Your Mileage May Vary

My New Hawaii Award Pipe Dream

Hawaii. Tropical paradise but still a part of the United States. It’s also an enigma for those trying to get there using points and miles. While airlines often charge a premium to get to the islands, they’ll still fly domestic configured planes across the Pacific Ocean. It’s worth a ton of miles to pay for a recliner seat from the west coast to Honolulu?

Since we live in Florida, it’s a trek to get from our home to Hawaii. For our 10th anniversary trip, we flew from MCO-SEA-HNL and even though we were in Alaska First Class the whole way, that was one long day of flying.

So there was no one happier than me to see the announcement that Hawaiian Airlines was going to start flying non-stop from HNL-MCO with one of their new A330s in 2021. These are their aircraft that feature lie-flat seats in first class.

How important is a lie-flat seat from MCO-HNL?

Our flight I just booked from Tokyo to San Francisco clocks in at 9 hours 30 min.

Here’s the flight from MCO-HNL.

I’d try anything I could to fly in a comfortable seat across the Pacific to Japan so why should I want less to fly from home to Hawaii? Now that’s possible, how can I use miles to get on that Hawaiian flight?

Award tickets are available with Hawaiian Airlines miles.

a screenshot of a computer

130,000 for a one-way First Class ticket from MCO-HNL. That’s more miles than I paid for a First Class ticket from NRT-SFO on ANA where we’re going to get caviar and Krug. Sure I can transfer points from Membership Rewards to Hawaiian Airlines at 1:1 but is that the best way to book a Hawaiian Airlines flight?

Besides using Hawaiian Miles, other airlines partner with Hawaiian Airlines. JAL, Virgin Australia, Virgin Atlantic and China Airlines all allow you to use their miles to book Hawaiian flights. Those aren’t much help to me but there’s one more airline that partners with Hawaiian that is of interest. JetBlue.

Now the JetBlue TrueBlue program goes under the radar for most people because it’s a fixed value program. That means rewards are linked to the cash price of a ticket for JetBlue redemptions. Sure, you can get some outsized value if you book a Mint class ticket, but that’s the best you can hope for.

That is, unless you are looking to book partner airlines where they publish award charts, like the one for Hawaiian Airlines.

Um, does that say that Hawaii to the East Coast in business class for 70,000 points??????????

JetBlue TrueBlue just offered me 60,000 bonus points for spending $3,000 on the JetBlue Plus card I already have. Not to mention the 100,000 points they recently offered to new applicants

Unfortunately, to book an award flight on Hawaiian Airlines with JetBlue miles, you have to call JetBlue. I can’t confirm that any of these flights are available since the dates I’m looking at in 2022 aren’t available yet.

But with JetBlue TrueBlue being a transfer partner with American Express, Capital One, Citi and Chase, it’s not hard to accumulate points that you can use with JetBlue.

If I’m able to book our non-stop flights from MCO to HNL in Hawaiian Airlines First Class seats for 70,000 JetBlue points each way, it might be my best award booking ever.

However, that’s one big BUT until I see if it’s possible. However, it doesn’t hurt to dream.

Want to comment on this post? Great! Read this first to help ensure it gets approved.

#stayhealthy #staysafe #washyourhands #wearamask

Like this post? Please share it! We have plenty more just like it and would love it if you decided to hang around and get emailed notifications of when we post. Or maybe you’d like to join our Facebook group – we have 16,000+ members and we talk and ask questions about travel (including Disney parks), creative ways to earn frequent flyer miles and hotel points, how to save money on or for your trips, get access to travel articles you may not see otherwise, etc. Whether you’ve read our posts before or this is the first time you’re stopping by, we’re really glad you’re here and hope you come back to visit again!

This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates from our team.

You have Successfully Subscribed!

Exit mobile version