readers will remember that I originally ran this review about 18 months ago. However, at the time the book wasn’t available via Amazon in the UK and copies were being imported from the US. As a result, virtually no readers were able to buy it.

It does now show as in stock on Amazon UK for next day delivery if you have Prime – you can order Mileage Maniac for £7.49 on Amazon here. I doubt they have many copies, so don’t hang around this morning if you want one.

Mileage Maniac Steve Belkin book review

This book is the story of Steve Belkin and the various promotions he has pushed to the limit over the years in his desire to earn frequent flyer miles.

(For clarity, I don’t think I have ever met Steve. I do know various other people mentioned in the book, but not Steve. I paid for my copy of Mileage Maniac.)

The book isn’t about one particular mileage scheme or loophole. It is the story of many, many mileage promotions that Steve has exploited over the last 15 – 20 years. He has a very particular way of looking at mileage offers – most are dismissed out of hand, but when he decides to go for it, he goes for it hard.

Steve is best known for flying to Thailand and hiring 20 disabled Thai rice farmers and masseuses – on a substantial salary by local standards – to each fly 200 $8 domestic flights on Thai Airways to earn generous top tier benefits (x 20) from Air Canada’s Aeroplan programme.

A good promotion would often require Steve to drop everything and fly to the other side of the world immediately – literally within hours – to put it into action before the airline woke up to what it had unleashed.

You may have heard the Thai rice farmers story before, especially the bit where Steve is accused by the US Government of running a group of drug mules. If you have, you haven’t heard the full version as outlined here. The full story is more bizarre, and indeed sadder, than the short version often circulated.

The book contains multiple stories like this, including a section dedicated to good old bmi British Midland.

It is hard to explain today how generous the bmi British Midland Star Alliance reward chart was. The airline, having virtually no long haul routes, priced its reward flights at levels which were achievable by short haul flyers. Those who credited long haul premium cabin flights on other Star Alliance airlines – or did huge amounts of credit card spend as I did, earning 2.5 miles per £1 on a Mastercard – were laughing. These were also the days when HMRC accepted personal credit cards with no fees ….

In my case, as my group of oldest friends all hit 40 between 2009 and 2011, I paid for all four of us to fly First Class to Dubai, Cape Town (for a weekend, as you do) and New York over three years. It didn’t make a serious dent in my bmi miles stash and I still had 1 million Diamond Club miles when the British Airways acquisition took place.

His best bmi ‘earn’ was a 26 SEGMENT $2,500 First Class flight from Colombo, one of the cheapest places in the world to start flights at that time, to San Diego. Yes, 26 segments – 13 flights in each direction. The routing was Colombo – Bangkok – Seoul – New York – Washington – Cleveland – Chicago – Kansas City – Denver – Salt Lake – San Francisco – Santa Barbara – Los Angeles – San Diego. And back.

Because of the high minimum mileage earning per segment which bmi awarded, plus the huge First Class and elite status bonuses, Steve earned 252,000 bmi Diamond Club miles from this one trip. As bmi only required 37,500 miles for a return Business Class flight from the US to Europe using ‘cash and points’, this one trip earned enough miles for SIX transatlantic Business Class redemptions.

The book also covers the development of frequent flyer miles over the years as the airlines finally woke up. Steve’s plans are always based on the cost of earning 80,000 miles for a ‘no taxes’ Business Class reward flight from the US to Europe. Today, with the legacy US airlines abandoning fixed mileage charts, those flights will often cost over 200,000 miles.

At the same time, US credit card sign-up bonuses have got out of control. The British Airways US Visa card, for example, currently has a bonus of 100,000 Avios for a fee of $95. The Aer Lingus and Iberia US credit cards have identical deals. Why hire a small army of Thai rice farmers when you can (as Steve did in later years) sit at home and earn 5 million miles purely by taking out multiple US credit cards for himself, his wife and his children?

The US airlines also woke up to the fact that their most profitable customers are not necessarily those who fly the most. For better or worse, elite status with US airlines now requires a minimum cash spend on top of a minimum number of flights.

You can run your own business and voluntarily choose to put 50 economy short haul flights per year to American Airlines but you may not spend enough for top tier status. An investment banker whose firm pays for fully flexible tickets between New York and London will hit the threshold in two trips. The game moves on, however, and players like Belkin adapt.

As well as covering multiple crazy frequent flyer mileage schemes, Mileage Maniac also gives an interesting insight into Steve’s own life and businesses which inevitably intertwine. For many years he ran the award booking service for US blog View From The Wing.

