Gadling’s guide to mileage running — maximizing miles and segments

Now that you’ve got a fare or a city-pair picked out, you need to book your ticket. Another tip is that ticketing rules often dictate that you can add extra segments (stopovers) to your itinerary. For example, if I have a flight from DTW-LAX, I might read the fine print and see that I can book up to two stopovers for that fare. So I can price out a DTW-MEM-MSP-LAX flight for the same price as the nonstop, except I earn extra miles from flying north-south so much more.

Often, you can find your fare rules by booking your ticket halfway through, pricing it out and either reading the fine print or clicking the rules link. If you can’t get the airlines’ search engines to automatically book those stopovers, try using the multi-city search to force it to keep those segments in place.

Additionally, you can always use ITAsoftware to investigate optimal fare routings and rules. While the software doesn’t have the capability to purchase tickets, it’s a great resource to learn about all of the ridiculous possibilities for your routings. I will warn you right now though that the software is pretty complex. You need to be (you guessed it) patient and diligent to find the best bookable routing.

Usually, crazy routings are only really bookable from non-hub cities. Airlines take precautions to make sure that those in hub-markets can’t screw with the system too much and book crazy itineraries. But if you’re in a non-hub city and have a little bit of creative mojo, it’s frequently possible to find multi-leg itineraries around the continent all completable in a single day.

Continue reading to Maximizing miles and segments, page 2 >>

Gadling’s guide to mileage running — how to find a mileage run

The first thing you need to determine before you make your run is exactly how many miles or segments that you need. Depending on the severity of the your requirements, you may want to break up the run into several smaller runs or do one long transoceanic job.

Next, you want to find the best bang for your buck. Many seasoned mileage runners book their itineraries off of mistake and sale fares. Over the course of the year they keep their ears to the ground, waiting for dirt cheap flights to Rome or error tickets to New Zealand pop up on the radar. You can do this in a number of ways:

  • Subscribe to a few different active newsletters. Travelzoo and Airfarewatchdog are two great resources that publish daily fare deals and tips online. Usually if they find good tickets they pass on the savings the same day. This is particularly handy because often times sale and mistake fares sell out or are canceled in a few hours.
  • Flyertalk is an online community of flyers dedicated to all things airline. There is a specific forum dedicated to mileage running, where you can peruse any variety of fares that people have found interesting over the past year or so. You have to be patient, however, because fares only pop up once in a while. Try subscribing to the RSS feed or reloading the page a few times a day.
  • If you haven’t got the patience for the best deal to come to you, it’s always possible to find the second best deal – or the best PPM on the current market. I’ve learned that the best tool for this is Farecompare (FC). You can either go to the destination maps, plug in your home airport and find the place that’s furthest from you for the cheapest price, or you can use this nifty tool that FC created (plug in your home airport). This makes it easy to sort the list of fares by PPM; if you don’t find a fare or carrier that suits your needs, just scroll down and find somewhere that sounds appetizing.

Feel free to shop around and find less-than-ideal candidates that might serve your needs better. It may be 0.032$/mile for you to go to Omaha on Saturday afternoon, but you can go see cousin Jeremy in rehab the following weekend in Minneapolis for 0.04$ a mile. It also partially justifies the wasted fuel, money and carbon.

Consider it a miniature vacation; I’ve been to Puerto Rico, Las Vegas, DC, San Francisco and Phoenix this year for under 48 hours each and enjoyed myself every time.

Continue reading to Maximizing miles and segments

Gadling’s guide to mileage running — Should I book a mileage run?

Mileage runs aren’t for everyone. Most obviously, you should be within reasonable distance of an elite tier (or your own personal goal – 2k miles short of a 50k reward ticket comes to mind) before you consider pulling the trigger.

If you’re doing it to achieve or maintain elite status, you need to be a frequent enough traveler such that you can enjoy the perks of elite status and extra miles. If you’re a twice-a-year-to-visit-the-parents sort of flyer, it may not be worth your effort.

You also have to consider the time, financial and ethical ramifications of your decisions. Yes, you are burning money to go somewhere you don’t need to go just to earn miles. You’re also dumping tons of carbon into the atmosphere along the way (even though the plane would still fly without you). Carbon offsetting can help you allay those concerns.

For me, the formula happens to work out pretty well because I have a relatively flexible schedule, friends all over the country, a little disposable income and nothing to do on the weekends. I also enjoy the beauty of travel, making new friends in strange places, people watching and working the system. And I take sadistic pleasure in riding around in airplanes.

But everyone has their own motivations. If you find that you happen to fit into some these categories, follow along while I show you how to book the best mileage runs.

Continue reading to How to find a mileage run >>