Point Systems American Airlines Miles

Airline
Points are relatively easy to collect, though we don't love the bank partners or transfer options as much.
American Airlines Miles

American Airlines Miles

#1 Among Airlines

Point Value

1.40 ¢

Hobby Score

7.3

View Ratings

Sweet Spots

Domestic US flights
Domestic US flights
Domestic US flights
See More Sweet Spots

Top Transfers

1:1
88% Value Retained
3:1
67% Value Retained
See More Transfers

Booking Tips For This Reward Program

Book early or late
Avoid British Airlines
Use the miles finder map
Avoid These Pitfalls

Key Takeaways

American Airlines is a great utility point system.

  • Points are relatively easy to collect, though we don’t love the bank partners or transfer options as much.
  • We love direct flights, and American can be a good option for finding those with points.
  • Rewards flights start at 7500 miles each way.
  • You can use AA miles to travel with eligible Oneworld partner airlines worldwide.

Reward Program Ratings

1.40¢
Point Value
Yes
Points Expire
Yes
to Spouse
Yes
to Friends

Hobby Score

7.3
Brand Footprint 8
Real World Practicality 8
Earn/Redeem Efficiency 8
Policy Fairness 6
Ease of Holding 6
Product Quality 8

Travel Partner Transfers

Transfers In

88% Value Retained
1:1
67% Value Retained
3:1
47% Value Retained
5:1
33% Value Retained
5:2

Transfers Out

No direct transfers out of American Airlines Miles. American Airlines Miles generally cannot be moved to other point programs.

Points Transfer Guide

5,500 American Airlines Miles Points

Transferable Points

Transfer to
Spouse
5,219,403
19,000
74% Value Retained
No
125,000
45,000
85% Value Retained
Yes
34,950
2,000
12% Value Retained
Yes

Associated Alliances

American Airlines Miles associated alliance is oneworld Alliance

Visit oneworld Alliance

Airlines within oneworld Alliance Alliance

How to Earn Miles

You can earn American Airlines AAdvantage miles in several ways. The most common and rewarding is by flying with American Airlines or one of its partners. You can also quickly build your balance through AAdvantage credit cards or by transferring Citi ThankYou Points to American Airlines.

Earn by Flying American Airlines

You’ll earn 5 miles per dollar spent on flights marketed by American Airlines or select partners. Taxes and fees don’t count toward mileage earnings. Basic Economy fares earn fewer miles—2 per dollar—so keep that in mind if you want to maximize rewards.

AAdvantage elite members earn bonus miles based on their tier level:

  • Gold: 7 miles per dollar (40% bonus)
  • Platinum: 8 miles per dollar (60% bonus)
  • Platinum Pro: 9 miles per dollar (80% bonus)
  • Executive Platinum: 11 miles per dollar (120% bonus)

Tickets that don’t earn miles include:

  • Award tickets issued with AAdvantage miles
  • Charter flight tickets
  • Companion or infant tickets
  • Tickets for items occupying a paid seat (such as instruments or pets)
  • Free or discounted promotional fares
  • Tickets bought through travel sites where the airline isn’t revealed until after purchase (e.g., Priceline, Hotwire)
  • Tickets issued under special provisions or reduced-rate industry fares

Flying with Partners (Alliance and Non-Alliance Partners)

When you book flights on partner airlines through American Airlines, you can still earn AAdvantage miles. Earning rates vary by partner, so check the partner page before booking to confirm how many miles you’ll earn for your fare type and cabin class.

Earn by Opening Co-Branded Credit Cards

The other top way to earn American Airlines miles is through a co-branded credit card. American Airlines partners with both Citi and Barclays to issue AAdvantage miles-earning cards. Each offers varying sign-up bonuses, which provide most of the miles you’ll earn when opening a new card.

Earn by Opening Certain Citi Cards

American Airlines is a transfer partner of Citi, so opening certain Citi cards lets you transfer points to American to top off your balance or book flights.

