Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

I finally blow my Miles & More miles, as I remember some benefits I had forgotten!

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This is a long story. It starts some time after October 2018, which was when Lufthansa launched a charge card in the UK.

This was the most bizarre reward card ever launched in the UK, perhaps even globally! It came as a double pack with a Diners Club card (!) and a prepaid Mastercard.

The prepaid Mastercard was automatically loaded from the Diners Club card whenever you paid with it. As I said, bizarre.

I finally blow my Miles & More miles

I had no Miles & More miles at the time and ignored the card at launch. A couple of months later, however, someone posted on HfP that the prepaid Mastercard could be used to pay HMRC.

Now it got interesting, especially for a self-employed guy who had large chunks of income tax, VAT and PAYE to settle ….

Obviously the party couldn’t last long and the card was closed down within two years. I’d run up a decent pile of Miles & More miles in that time though.

Miles & More miles usually expire after three years of earning them unless you have elite status. This is a hard expiry which activity on the account does not stop. However, Lufthansa generously put a hold on expiry for five years for ex-cardholders, albeit no-one knew at the time whether it would carry on from quarter to quarter. I sat on my miles, apart from the odd short haul redemption.

In June 2024 Lufthansa launched a status match for SAS EuroBonus Gold members, when SAS left Star Alliance. Rhys and I had SAS status from a media event the previous year so we jumped on this. My Miles & More Senator / Gold status was only valid to February 2025 but could be extended for a year by taking six flights, which I did.

I’m taking my son to Tokyo

Fast forward to this week. I still had 250,000 Miles & More miles, Senator (Gold) status until February 2026 and a 14-year old son who wants to go to Tokyo for the food and the manga culture. With my daughter tied up with A levels for the next nine months, we’re looking at a period of father-son trips.

(Long term readers may remember that my son has actually been to Tokyo before, in 2017, but as he was only six at the time he claims it doesn’t count!)

An Avios trip to Tokyo in the UK school holidays in business class isn’t happening with British Airways or Iberia, at least not with only six months notice. I could possibly have done it on Japan Airlines, Qatar Airways or Cathay Pacific but it would be pricey without a 2-4-1 Companion Voucher.

Lufthansa had reward seats on the exact Saturday to Saturday dates I needed but looked too expensive. Under the new semi-dynamic pricing model, which is actually pretty decent, it would be 195,000 Miles & More miles + £700 of taxes and charges per person.

I finally blow my Miles & More miles

I had forgotten two things though:

  • Senator (Gold) members of Miles & More get ‘buy one, get one half price’ on redemptions with Lufthansa, Austrian and SWISS. Not a one off, not once per year, but EVERY TIME. This meant that two business class seats to Tokyo wouldn’t be 390,000 miles for my dates, they would be just 292,500 miles.
  • You get a free 50,000 miles overdraft as a Senator member. This was not part of the original SAS status match – it is never offered during a status match – but unknown to me it was activated when I extended my status after taking six flights.

This meant that my 250,000 miles were enough. Well, they were enough as long as I didn’t mind going overdrawn. I booked.

My son and I have our business class tickets to Tokyo, and I have until the end of February to find a way of paying off my miles overdraft. In the worse case scenario I’ll buy the miles but I’d like to avoid that.

Even if neither aircraft is swapped from its current non-Allegris configuration, we’ve got some interesting flights on the way:

  • top deck seats on a Boeing 747-8 (Lufthansa, Korean and Air China are the only passenger airlines flying the stretched 747-8, with Lufthansa having 60% of them)
  • ‘throne’ seats on a SWISS 777-300 (these normally come with a hefty reservation fee but it is waived for Senator / Gold members)

Neither are cutting edge but both are a little special.

Conclusion

Miles & More gets a bit of a bad rap in frequent flyer circles, but for a Senator the ability to go overdrawn and the ‘buy one, get one for half price, unlimited times’ redemption benefit on Lufthansa Group airlines can’t be knocked.

It’s a shame that Lufthansa never found a way of getting back into the UK credit card market. It really tried – hence extending the miles validity of old cardholders for five years, to keep them loyal during the wait – but couldn’t make the maths stack up.

It is also impossible (for legal reasons in Germany) to transfer miles into Miles & More from any partner except Heathrow Rewards. All hotel partner transfers were scrapped.

