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Barry’s SAS million point challenge – a diversion to add Airline 15 (Kenya Airways)

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Rob writes: In October, SAS announced the million points challenge – here’s our article. If you could fly 15 of the SkyTeam alliance carriers by the end of 2024, you would receive 1 million bonus SAS EuroBonus points.

It was not a competition – everyone who hit the target would get the points.

A number of HfP readers took up the challenge. One of them was Barry Collins, who you may have seen discussing the challenge in The Times – click here (paywall, or click here for a non-paywall version). Barry is also featured in the Financial Times today.

SAS million point challenge

Barry is sharing his trip with HfP readers. Part 1 and Part 2 looked at ‘why’ and ‘how’ (click to read). Airline 1 was Air Europa. Airline 2 was Air France. Airline 3 was TAROM. Airline 4 was KLM. Airline 5 was SAS. Airline 6 was Virgin Atlantic. Airline 7 was Delta. Airline 8 was Aeromexico. Airline 9 was Saudia. Airline 10 was Garuda Indonesia. Airline 11 was Vietnam Airlines. Airline 12 was China Airlines. Airline 13 was Xiamen Airlines. Airline 14 was Korean Air.

We rejoin Barry in Guangzhou. To make up for earlier errors buying non-qualifying tickets, he is now desperately rearranging his trip to include the obscure Kenya Airways ‘fifth freedom’ flight from Guangzhou to Bangkok.

This wasn’t part of the original plan but it is the only way he can make up for having his Delta Air Lines ticket disqualified for being too cheap and still hit 15 SkyTeam airlines.

Over to Barry ….

SAS million points challenge

Guangzhou to Bangkok, Kenya Airways

Three Chinese airports, and a third different experience. This time I followed the ‘transfer / 24 hour visa free’ sign that I was turned away from in Xiamen, for a straightforward transfer as good as any that I’d had elsewhere. There was also just the one bag and passport check!

The lounge in Guangzhou was excellent, as good as Shanghai. However the biggest shock was that it was a generic ‘Baiyunport’ lounge, rather than airline branded, accepting all and sundry.

SAS million points challenge

If you are ever in Guangzhou airport, it is definitely worth a visit. Porcelain tiled floors and dark wood acoustic wall panelling were paired with natural stone counters for the multitude of buffet food offerings. With staff serving at the bar / coffee / dessert area, as well as a ‘made to order’ noodle bar, this all felt very classy indeed.

I went for the Hong Kong style noodles with fish balls. There was lots of space and seating options, but I need to give it a slight mark down for limited places to charge devices in the dining area, and for not being able to find a lid for my takeaway coffee!

One thing all of the Chinese airports definitely have in common is no free WiFi. Well, a least not one that gets you onto virtually any Western website except Sky Sports, apparently. I was able to get on there to see the football scores, but there was no way to message my family to let them know I was OK. Hey ho.

SAS million points challenge

Let’s talk about my last minute booking on Kenya Airways

Yesterday, when I was sat at the gate in Shanghai, I had to make a decision about this Kenya Airways flight today from Guangzhou to Bangkok. I had been incredibly lucky that virtually the only SkyTeam airline I had not flown – and would have struggled to use given it is the only African carrier – ran a ‘fifth freedom’ service in Asia.

I had to be on it in order to catch my (new) flight home on China Eastern. I also had to get a ticket type that would earn points if I wanted to complete the challenge, now that I’d been told my Delta flight wouldn’t count for being too cheap.

As it stood, there were no ‘point earning code’ flights available in economy as confirmed by the Expedia website. I could play it safe and buy a business class ticket for about £500 or I could take a risk and buy an Economy Flex ticket from Kenya Airways directly. However there was no way to know what fare code this ticket would generate. The information is simply not in the public domain.

I took the risk and bought the Economy Flex ticket. Even after buying the ticket, Kenya Airways does not show the fare code on your confirmation. It wasn’t until the lady printed me a boarding pass in Guangzhou that I knew what code I had.

