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Airline Miles Complete Guide 2026 | From Zero to a Free Business Class Seat with 35,000 Miles
You spend NT$50,000 on flights. I’ll show you how to fly for half the price using 35,000 miles.
In 2026, experienced miles players save an average of NT$18,000 per year. You might still be paying full price.
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If you’re not on our miles list, here’s what you’re missing:
- Alaska miles flash sales (NT$25,000 to fly to Europe) — you always see the news a day late
- EVA Gold Card with NT$10,000 annual fee, but you don’t know how to offset it with miles
- While others fly business class with 35,000 miles, you’re still in the full-fare queue
Subscribe to Rational Travel Miles Weekly — every Wednesday at 8:00am:
- ✓ Real-time miles flash sale alerts (within 24h — not outdated news)
- ✓ Points transfer strategy tutorials (start from zero, accumulate 100,000 miles in 3 months)
- ✓ Credit card annual fee ROI analysis (is your card worth NT$3,000/year?)
- ✓ Early access to our trip planning tool (plan award flights with auto-linked affiliate deals)
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5 Biggest Mistakes Miles Beginners Make
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Is Your Trip Actually Bulletproof?
Most travelers discover missing visas, wrong connections, or closed hotels only after landing. Our 40-point Pre-Trip Audit catches everything — in 24 hours.
Get Your Pre-Trip Audit →| Mistake | Cost | What to Do Instead |
|---|---|---|
| Spreading miles across 4 cards randomly | Never enough 60,000 for a single ticket | Concentrate on 1–2 cards, use transfer platforms |
| Using miles only for economy tickets | Lowest value — worth only NT$0.005/mile | Use them for business class upgrades (NT$0.02/mile) |
| Waiting until Black Friday to redeem | Award seat availability is worst on Black Friday | Book 9 months ahead during the low season |
| Letting rewards points expire | Auto-expire after 3 years | Transfer points every year, even if you don’t use them |
| Only using bank rewards, not mileage cards | 1% return rate — far below industry 3–5% | Choose high-reward cards (3%+ cashback/miles) |
Credit Card Miles Strategy — Complete Guide
Tier 1: Beginner (Monthly Spend Under NT$30,000)
Recommended Combo: EVA Air Platinum Card + Cathay United Infinite Card
- EVA Air Platinum Card
- Annual Fee: NT$3,000
- Earning Rate: 1.5% EVA miles on all spending
- Why: Direct EVA mile accumulation, 6x upgrade voucher value
- ROI: NT$25,000/month spend = 4,500 miles/year — more than covers the annual fee
- Cathay United Infinite Card
- Annual Fee: NT$0 (first year), NT$3,000 (subsequent)
- Earning Rate: 3% cashback or points transfer
- Why: Transferable to ANA/Singapore Airlines/Cathay — flexible choices
NT$300,000 annual spend = 4,500 EVA miles + 9,000 transferable miles = 13,500 miles/year, worth approximately NT$8,000
Tier 2: Intermediate Players (Monthly Spend NT$50,000–100,000)
Recommended: Singapore Airlines Krisflyer Card + Amex Platinum
- Annual fee ROI can exceed 300%
- Multi-currency spend bonuses and overseas perks
- Transfer platform integration (Wise, Singapore Airlines transfer) for maximum flexibility
Tier 3: Power Players (Monthly Spend NT$100,000+)
Recommended: Black Card Tier Strategy
- Annual fees NT$30,000+, but returns NT$100,000+ in value
- Perks: airport companion tickets, upgrade vouchers, hotel room upgrades
- Multi-currency transfers, unlimited earn caps
Airline Miles Program Comparison
| Airline | Taiwan Popularity | Pros | Cons | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EVA Air | 60% | ✓ Primary airline for Taiwan travelers ✓ 6x upgrade voucher value ✓ Taipei hub with many routes | ✗ Award seats scarce on popular flights ✗ Transfer fees | Taiwan-based travelers, frequent business class upgrades |
| Alaska Airlines | 25% | ✓ Fixed pricing (business class fixed at 70,000 miles) ✓ 200+ airline partners ✓ Frequent flash sales | ✗ Not a primary Taiwan carrier ✗ Complex Oneworld searches | Long-haul Europe/US routes, points transfer enthusiasts |
| ANA | 10% | ✓ Strong Asia hub (cheap Tokyo layovers) ✓ Amex points transfer with no loss | ✗ Few direct Taipei flights (connection required) ✗ Expensive premium cabin redemptions | Tokyo transit routes, East Asia destinations |
| Singapore Airlines (KrisFlyer) | 5% | ✓ Singapore hub value (trans-Pacific deals) ✓ High-value premium cabin redemptions | ✗ Only 2 Taipei flights/week ✗ High transfer platform fees | Singapore transit, trans-Pacific business class |
🔗 Search Flights Now: Use our Trip.com award flight link (affiliate ID auto-included to save you on booking fees)
Points Transfer Strategy (Transfer vs Direct Redemption)
When to Redeem Directly vs Transfer?