Eligible cards include:

  • Citi Strata Elite
  • Citi Strata Premier
  • Citi Prestige (no longer open to new applicants)

If you have any other Citi card, you can’t transfer points to AAdvantage. Citi is the only major credit card issuer that partners with American.

Our Favorite Cards

Other Cards for this Point System

Annual Bonuses & Big Spend Bonuses

  • American Airlines Platinum Select World Elite Mastercard
    • Spend requirement: Earn a $125 American Airlines flight discount after spending $20,000 in a calendar year.
    • Our take: Not worth pursuing; similar spend is typically better used on a new card sign-up bonus.
  • Citi AAdvantage Business Mastercard
    • Spend requirement: Earn an American Airlines companion certificate for domestic Main Cabin after spending $30,000 in a calendar year. Redemption requires a $99 ticketing fee plus taxes and fees.
    • Our take: Also not recommended; the reward generally does not justify the required spend.

Other Options to Earn

These are generally lower-value ways to earn miles, but here are the options so you can decide what fits your situation.

  • Earn AAdvantage miles by booking hotel stays through AAdvantage Hotels.
    • Note: You will not earn hotel loyalty points or elite night credits with the hotel if you book this way.
  • Shop through the AAdvantage eShopping portal to earn miles on online purchases.
  • Use SimplyMiles to earn AAdvantage miles when shopping online or in person with select merchants.
  • Join AAdvantage Dining to earn miles when dining at participating restaurants.

Breaking Points

How to Redeem Miles

Redeem for airfare

The best way to redeem your American Airlines AAdvantage miles is to book award flights. On the American Airlines home page, check the Redeem miles box when searching.

  • Search results display by week, and you can toggle to the monthly calendar to compare award prices.
  • You can filter by airline, including American and eligible partners.

Hotel Stays and Car Rentals

  • AAdvantage Hotels: You can redeem miles for hotel stays, but the value varies based on your elite status and whether you hold a co-branded American credit card. Even with top status, flight redemptions usually provide significantly better value.
  • AAdvantage Cars: You can also redeem miles for car rentals, but values are generally poor—around 1 cent per mile at best, often less. Using miles for flights is almost always the better choice.

Sweet Spots Finder

Look at the chart below to find the best sweet spots for this airline. Use the filters to find the optimal Sweet Spot for your trip and points.

Award System

American Airlines Miles

Max. Point Value 1.40 ¢

Do Points Expire? Yes

Point Transfer Options

Transfer To Spouse/Partner Yes - $$

Transfer To Friends Yes - $$

You load your points. We’ll show you valuation and transfer options.

Add My Points

Travel Partner Transfers

Outside Point System American Airlines Miles

Transfers In From
Point Transfer Options
World of Hyatt

5:2 33% value retained

Point Transfer Options
Citi ThankYou Rewards

1:1 88% value retained

Point Transfer Options
IHG One Rewards

5:1 47% value retained

Point Transfer Options
Marriott Bonvoy

3:1 67% value retained

The Highlights

American Airlines is a great utility point system.

  • Points are relatively easy to collect, though we don’t love the bank partners or transfer options as much.
  • We love direct flights, and American can be a good option for finding those with points.
  • Rewards flights start at 7500 miles each way.
  • You can use AA miles to travel with eligible Oneworld partner airlines worldwide.

What to Know About This Point System

American Airlines has had its ups and downs over the past few years. And while it’s not a top pick for everyone, AA miles can be exceptionally valuable and surprisingly easy to collect piles of them in a relatively short period of time. Your bonuses come through different cards and even different banks. The main contributor at this time is Citi, who has increased sign-up bonuses. Barclay also offers a line up of AAdvantage Aviator cards. And there are the American Express Rewards that are transferable to AA.

Booking can be tricky and probably one of the main reasons why people shy away. Finding non-stop flights is almost impossible; sometimes the greatest deals involve an unpleasant red-eye; and when using your points to book with one of their partners, you normally have to actually pick up the phone and talk with someone directly through the airline. (Who wants to do that anymore?)