However, with no internet access, I will have no way of checking it against the qualifying list on the SAS website until I land in Bangkok just before midnight tonight!

SAS million points challenge

As this is a single leg of a route that goes from Guangzhou to Nairobi, the white guys travelling on their own in the queue stand out like sore thumbs. Besides myself, there are at least nine others on this flight doing the SAS challenge. Denmark, France, China and the US are all represented.

Only one female, the rest are males. One couple, one pair of friends, and the rest are solo travellers. All are in their 20’s, with only two of us fortysomethings. It’s a big plane, so there are probably more on here too at a guess.

I feel slightly proud to have been roughing it in economy with the young ‘uns. The other guy my age is a ‘Million Miler’ with Delta and is doing the whole thing in Business and First Class, although I don’t understand how he can justify the cost against the miles. Perhaps he is simply hoping to break even and have a fun time in the process. 

Everyone I have spoken to knows about the fare code thing. One of the French guys told me that he booked the last two ‘E’ coded seats for this flight, so Kenya Airways would have to start selling different codes that might work. He then cancelled the two ‘E’ coded seats for a refund once he got the ticket sub-class he wanted.

This really is a challenge set up for the travel influencer / AV geek. I was clearly way out of my depth going for this as a lay person ….

Four of the challengers were sat in a row so agreed to pose for a photo. However, two of them asked for their face to be omitted from any blog post, as their boss thinks they are somewhere else!!!

SAS million points challenge

The aircraft is a fairly tatty Boeing 787, with a 3-3-3 configuration in economy. I have to physically hold the headphone jack in place to not lose sound on the seatback entertainment.

The food was a sorry looking roll that I didn’t eat. But there’s plenty more room than the last plane, a working screen and nobody next to me in the middle seat – so I watch a film and wait to see if my Economy Flex code gamble has paid off ….

Fifteen SkyTeam airlines down, but frustratingly – due to the Delta Air Lines error – one still to go.

Click here to read the final part of this story.

The full itinerary

As a reminder, here is Barry’s original itinerary together with the changes made along the way:

Trip 1Gatwick to Barcelona (easyjet), Madrid to Gatwick (Air Europa) booked as part of a family holiday

Trip 2Heathrow to Paris (Air France)Paris to Bucharest (TAROM)Bucharest to Amsterdam (KLM) – Amsterdam to Stockholm (SAS) – Stockholm to Heathrow (SAS) 

Trip 3Heathrow to Atlanta (Virgin Atlantic) – Atlanta to Mexico City (Delta)Mexico City to Paris (Aeromexico) – Paris to Heathrow (Air France) 

Trip 4Stansted to Istanbul (Pegasus) – Istanbul to Riyadh (Pegasus) – Riyadh to Jeddah (Saudia) Heathrow to Jeddah (British Airways) – Jeddah to Jakarta (Saudia)Jakarta to Singapore (Garuda) – Singapore to Ho Chi Minh (Vietnam)Ho Chi Minh to Taipei (China Airlines)Taipei to Xiamen (Xiamen Airlines) – Xiamen to Shanghai (Xiamen Airlines)Shanghai to Seoul (Korean) – Seoul to Shanghai (China Eastern) Seoul to Guangzhou (China Southern) – Guangzhou to Bangkok (Kenya Airways) – Bangkok to Shanghai (China Eastern) – Shanghai to Gatwick (China Eastern)

Comments (65)

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

  • craiguk58 says:

    Really enjoyed reading about this, I’d be interested to know how much the whole trip cost!

    • Rob says:

      It’s in Part 2, link at the top of this article, albeit that excludes the extra £700 of so he ended up spending to rebook various flights. I suspect near £5k in the end but HfP has paid a decent chunk of that.

      • Tracey says:

        Curious. What came first, Barry’s intent on taking the challenge, of Rob’s idea to sponsor it?

        • Rob says:

          When I wrote about the challenge, I wrote in the comments that we’d be willing to part fund someone. Barry got in touch and I assume the ability to offset a decent chunk of the cost helped get him over the line to book.

