Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Farce as Turkish Airlines closes the ‘one million miles for six continents’ challenge

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

Last weekend we covered the Turkish Airlines ‘one million miles for six continents’ challenge.

It did what it says – you would receive 1,000,000 Miles&Smiles miles if you flew to all six continents by 27th October.

‘Would’ is now the operative word.

Turkish Airlines million mile challenge

The challenge was due to run until 27th October.

However, yesterday afternoon, it was cancelled.

The Turkish Airlines website for the challenge now says:

Route: 6 Continents Has Ended

Thank you for the great interest you have shown in our Route: 6 Continents campaign.

In line with recent updates, the campaign has officially concluded as of July 8, 2025.

Members who purchased at least one ticket or completed a flight across six continents by July 8, 2025 will retain their eligibility. If these members complete their all flights across six continents by October 27, 2025, they will be earned 1 Million Miles.

Tickets purchased after July 8, 2025 will not be considered within the scope of the campaign.

Thank you for being part of this inspiring journey with us!

This is, clearly, a farce.

Was Turkish Airlines overrun with people taking part? In truth, it is difficult for them to know because the promotion did not require registration.

It can only guess, based on booking patterns, how many people were planning to do it.

Turkish Airlines Million Mile challenge

The promotion wasn’t hugely generous either. It SOUNDS generous, because you think that one million miles goes a long way, but thanks to a heavily devalued Miles&Smiles reward chart and high taxes and charges, they don’t.

Turkish Airlines miles also have a ‘hard’ three year expiry. If you hadn’t used them in three years, they would expire, irrespective of your activity in the meantime.

On our maths, the best you could do would be to spend £5,000 flying to all six continents on Turkish Airlines (which, including hotel costs, was realistic) and then redeem your one million bonus miles for £5,000 of Amazon gift vouchers.

You’d effectively have got a free trip to all corners of the world in economy, but it would be ‘free’ if you had a strategy for using up the Amazon credit or whatever gift vouchers you took.

Do partly booked trips count?

On the face of it, people who have already booked tickets are not being left high and dry.

The announcement says:

Members who purchased at least one ticket or completed a flight across six continents by July 8, 2025 will retain their eligibility.

However, the terms and conditions for the offer now state:

The campaign ticketing dates were changed from June “27, 2025 – October 27, 2025” to “June 27, 2025 – July 8, 2025”. 

There is no mention of people who add flights later, who already have one qualifying flight booked, still qualifying.

It would be shocking if Turkish Airlines tried to stop people who had booked part of the trip but were waiting on booking the rest from qualifying. Let’s see what happens.

You can find out more about the challenge cancellation on this page of the Turkish Airlines website.

It’s also worth checking out the dedicated challenge thread at Flyertalk.

Comments (48)

  • Pat says:

    Perhaps the promotion was ended prematurely due to operational reasons?

    • ChrisBCN says:

      I think they got scared when they saw 10 people had already/almost already completed the challenge and their 10 million miles marketing budget was going to be blown…

      • VinZ says:

        But how? It started only a few days ago, no?

        • Mr. AC says:

          It’s been 14 days which is quite enough to pull it off if you got right to it when it was announced.

  • SydneySwan says:

    The words ‘brewery, piss up, unable to arrange’ come to mind.

  • Phillip says:

    The distrust towards TK has once again been validated and was clearly warranted.

  • Nico says:

    It is pretty weird to not be able to understand the success it would have after SAS, they have no excuse!

    • Phillip says:

      It would be interesting to understand what data they observe that makes them think bookings are aimed at the promotion. Maybe people booking all of them at the same time?

      • ChrisBCN says:

        If they have a good data person they would be able to know how many people have booked the right things to be eligible.

        If they don’t have a good data person, then they would know how many claimants they have received so far – if that’s a small handful already this early in the process, that will scare the hell out of them.

        Of these, the second is most likely.

        • Lady London says:

          All they had to do to make things transparent and not a fiasco was to.state only the first 10 – 100, or whatever, valid claims from passengers who had met the conditions would have been accepted.

          • Rob says:

            What?! Who is going to do the challenge if that is in the rules?

            Remember the recent Malaysia Airlines status promo? It was easy status if you flew them once in business class but the rules said they limited it to the first 200. The net result? Virtually no-one did it, because everyone assumed the 200 would have gone immediately – in reality, they never got close to awarding 200 people with status.

      • Nico says:

        New accounts and high unusual volume I guess.

  • Gerry says:

    So lame to not only cancel/shorten it, but also impose a new condition about the need to purchase tickets before the 8th…

    Poor show from TK…

    • Lady London says:

      If you’d purchased a non-refundable ticket but still planning to purchase the remaining tickets to complete the challenge?

  • TimM says:

    I imagine something is afoot in Turkish Airlines that we don’t yet know of.

  • Michael_s says:

    I’m TK elite for 14 years. This is quintessential TK crash course for many

    Good product, good connections, fantastic credit card, horrible customer service. People on the phone line are intentionally left inept

    If all you need is to book a ticket online and fly, great. If you need THEM to do something for you or fix something, good luck. Send an e mail which may or may not be read and responded within next 6 weeks

    • BBbetter says:

      I remember the days when you had to call their booking desk in airports (as customer support could not handle it) to pay for redemption bookings and they sent you a dodgy looking link.
      They finally fixed online redemptions but suddenly realised that needs to be paid for and opted for an overnight devaluation.

    • Lady London says:

      “People on the phone line are intentionally left inept” .

      Now where have I heard that comment before 🙂

  • James says:

    The challenge was possible for regularly for $3k as found across many award forums etc so not sure why you are suggesting £5k as the lowest possible.

    • Craig says:

      That’s a totally moot point now!!
      $3k / £5k / £000’s it doesn’t matter does it if you haven’t already booked by yesterday (8 July).

    • Rob says:

      Because I’m including hotels etc in that. Since the best you can do is get your money back you are clearly going to be staying 3-4 days in each place or it’s pointless.

      • Ken says:

        I’m not sure how spending $3k to get say £5k in Amazon vouchers is only getting your money back.
        You can guarantee people will just try this – or stay in cheap backpackers places.

        • Rob says:

          $3k isn’t starting in London for a start. Most legs are via Cairo. You need visas. Let’s say you can do it for £4k inc visas, positioning etc and you sleep in airports. You’d really do this (12 long haul economy flights) to make £1000 profit and have it paid in Amazon vouchers?

          • Ken says:

            Hmmmm, £1800 for positioning flights and visas…..

            I wouldn’t do it no.
            But then again I wouldn’t do bus or coach journeys that lasted 24 hours like I did 40 years ago.

            it’s not a difficult challenge to complete and it starts when millions of students are on vacation.

            I can see the appeal for some in doing it, ending up in Australia with a ticket back home AND showing a profit on it.

          • Rob says:

            But there is only appeal if you stop at the destination, and in that case there is no way you’re making any sort of gain.

            No-one is disagreeing that its worth doing if you want a free trip around the world in economy, but its nonsense if anyone is suggesting someone would deliberately do this (sleeping in airports, no hotel costs, no sightseeing) just to make £1,000 or so. You’d be averaging about £5 per hour for your time at best. You also need £4k of loose change in the first place to do it.

Leave a Reply to ChrisBCN Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please click here to read our data protection policy before submitting your comment

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.