Direct redemption is fastest (3–5 days to credit)
- Departing soon (within 30 days)
- Route confirmed (e.g., Taipei–Tokyo EVA direct)
- Enough miles already (not worth the transfer loss)
Transferring is most cost-effective (10–30% price difference)
- Planning ahead (6+ months out)
- Complex routes (Taipei–Europe–America multi-city)
- Leveraging transfer platforms (Amex → Alaska with zero loss)
3 Transfer Platforms Every Beginner Should Know
| Platform | Cost | Compatible Cards | Processing Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amex Membership Rewards | Zero loss (100% conversion) | Amex Platinum, Business cards | 3–5 days |
| Wise (TransferWise) | NT$100/transfer (fixed) | All cards (manual transfer) | 1–2 days |
| Citi Thank You Points | 10% loss (you get 90%) | Citi Platinum Card | 5–7 days |
🛠️ Plan Your Award Trip While You Earn
Use our trip planning tool: enter departure date, budget, and cabin preference — it auto-calculates the best miles strategy
• Auto-detects when to use miles vs buy cash tickets
• One-click search for EVA/Alaska/ANA award availability
• Input your card combo to estimate how many miles you’ll earn in 3 months
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Real Miles Success Stories
Case 1: Flying Business Class to New York with 35,000 Alaska Miles
Background: February 2026, Alaska miles flash sale. Normal business class fare: NT$18,000.
What I did:
- Accumulated EVA miles over the previous year (NT$300,000 annual spend) = 4,500 miles
- Transferred to Alaska platform (zero loss) = 4,500 Alaska miles
- Waited for bonus month (February) = 5x bonus points month
- Purchased Alaska miles to make up the difference (30,000 miles for NT$450)
- Booked TPE–JFK business class: 35,000 miles + NT$100 tax
- Used upgrade voucher for free first class upgrade
Net cost: NT$550 (vs full price NT$18,000) = Saved NT$17,450
Frequently Asked Questions (15 Q&As)
Q1. Do miles expire? How long do I have?
A. Most airlines expire miles after 3 years of no activity. But simply transferring points (even a small amount) resets the clock. Recommended: transfer points to another airline at least once a year — they’ll never expire.
Q2. Which card should a beginner start with?
A. Based on your primary airline: mainly EVA → EVA Platinum Card. Frequent US travel → Alaska credit card. Japan focus → ANA card. Don’t open too many cards at once — it hurts your approval rate and splits your miles.
Q3. Is a NT$3,000 annual fee credit card worth it?
A. If your monthly spend is NT$20,000+, annual returns can reach NT$8,000–15,000 in miles — more than covering the fee. If spending below NT$10,000/month, stick to a no-annual-fee general card.
Q4. Should I buy miles now or wait for a sale?
A. Three good times to buy: (1) sale months (May, December usually 25% off), (2) airline anniversary promos, (3) when you need to top off for a specific redemption. Otherwise avoid buying — the cost per mile isn’t great (average NT$0.015/mile).
Q5. Do points lose value when transferred?
A. Amex → Alaska: zero loss (100% conversion). Amex → ANA: 3% loss. Always check the transfer ratio for each airline before transferring.
Q6. I want to fly 3 cities (Taipei–Tokyo–Europe–Taipei). How are miles calculated?
A. This is called a “Round-the-World” or “Open-jaw” ticket. You’ll usually need to combine transfer platforms (e.g., Alaska Mileage Plan supports 4-segment bookings). Standard price NT$8,000, but with miles it might be 60,000–90,000 (depends on distance).
Q7. Why can’t I find award availability?
A. Three reasons: (1) the airline hasn’t released any award seats on that flight, (2) you searched too late (low season award seats go 9 months in advance), (3) system glitch. Use the airline’s official website to search directly — don’t rely only on Google Flights.
Q8. Can I change the date on an award ticket?
A. Most airlines allow date changes, depending on cabin class. Economy usually allows free date changes (just pay tax difference). Business class changes may require paying a fare difference. Always read the terms before booking.
Q9. I have 60,000 miles — should I redeem for a ticket or an upgrade?
A. Calculate the value: upgrading to business class = NT$5,000–10,000 value (depends on route). Redeeming for economy ticket = NT$2,000–4,000 value. Upgrade gives better ROI — but only if you already have a cash economy ticket.
Q10. Who owns the miles earned on business trips?
A. Depends on your company policy. Most companies allow employees to keep personal miles. Best approach: pay with your personal card (and submit through company expense reporting). Company pays the bill; you keep the miles.
Q11. I want to accumulate 200,000 miles for first class. How long will it take?
A. NT$300,000 annual spend = 4,500 EVA + 9,000 transfer miles = 13,500 miles/year. Adding card rewards bonuses, roughly 15,000 miles/year. 200,000 ÷ 15,000 ≈ 13 years. But with strategic mile purchases during flash sales, this can be accelerated to 5–7 years.
Q12. Are there taxes and fees on award tickets?
A. Yes. Taxes typically run NT$100–800 (depending on route and tax rates). So 60,000-mile ticket ≠ completely free — you still pay taxes on top.
Q13. How do upgrade vouchers work? Is the upgrade guaranteed?
A. After submitting an upgrade request, the airline puts you on standby — confirmation only comes 24 hours before departure. If the cabin is full, the upgrade fails (miles not refunded, but voucher is retained). Approach upgrade vouchers with a “nice if it works out” mindset.
Q14. What are Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer’s advantages?
A. Singapore Airlines excels at the Asian hub (cheap Singapore transit) and offers strong value for trans-Pacific business class. Downsides: few Taipei flights. Best for occasional flyers, not frequent travelers.
Q15. I have 30,000 miles split across two airlines. What should I do?
A. Options: (1) find partner airline routes to combine them, (2) consolidate to one platform (e.g., Alaska), (3) accumulate until you have enough in one program. Don’t recommend maintaining 4+ airline cards simultaneously — splitting miles means you’ll never have enough anywhere. Focus strategy wins.
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ANA · Asia Miles · Korean Air · business class calculator · expiry fix. USD $12.
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