          We got lucky with Barry. A couple of experienced bloggers got in touch which obviously has advantages but they wouldn’t have made any mistakes either and it would have been duller. Barry has also been very happy to talk to the media which was a benefit and not something we initially discussed.

          • Simon says:

            These articles have definitely been better for having someone like Barry write them than an experienced blogger.

            A really enjoyable series.

          • Paul says:

            You’ve definitely got lucky with Barry. Thanks for taking the gamble, it’s been a great series which I’ve enjoyed reading, and all the better for not being written by an experienced travel blogger!

      • Barrel for Scraping says:

        I hope you’re giving him the extra £700 too as I’m sure these issues he had have been good for the ratings! It seems a bit irresponsible sending someone on a round the world trip and not giving him a heads up on eligible fare classes.

        • Bagoly says:

          But from Rob’s earlier comments I understand that SAS failed to make that clear in the original terms?

          • Rob says:

            We didn’t ‘send’ him anywhere! He sent himself and we paid him to write about it. He was paid about £750 more than the original budget though because I assumed it would be 15 flights and it ended up being 21 plus some city reviews – albeit we merged a lot of the articles together when we realised we’d be running it until next Christmas if we did them all separately!

  • TimM says:

    I can recommend an eSIM for a data connection anywhere without the hassle of buying and registering physical SIM cards. There is a comparison site:
    https://esimdb.com

    And also a MacBook Air for 18 hours of battery life between charges! What is the point of having a portable computer if you need to plug it in all the time?

    • StillintheSun says:

      The website link is really helpful, thank you! I normally use an Airalo. It is reasonably easy to set up on my iPhone 13 mini (last of the non-brick like size iPhones). I’d put reliability and ease to set up over price given the price differential often isn’t that much between eSims. Are there a couple of companies you could recommend over Airalo?

      • Soloflyer1977 says:

        I have used Nomad and Mobimatter which have some good multi-country esims (eg 10GB for Asia for £10). Also esimdb, as mentioned above, is a good comparison site

      • Phillip says:

        I swear by Airalo, having used it in pretty much all regions bar Africa.

      • Rob says:

        I still have a 13mini as does a barrister mate. Apple really should have kept them going.

        • StillintheSun says:

          The last sensibly sized iPhone standing is the “budget” iPhoneSE. I have to admit that I haven’t tried one (the specifications are much reduced). Anyway I had high hopes when I heard the rumour that apple would release the next model iPhoneSE early 2025 given that smaller = cheaper. Unfortunately, the other rumour is that Apple are completely abandoning phones smaller in size and that includes the new iPhoneSE. I don’t suppose anyone has any information on this from a recent tour of an unspecified factory in an unspecified location?

          • Rob says:

            I don’t care if smaller = pricier. As I have an iPad, 13 inch and 15 inch laptop, I am sorted for large screens – just need a small light one.

          • StillintheSun says:

            I agree with you Rob; I’d happily pay more for a smaller phone. The budget iPhone SE was designed to increase Apple market share vs lower price smart phone competition. My reasoning was that Apple deliberately made the old budget iPhoneSE significantly smaller that the usual models to save on cost. I thought that the new model 2025 iPhoneSE would also be smaller in order to save cost. I really don’t care if the SE camera is marginally worse etc than the higher priced models. Size and weight are my key drivers. Unfortunately, apparently Apple only believe that there is a sufficient market for larger phones and therefore the new model iphoneSE is likely to be normal size and there will be no smaller models at all in any category. I’m happy to be corrected if anyone has alternative Apple gossip! Apologies for straying way off topic.

          • Novice says:

            I don’t buy anything other than iPhone SE. Because in my opinion, iPhone peak hit at iPhone 4-8. After that it’s just Apple upgrading to keep selling phones. I simply refuse to buy anything just because of the reason that it’s latest.

            I know everyone else does but I love old technology that lasted longer. I use proper cameras for photography so don’t need to have a massive phone. Phone is for calling and texting and you don’t need the massive bricks for those functions.