This Japan trip may be my Miles & More swansong. I won’t retain Senator status beyond February 2026 unless I get an extension from my ITA Volare status when ITA joins Miles & More, and I take far too few Star Alliance cash flights to build a balance.

It is, however, great to go out in style with a special trip with my son.

Comments (92)

  • dshunter says:

    I’ve finally started shifting my lufthansa miles (mostly earned from booking.com) since the ‘devaluation’ earlier this year. It’s a dramatically better scheme now.

  • Bill Neely says:

    I’m glad you had a great experience. My Miles & More experience is bad- Turkish made it almost impossible to convert my 30,000 miles into either a short haul ticket or a gift (they had a catalogue of things to buy, but no way of ordering them, much less having them delivered). As a result I will never build up miles with that card again- even Lufthansa.

  • deiveed says:

    Wasn’t aware of these benefits before – I think it could make sense for long haul first class flights to Singapore or Japan.

    As someone who accidentally made Senator this year, I must say the status is almost completely redundant (like most frequent flyer status when you already fly business) especially when Centurion gives you access to the first class lounges except the FC terminal in FRA.

    I would seriously consider switching to star alliance if there are ever reciprocal benefits on the highest level – between Hon Circle, PPS Solitaire and Global Services. But right now, there isn’t even reciprocal mileage accrual (except maybe for United – not sure).

    • Pat says:

      if you fly exclusively c and you have amex cent its hardly surprising sen is not valuable to you, what else would it be? m&m carriers don’t charge anyone for asr in c.
      last point, incorrect, no qp or hon circle points on anything other than integrated airlines.

      • Throwawayname says:

        I don’t understand either. Other than the occasional slightly fancier lounge at a hub, the only real difference of status for those who never fly in Y is the access to priority customer service and possibly the additional luggage in case you want to do an intercontinental house move without needing to bother with cargo shipments.

        • Andre says:

          The real perks of Senator Status are not the Senator lounges (which indeed are only marginally better than Business lounges at best) but things like lounge access on arrival, better hotline, evouchers, Senator waitlist, and, as Rob mentioned in the article, companion award and miles overdraft. There was also always way better award availability, but I‘m not sure this still exists after the recent devaluation.

      • deiveed says:

        I meant they have to start counting flights on other Star Alliance carrier for achieving Hon/Solitaire/Global Services and offer reciprocal lounge access (ie Hon granting you SIN F lounges and GS lounge at Heathrow) for me to switch.

        I suspect it won’t ever happen. Better lounges at hubs matter a lot when I go to these hub airports 30 times a year sometimes on long layover.

  • Pat says:

    m&m is very underrated, the benefits are very good on the integrated carriers

  • ADS says:

    “top deck seats on a Boeing 747-8”

    that really is special … just as long as your son doesn’t get a taste for the small cabin … and demand business jet flights in future 🙂

  • Colin says:

    Following an article on Head for Points in 2019 I applied for and received the two Miles & More Global Traveller Cards, a Diners Club card and a Mastercard, effectively issued by Affiniture and Cornèrcard respectively. I received 10,000 award miles as a promotional bonus and 1.25 miles for each pound spent. For me it was the kudos of holding a rare Diners Club card that appealed and there was a sense of achievement when you found a retailer that accepted it!

    • Rob says:

      Yes, it was a novelty. Did I ever use mine?! Possibly I will have settled a hotel bill somewhere, but a branded hotel would be the only place where I’d risk trying it.

      You’ll remember that the prepaid card was a really flimsy piece of plastic. Most credit and debit cards today have gone the same way, with numbers printed on the back, but it was a novelty in 2018/9.

      • Barrel for Scraping says:

        I wish I’d got it just to pull out when someone says “we accept everything but American Express”

        • The Savage Squirrel says:

          Our local M&S has an absurdly impressive variety of card stickers on the tills including Diners Club, JCB, Discover and God knows what else; only place I’ve ever seen them in ruralish Yorkshire. The most surprising bit of the Lufthansa tie-in was learning that Diners Club still existed as a UK offering; in my mind it had disappeared around the same time as Access 😀

        • Willie says:

          Hah yes came to say this – the look on their face would be priceless.

  • HughM says:

    Thrones for senators: et tu, Brute?

  • Erico1875 says:

    Surely by charging you 2.4c per mile they are putting a cash value on a point which is what they are trying to avoid with the bundles

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