Strengths Membership Rewards has over Ultimate Rewards

43

When it was discovered last month that Chase would be losing Korean as a transfer partner, I offhandedly mentioned that the announcement increased the value of Membership Rewards in my mind. A reader challenged me as to why a change at Chase would change my mathematical value of Membership Rewards points. He’s right that there isn’t a direct relationship, but the comment caused me to consider which currency is more valuable to me. Are Membership Rewards more valuable than Ultimate Rewards? Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But here are 5 strengths Membership Rewards has over Chase Ultimate Rewards.

a close-up of a logo

1) Membership Rewards has more airline partners

a screenshot of a group of logos

Korean didn’t singlehandedly tip the scales on this, but losing Korean was still a major blow to Ultimate Rewards. There are a number of airlines that are both Chase transfer partners and Amex transfer partners. Some of these can be quite valuable, but they do not give a competitive advantage to Chase since they are shared by both programs. Here are the partners that overlap:

Partners with both Chase and Amex:
Air France / KLM Flying Blue
British Airways Executive Club
Iberia Plus
Aer Lingus AerClub
Virgin Atlantic Flying Club
Singapore KrisFlyer
JetBlue TrueBlue
Marriott Rewards

In addition to that list, Chase has two unique airline transfer partners:

Unique to Chase:
Southwest
United

However, Amex has ten* unique transfer partners:

Unique to Amex:
Air Canada Aeroplan
ANA Mileage Club
Cathay Pacific Adia Miles*
Delta SkyMiles
Etihad Guest*
AeroMexico Club Premier
Alitalia MileMiglia
El AL Matmid Frequent Flyer Club
Emirates Skywards
Hawaiian Miles
*Note: Etihad and Cathay are also Citi transfer partners

Right off the bat, Amex has strength in numbers. But beyond just the quantity, those partners have some excellent award chart sweet spots / advantages that make them stand out values. More on that in a minute.

2) Frequent transfer bonuses

a close-up of a logo

While Amex and Chase share a number of common 1:1 airline transfer partners, Amex frequently offers transfer bonuses that make your Membership Rewards points worth more miles. There is currently a 40% transfer bonus to Avios (British Airways / Iberia) and within the last month alone we saw a 30% transfer bonus to Virgin Atlantic and a short-lived targeted bonus on transfers to Cathay Pacific. If Chase has ever run a point transfer bonus, I don’t remember it.

For this reason, the shared partner list isn’t necessarily equal. Amex frequently offers transfer bonuses to the following airlines:

British Airways / Iberia
Air France / KLM Flying Blue
Virgin Atlantic

This means that Chase is only really on equal footing with Amex on the following shared partners:

Singapore
Marriott

Note that I left out JetBlue. Chase recently added JetBlue as a 1:1 transfer partner and Citi has increased the ratio to 1:1 for premium cardholders effective 9/13/18. Amex is currently running a transfer bonus that brings JetBlue to 1:1. Will they keep the 1:1 ratio long-term? I’m not sure. At the moment, I’d have to give the edge to Chase / Citi, though JetBlue may become a wash.

Transfer bonuses from Amex can really help to exploit award chart sweet spots. For instance, with the 30% transfer bonus to Virgin Atlantic, one could book round trip first class to Japan on ANA for about 85K / 93K Membership Rewards points (depending on departure point), whereas the same awards would cost 110K / 120K without the bonus (from Chase or Amex). A difference of 25K points is not insignificant. Under the same bonus, it was possible to transfer 39K Membership Rewards points to land Delta business class to Europe — a savings of 11K points. One or two transfer bonuses maximized could mean getting a lot more mileage out of your points.

3) More credit card options

a wallet with credit cards and a dog

Chase currently offers 7 cards that earn Ultimate Rewards points (note that there are also some cards that still exist but are no longer available to new applicants). Amex offers 11 Membership Rewards-earning cards that currently offer public welcome bonuses (and 13 cards overall that earn Membership Rewards points). If you were able to get all 7 Chase cards with their associated public welcome bonuses, you would have 315K Ultimate Rewards points (though note this would be challenging as current language would prevent you from earning both Sapphire bonuses within 48 months). If you were to pick up the public welcome bonuses on all of the currently-available Amex Membership Rewards cards, you’d have 410K (targeted offers may bump that up significantly, though note that several flavors of Platinum are included — these points do not come without cost).

The key difference, of course, is that while Chase generally limits you to earning the welcome bonus once every 24 months, Amex limits you to once-per-lifetime unless you receive a targeted offer absent the lifetime language. Here is a list of the currently-offered cards that earn Membership Rewards points (click each card name to learn more about it and see its current offer):

Card Info Name and Link Only (no offer)

4) Better airline sweet spots

a seat and a monitor in an airplane
ANA Business Class, bookable round trip to Japan from 75K.