            I do have high- tech laptop though.

    • Retron says:

      “What is the point of having a portable computer if you need to plug it in all the time?”

      I’ve got a Clevo laptop which is the complete opposite of a Macbook Air – it has a desktop CPU, a GeForce 2080, a 17″ screen, a literal power brick (330W), weighs something like 4kg and lasts for all of an hour on battery – and that’s on a good day. I take it on holidays so that I can still play a bit of WoW or Diablo 4, and the large screen is great for browsing websites etc.

      Sadly it was the last of its kind, so whatever I end up with next time will by default be smaller and thinner – and with a laptop rather than desktop CPU. I’ll miss the “oomph”, if nothing else!

      • Lumma says:

        Other than PC gaming, one of the high end macbooks would be way better than that for pretty much anything, be more compact and have decent battery life.

  • Paul says:

    I love that two people are flying around the world whilst their bosses think they are somewhere else!

  • Maxim says:

    Thanks for the continued updates. Just to say the fare codes for Kenyan are definitely visible on the website, as well as through the ITA matrix. Furthermore, the fare is shown on the confirmation twice, both in ‘class’ under the departure airport, and the first letter of the ‘fare basis’ under that.

    • Barry says:

      Kenya Airways doesn’t show fare codes before purchase on their website. I must have been on that site for a cumulative of hours, and have multiple screen grabs. There is nothing until your email confirmation 👍

      • Maxim says:

        Ah, you are right, I was certain it was visible in the unformatted fare conditions, but it isn’t. Apologies!

      • Nico says:

        Why not use the OTA that always show you the code then? you liked the unexpected?

    • masaccio says:

      A trial booking I just tried didn’t show the fare code. It is of course visible in ITA Matrix.

  • masaccio says:

    The decent number of million mile runners that Barry has bumped into just on his flights makes me wonder how many people are doing this. And how many are getting it right…

    • Qrfan says:

      I reckon that taking on this challenge without even knowing about ITA matrix is pretty niche. The idea of taking 10+ economy sectors to earn enough points to avoid about 10 economy sectors is still a bit baffling to me. I collect points to avoid flying economy. I bet the guy up front is having a great adventure though.

      • Rui N. says:

        It’s more to have 1 million miles in your account and never redeem them because of lack of availability

  • Jingle says:

    Nice to have some light relief from the existential angst and bitterness flowing out from the BA “ betrayal “ 😊

    • masaccio says:

      You’d be bitter too if you were dreading the ‘trauma’ of not using the First Wing or having to ask for champagne in the Galleries Lounges.

      • George says:

        Thoughts and prayers. Candle in the wind

        • Rui N. says:

          I’ve written to my MP already!
          (I’m joking, but I know a person that wrote to his MP because he got “censored” – ie got a few messaged deleted – on an Internet forum)

  • Erico1875 says:

    We are all praying for you Jingle. If we can all join hands to a chorus of “we shall overcome”

  • Paul (another one) says:

    I don’t know how the commercials add up for you Rob but this is definitely the series of articles I’ve read the most avidly. Great sponsorship and another well done to Barry.

    PS genius levels of av geekery to buy the last two “wrong” tickets (but I wonder what it cost in lost refund given it would have been a “cheap” bucket).

    • Rob says:

      HfP money in and HfP money out are rarely connected! Good content gets readers and we hope to flog them the odd card months down the line.

      All our ads are flat fee per week so reader numbers on particular pieces mean nothing.

      • cin4 says:

        I thought you have plenty of commission arrangements too?

        • Rob says:

          Non-card links in articles are well under 5% of revenue between them. We take it because it is stupid not to, but it’s not much. As a random example, KLM paid us £21 last year.

    • Barry says:

      He told me he bought with his Revolut card and as such got a full refund within 24hrs 🤷

      • Bagoly says:

        Is that the Revolut Ultra cancel mechanism?
        I had not come across such a thing until Rob’s comment on the FT article today.

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