If you are reading Head for Points then you can’t fail to get £7.49 of entertainment value from Mileage Maniac.

You can order Mileage Maniac from Amazon here.

Comments (64)

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

  • Scott says:

    Got this book after the first HfP article (and a copy for a like-minded relative!) and thoroughly enjoyed it – highly recommended!!

  • Alastair says:

    All gone by 7.30am.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    Yes, bought this a couple of years ago. Extremely entertaining. He does indeed look at things differently; and does push things farther, frankly, than is sensible (would you remortgage your house without telling your wife in order to take advantage of a Cathay Pacific promotion?) which is part of what makes it so interesting.

  • Inizii says:

    On Apple Books for £4.99

  • Lady London says:

    The story I’d like to hear more about is how United Airlines apparently denied and dishonoured and manoeuvred to deprive some frequent flyers of their lifetime unlimited free flights status United appeared to have thought no one would ever earn, after those frequent fliers had earned that status and actually started to use the benefits.

    • meta says:

      I think that was American Airlines. There was an article in The Guardian about it. I think it ended up in court, not sure about the outcome.

      • Mike says:

        A few different stories being confused here
        Just search steve rothstein american airlines and it will explain all
        Fascinating story! What a life lived

    • JDB says:

      Quite a few organisations seem to resile from lifetime benefits or fixed membership prices they thought people either wouldn’t attain or would allow to lapse. My father was given life membership of the AA for his 21st birthday after the war. They wrote to him in the 1990s to tell him such memberships were cancelled. A quick letter to the chairman resolved that, but others now trying it on as he has exceeded their expectations of longevity.

      • RussellH says:

        I am glad to be able to say that the National Trust for Scotland has not taken that line.
        I was given a life membership for my 21st in 1967. Full membership advantages still provided.

      • John says:

        In 1979 my dad received a US “lifetime” visa which was marked as such in his passport which he used a few times afterwards, but when he tried to enter overland from Canada in 1994 the CBP officer claimed it meant it was for the lifetime of the passport it was issued in, and charged him $6 for a new visa.

        Interestingly in 1999 he brought the old passport along and the old visa was accepted in lieu of having a return flight to show the airline agents, and the CBP agent apparently accepted it as equivalent to a green card but advised that he apply to transfer it to the current passport – but my dad eventually decided not to stay in the US.

        • ChasP says:

          I also had one of those visas from the early 80’s I also remember the last section on the application Fees read we charge the same for a visa that your country charges US citizens, So it was free – times have changed

      • Londonsteve says:

        Parents bought Eurotunnel shares in the 1987 issue offering lifetime crossings for £1. It was a considerable investment at the time and compared to the number of times they subsequently used it, paying to cross the channel at full price is likely to have been cheaper. Still, I don’t doubt that some people took very good advantage of it. Eurotunnel tried to cancel the privilege around 2008 when they reorganised themselves to cut their crippling debt burden but a shareholder action group successfully campaigned to retain their legal right to a £1 crossing and it exists even today. They sneaked in an annual registration fee and a booking obligation to cut down on ‘spur of the moment’ journeys. Can’t be many left of the original investor group, my parents were relatively young back then, most others will have likely since passed on.

      • Lady London says:

        Glad to hear it @JDB.

        I have one lifetime membership I shall be particularly annoyed if they try such tricks on – I paid a significant for the time amount, and I don’t want them rewriting the rules.

        Though I do expect all my rights to disappear anyway in a massive carveup with private equity walking away with the assets with the finance industry divvying up amongst themselves all the benefits and the members and the earlier members that created the assets totally ripped off, in about five years.

        Probably a similar situation to the reasons The AA tried it on with your Dad – who knows, those pesky lifetime memberships can b*gger up a balance sheet and their potential legal cumber needs to be removed so the finance industry can eat lunch.

      • Alex Sm says:

        What about that membership for the guy from “Up in the air” movie? Can’t be completely fictious

  • Ian says:

    My copy says it’s printed by Lightning Source, which is Ingram Spark’s operation for publishing print on demand. Odds are thay Amazon (or anyone else) can take as many orders as they like and fulfil them all. May take a few days to arrive.

  • FatherOfFour says:

    Paperback showing as unavailable to me, but kindle still there obviously.

  • David Jenkins says:

    Excellent book. I bought it on Kindle when it came out.

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

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