Compared to Chase, Amex offers unique partners with better award chart sweet spots. Here are a few Membership Rewards partner sweet spot highlights:

Air Canada Aeroplan:
-55K each way business class to Europe 1
-70K each way first class to Europe 1
-No fuel surcharge options to Europe: Aegean, Avianca, Brussels, Croatia, SAS, Swiss, Singapore, Turkish, United (or low surcharges on LOT)
-Cheap lap infant pricing: $50 or 5K in economy, $75 or 7.5K in business, $125 or 12.5K in first

Etihad Guest:
-“Old” AA award chart (i.e. 50K each way business / 62.5K first to Europe or Asia 1, 25K economy to Japan in off-peak season, etc)
-44K each way business class on Royal Air Maroc
-59K business class on Asia between the west coast and Seoul
-25K business class Prague to Seoul

ANA Mileage Club:
-From 75K round trip in business class on ANA between North American and Japan (90K round trip in high season)
-From 105K round trip business class on ANA to Australia
-88K round trip on partners to Europe
-104K round trip on partners to South Africa
-120K round trip on partners to Australia
-Awesome around-the-world chart

Add to those the strength of a transfer bonus to exploit the sweet spots in Virgin Atlantic Flying Club, Cathay Pacific Asia Miles, Flying Blue, or Avios and there is a ton of potential for really outsized value.

5) Round-the-world awards with ANA

ANA is a program that has really caught my attention this year for a lot of reasons, not the least of which is its around-the-world pricing on Star Alliance. These are subject to a number of rules (up to 8 stopovers, up to 12 total segments, no backtracking to name a few), but they can provide tremendous value. Here’s a look at the chart.

a table with numbers and a number of miles

It is possible to build some pretty amazing values from that chart, particularly in business class. For example, for 115,000 total miles, fly in business class from New York to Tokyo to Seoul to Bangkok to Frankfurt to New York:

a map of the worldOr for 145K, fly from New York to Johannesburg to Istanbul to Delhi to Beijing to New York.

a map of the world

Those examples don’t come close to the maximum number of stopovers or segments – play with routings at GCMap.com to get a feel for distances and you can see some amazing potential compared to buying separate awards. While I love having a variety of points to piece together my trips, it’s just not possible to use any other transferrable currency to get that much mileage out of your points.

Bottom line

Membership Rewards is obviously a well-known program, but I think its strengths are often overlooked. Chase has strengths of its own — Membership Rewards doesn’t have a hotel program to match the value of Hyatt to name one. But if you are looking to fly internationally, especially in premium cabins, Membership Rewards has some strengths that you shouldn’t overlook.

Want to learn more about miles and points? Subscribe to email updates or check out our podcast on your favorite podcast platform.
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

43 Comments
newest
oldest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
eponymous coward

This post needs an update because Aeroplan is a Chase partner…

[…] this quarter’s 5x on the Freedom card. While I personally take the much-contested stance that Membership Rewards are more valuable than Ultimate Rewards, even I would have a hard time choosing the Amex Gold card over the CSR right now. Of course, the […]

[…] ThankYou points sweet spots. Somehow, despite having previously published my arguments about the Strengths of Membership Rewards over Ultimate Rewards (and much to Stephen’s chagrin thanks to our current challenge), I realized that we […]

[…] of the ANA around-the-world chart (despite the fact that I’ve said it is one of the great strengths of Membership Rewards). If only I had known about it when I started in this game (how many times have you said that […]

[…] can also read about some of the Strengths Membership Rewards has over Ultimate Rewards. That’s not to say that Ultimate Rewards doesn’t have its strengths also — but […]

James Eugenio

Travel portal. The few times I’ve checked, it takes way more points for the same itinerary. 35k vs 15k on one trip for airline tickets

[…] recently wrote a post about some of the Strengths Membership Rewards has over Ultimate Rewards. Of course, Ultimate Rewards is also a terrific currency to collect and one that has many strengths […]

Ripley62

The question become more difficult the more you work the AmEx program. I don’t believe Chase does retention offers, this year I’ve gotten for just my Plat 30k MR as a retention offer. I don’t think I’ll try it yearly but it’s not a bad bonus. There’s been quite a few targeted spending offers recently also that effectively make all categories 2x. Then there’s the AnEx offers, yes Chase has some, but this year there’s been a long list of good travel ones I got a 15k MR for $750 on AF, in addition to the 5x, KLM had a similar one. Marriott, SPG, RC, Hilton, Intercontinental, all of those have been widely targeted with eithe $60 or $100 statement credit (20% return) or better 6k to 10k MR. For me between using both the KLM and AF offers and a retention I’ve gotten 60k MR

[…] MR vs UR, Who Wins?:  Keep in mind that everyone values points differently, which is totally ok!  I thought this was a very, very good breakdown comparing two of the most popular flexible point programs around.  Do you share Nick’s sentiment on MR? […]

[…] significant portion of annual spend from many readers. Considering my post the other day about the Strengths Membership Rewards has over Ultimate Rewards, this new set of benefits looks very attractive […]

[…] other day, I wrote a post about the Strengths Membership Rewards has over Ultimate Rewards. In that post, I mentioned that Chase only really has two unique airline partnerships: United and […]

Andy Shuman

I feel the same way. If you look at the big picture, MR points are more valuable now than UR points all things considered.

steven

Etihad 59K business class on Asia between the west coast and Seoul, what is this?
Thanks!

Clare N

Would love to see either program include Amtrak in their mix.

masselite

You can redeem Amtrak gift cards for MR points at 1:1 ratio.

[…] you but I get all the crap, me the so hypocritical one lol. Anyway, this one does have good info! Strengths Membership Rewards has over Ultimate Rewards. Has anyone booked an ANA round-the-world award? I am thinking to treat my son to such a trip as a […]