Site icon Your Mileage May Vary

What Do Award Booking Services Offer & Who Should Use Them?

a room with two beds and a bed in the middle

You’ve been racking up points for years, but when you try to book your dream business-class flight, nothing works. Frustrated? You’re not alone.

When it comes to airline frequent flyer programs, earning points is the easy part. Redeeming those points for free travel (or mostly free travel) is the difficult part. Not only do you have to find award space, but you also have to use the right program to book your travel or risk paying more than you have to.

Experts in booking award tickets realized that many people were willing to pay for help in finding and securing these tickets. This insight led to the creation of the award booking service business model.

What do these booking services do? Who should think about using them? How do you pick which one to use?

I’ve used these services before and referred others to them, as well. I’ve also spent the time and effort to book several complicated award tickets myself. Here’s my take on the value-added to booking award tickets that these services provide…

What Do Award Booking Services Do?

The basic service is the same at most sites. After an initial review of what type of travel you want to take and an account of all your points, they’ll try to find the best itinerary possible while also getting the best value for your miles. How they go about this process and how much you’ll need to pay is what differentiates the services.

Our seats on Singapore Airlines A350-900 booked with KrisFlyer miles.

Should You Consider Using An Award Booking Service?

There are several types of people who can benefit from using an award booking service. These include:

Some people probably shouldn’t use an award booking service. They include:

What Can Award Booking Services Do That I Can’t?

Quite honestly, nothing.

Consider this analogy: Your kitchen sink is leaking, flooding the floor. You turn off the water, but what should you do next? You could head to Lowe’s or Home Depot to buy various plumbing tools, and then spend days researching online how to replace the sink and connect the plumbing. When you eventually turn on the water again, it might work, or it might not, requiring you to begin the process anew.

Or you could call a plumber who already has all the tools and knows how to use them. If some problem arises, they’ve already had experience dealing with it, and if anything goes wrong, they’re the ones who’ll have to re-do the work. Of course, you’ll have to pay them, but if you’ve hired a good one, their work will almost surely be better than what you could do on the first try.

If you get a good award booking service, they have several things that you don’t:

How Much Do Award Booking Services Charge?

Each service has its own pricing structure. Some require a deposit to start working on your trip, while others don’t. Almost everyone charges if they find a trip that meets your requirements, regardless of whether you book the trip.

The average price for a normal award booking is about $200 per person. However, there are additional charges if you want to change or cancel your ticket later. Some services offer free upgrade options, while others monitor your booking for a fee and constantly monitor it for better options.

My Experiences with Award Booking Services

On a side note, my very first use of an award booking service was back in 2005. I found a website that helped my wife, Sharon, and I book business class tickets to Japan on United using 90,000 US Airways miles we transferred from American Express (wow, that was a while ago) (Note from Sharon: Yes it was. And he kept all the notes on it. I won’t complain though…they’re all electronic, not on paper). The website I found was the same one that now hosts our travel blog on Boarding Area, so I guess I owe it to them for getting us started in this hobby.

Flying to Japan, April 2005 (Note from Sharon: OMG, I remember that air purifier thing! I think I got it from Brookstone. It was eventually deemed an electronic device and I wasn’t allowed to wear it anymore)

In 2010, I contacted a service I read about in a magazine in my doctor’s office waiting room. They helped me book a trip from Orlando to Ireland for an Adventures By Disney trip using my Delta Skymiles, flying on a combination of Air France and Delta.

After that, I was getting good at booking my own tickets. When I got stuck with finding award space, the booking websites replied that I did almost all of the work and pointed me in a direction I didn’t know about instead of charging me to book award tickets.

What Award Booking Services Are Available?

Let me start by saying I have no dog in this hunt and get no credit if you follow these links and use their services.

Most of the services I used are no longer in business. If I needed one today, I’d look for a service with a proven track record. But I’m a chicken. I like to stick with known quantities. Well-known services may charge more, but you know what you’re getting. Some newer websites may charge less because they need to incentivize people to use them over the big guys. If you’re comfortable with that, it’s your choice.

Some of the options I found are:

What’s New in the Award Booking Space?

The award booking services space significantly changed when the people behind the Juicy Miles and PointsPros websites formed a new company called Point.me.  It has a reasonably priced self-service option that lets you search award inventory with the major airlines and programs. I used this to find a cheap flight using Aeroplan points. They also have a concierge service based on the award booking service model.

While I haven’t used their concierge service, I feel comfortable recommending it as I used PointPros for my dad’s flight to Thailand, and Juicy Miles was a very popular service.

Final Thoughts

I probably used award booking services much longer than I had to. It took several service providers telling me I had the knowledge to book my own tickets before I gained the confidence to do it myself.

As I listed above, there are people for whom these websites provide a valuable service. When PointsPros found award flights for my dad and his wife, their travel agent was amazed and commented that none of her other clients had ever been able to find business class award tickets to fit their itineraries. My reply was, “That’s because none of those people knew the people that I know.” 🙂

Paying $200 to $500 to use points to book a business class ticket that would have otherwise cost thousands of dollars is worth the expense if you don’t have the tools, knowledge, experience or time to book the ticket for yourself.

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

Want to sponsor a post, write something for Your Mileage May Vary, or put ads on our site? Click here for more info.

Like this post? Please share it! We have plenty more just like it and would love it if you decided to hang around and sign up to get emailed notifications of when we post.

Whether you’ve read our articles 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