Stop paying full price
for the trips you deserve
Business class flights. Luxury hotels. Dream destinations. This is not luck — it’s a learnable system. Here’s everything you need to know to start, from someone who has done it across 30+ countries.
What are miles &
points, exactly?
Miles and points are a form of travel currency issued by airlines, hotels, and banks. Every time you spend on the right credit card, you’re quietly earning currency that can be redeemed for flights, hotels, and upgrades — often at 3–10× the value of simple cash back.
Most people leave this completely on the table. They swipe a debit card, earn nothing, and pay full price for every trip. The people who understand this system? They’re sitting in business class sipping champagne — on 35,000 points and $38 in taxes.
This is not a loophole. It’s not complicated. It is a strategy — and this page will teach you the whole thing.
“I flew Swiss Business Class from Zurich to Miami — lie-flat seat, four-course meal, real champagne — booked with Capital One Miles transferred to Avianca LifeMiles. Total out of pocket: taxes.”
— Natalie · Read the full review →The only 3 things
you need to do
Earn the right points
Transfer — don’t redeem through the portal
Book the award
Repeat & refine
Six concepts that take you
90% of the way there
Transferable Points
Points from Chase, Amex, or Capital One that can move to 15+ airline and hotel programs. This flexibility is what makes them 3–5× more valuable than fixed airline miles. Always earn these first.
Sign-Up Bonuses
Spend $3,000–5,000 in the first 3 months on a new card and instantly earn 60,000–100,000 bonus points. One bonus alone can cover a round-trip business class flight to Europe.
Transfer Partners
Airlines and hotels where your bank points become miles. Booking through a partner like Avianca or Flying Blue instead of directly through the bank portal can cut the cost by 50–75%.
Cents Per Point (CPP)
Formula: (Cash Price − Taxes) ÷ Points Used. Aim for 2¢+ economy, 4¢+ business class. Anything under 1.5¢ — just pay cash and save your points for something better.
Airline Alliances
Airlines partner in groups: Star Alliance (United, Singapore, Lufthansa), SkyTeam (Delta, Air France, KLM), Oneworld (American, British Airways, Qatar). Use one program to book partner flights at far lower costs.
Annual Fee Offsets
Premium cards have $95–550 fees but come with TSA PreCheck credits, lounge access, hotel credits, and dining credits that exceed the fee. A $395 card with $700 in credits saves you $305/year.
See what’s actually
possible with points
These aren’t hypothetical examples. These are real trips, real seats, and real reviews of what you actually get when you redeem well.
Around the world
with Aeroplan points
Aeroplan’s stopover rules let you book a round-the-world itinerary for less than a single business class ticket. This guide walks through exactly how I did it — layovers, routing rules, and all.
Read the guide →See what your
points are worth
The 3 cards I recommend
for beginners
You don’t need 10 cards. You need the right 3. These unlock the most flexible points and cover every spending category.
Not sure which of these fits your life?
Answer 8 questions and get a personalized match in 2 minutes.
Capital One Venture X
- 2× on every purchase — no categories to track
- $300 annual Capital One Travel credit
- 10,000 bonus miles on every card anniversary (~$100 value)
- Priority Pass + Capital One Lounge access for primary cardholder
- 17 transfer partners incl. Avianca, Turkish Miles&Smiles, Air Canada
- No foreign transaction fees
Chase Sapphire Preferred
- 3× on dining, gas & EV charging, vacation rentals, and streaming
- 5× on Chase Travel bookings; 2× on all other travel
- $100 annual hotel credit via Chase Travel
- $120 TSA PreCheck / Global Entry credit every 4 years
- Transfers to World of Hyatt, United, Air France & 10+ partners
- Primary rental car insurance + trip delay & cancellation coverage
Amex Gold Card
- 4× at restaurants worldwide (up to $50k/yr)
- 4× at U.S. supermarkets (up to $25k/yr)
- 5× on prepaid hotels via AmexTravel.com
- $120 dining credit + $120 Uber Cash + $84 Dunkin’ credit annually
- 20+ transfer partners incl. Flying Blue, Virgin Atlantic, Turkish
- No foreign transaction fees
⚠ This system only works if you pay your balance in full every month. Interest charges eliminate every penny of value. If you tend to carry a balance, build that habit first before opening any travel card.
Your 90-day
action plan
Choose your first card
Start with Capital One Venture X or Chase Sapphire Preferred if your credit score is above 700. Not sure which fits your spending habits and travel goals? Take the 2-minute card quiz — 8 questions, instant personalized recommendation. Also sign up for free loyalty accounts with 2–3 airlines that fly from your home airport.
Hit your welcome spend
Most cards give you 3 months to meet the minimum spend requirement — typically $3,000–5,000. Put all your normal spending on the card: groceries, gas, utilities, subscriptions, dining. Don’t spend more than usual, just redirect what you’d spend anyway. The welcome bonus points usually post with your next statement after hitting the threshold — so don’t panic if they don’t appear immediately.
Start researching your award
While your spending is still in progress, start exploring award availability so you know what you’re working toward. Search directly on airline websites using the “redeem miles” option. Use tools like PointsYeah or Roame to compare costs across partners — the same flight can cost wildly different amounts depending on which program you book through.
Wait for your bonus points to post
Once you’ve hit the minimum spend, your welcome bonus will post with your next billing statement — usually within 6–8 weeks of account opening, or shortly after the spend requirement is met. Check your account or the card’s app. Once they appear, you’re ready to transfer.
Transfer and book
Once your points have posted, transfer them to the airline’s loyalty program (transfers are instant with most banks). Book directly on the airline’s website using your miles. Pay only taxes — usually $10–60. Don’t transfer until you have a specific award in mind — points can’t be moved back once transferred.
You just booked a free flight
You’re now in the top 5% of cardholders who actually use their points well. Keep earning, watch for transfer bonuses, and use the triple dip strategy when opening your next card.
“The best part nobody tells you about? Once you’re in business class, you’re also in the lounge. Pre-flight champagne, real food, a shower if you want one — all on the same points.”
— Natalie · See all lounge reviews →“Natalie walked me through everything in one call. I booked business class to Paris for my family of four — I never thought it was actually possible until she showed me how.”
“I had no idea my existing points could get me to Japan in business class. Natalie found us a redemption we never would have discovered on our own. Game-changing.”
“The guide alone was worth more than every travel hack article I’ve ever read. Clear, specific, actually actionable — and she answered all my questions in 20 minutes.”
Everything you’re
wondering about
This guide gives you the map.
I’ll give you the route.
Most people read beginner guides and still end up confused about which card to get first, which points to earn for their routes, and how to actually find and book award seats. That’s exactly what a strategy call solves.
Let me build your
points strategy
I’ll audit your current cards, identify which points to earn based on where you want to go, and hand you a complete plan — down to the specific award to book and how to transfer your points to get there.
“I’ve sat in lie-flat seats above the Atlantic, had champagne at 35,000 feet, and checked into luxury hotels from Hawaii to Zurich — and I’ve shown hundreds of people how to do exactly the same. Let me show you.”
— Natalie Becerra, Where’s Natalie Now