American Airline partners up with OneWorld, opening up amazing seats even for business and first-class options without the restrictions attached to Star Alliance or the pricing inconsistency of SkyMiles. By not relying on the American Airlines website to find the best route for redemption, you can get you some pretty sweet seats on stellar partners.

Here's a trick: Cathay Pacific has a better OneWorld search. If you find a desirable One World flight there, there's a decent chance you can call American Airlines for the same flight even though it doesn't show on their site.

Or, if you decide to redeem right through the American website, there are standard “MileSAAver” seats, “MilesSAAver Off Peak” options, “Reduced Mileage Awards” and their new “Economy Web Specials Program,” where you can get flights all over the world for just 5,000 points one way.

While it may not be for everyone, it's worth having at least some AA points for when the stars align with one of their discount programs and your travel schedule.

WHAT IS AN AMERICAN AIRLINE WEB SPECIAL?

American Airlines started Web Specials in 2018. And for those of us traveling with points and miles, this was exciting -- especially when they started to include international routes and first and business class. The specials are based on demand rather than on a specific award chart. As an example, one staff member went from NY to Los Angeles for 5,000 AA Miles one way last winter. And another was able to book New York to New Zealand for the same amount of miles. So what’s the catch? If you need to cancel your trip, the cost of getting your points back could be more than the points are worth. You can cancel your trip and reinstate your miles for $150, the first award ticket and $25 for each additional ticket. Unless of course you’re an Executive Platinum member, in which case, reinstatement comes with no penalties.

Bottom Line:

Web Specials are fantastic in our opinion, especially if you’re flexible and a bit of a risk taker. We’re not Executive Platinum members, and some of us had to kiss 5,000 miles and $6 away when our plans changed this spring and our hiking trip got canceled. But if you’re holding up 5,000 AA Miles against a flight across the country, it’s really not a huge sacrifice. The fact that you can hop onboard an AA or OneWorld Alliance plane and travel for under 20,000 points is a steal. And we’re willing to take the risk of losing a few thousand miles if need be.

Associated Alliance

oneworld AllianceAirlines within oneworld Alliance

How to Redeem

Redeem for airfare

The best way to redeem your American Airlines AAdvantage miles is to book award flights. On the American Airlines home page, check the Redeem miles box when searching.

  • Search results display by week, and you can toggle to the monthly calendar to compare award prices.
  • You can filter by airline, including American and eligible partners.

Hotel Stays and Car Rentals

  • AAdvantage Hotels: You can redeem miles for hotel stays, but the value varies based on your elite status and whether you hold a co-branded American credit card. Even with top status, flight redemptions usually provide significantly better value.
  • AAdvantage Cars: You can also redeem miles for car rentals, but values are generally poor—around 1 cent per mile at best, often less. Using miles for flights is almost always the better choice.

Visit American Airlines Miles

Status Levels Explained

American Airlines has four tiers of elite status. You must earn Loyalty Points during a 12-month qualification period (March–February) to reach each elite status level for the following year.

You can earn Loyalty Points in a variety of ways, but the most common are:

  • Flying on American Airlines or its partner airlines (earning rates differ between the two)
  • Opening and spending on co-branded American Airlines credit cards

Each eligible mile you earn also earns one Loyalty Point.

Exceptions include:

  • Bonus miles or accelerators on purchases using an AAdvantage credit card
  • Welcome bonuses for new credit card accounts
  • Bonus miles earned from special promotions
  • Government taxes, fees, and other charges on tickets
  • Conversion of another reward currency to AAdvantage miles (such as transferring Marriott Bonvoy points)

What to Know Before Canceling

Since any points earned are tied to your American Airlines account and not to a specific credit card, canceling a card won’t impact your miles. As long as you have some type of activity on your account, such as redeeming or earning miles through spending or flying, your points will remain active.

If there is no activity on your account for 24 months, your miles will expire.