Air Canada recently released the details of its newly revamped Aeroplan loyalty programme, which is due to ‘go live’ on 8th November 2020.
There are a variety of innovations and you can read the full details here, but I suspect that what many readers are interested in is the new rewards chart.
New Air Canada Aeroplan Rewards Charts
Before we get to the (slightly confusing) charts though, there are a few key things to be aware of.
The first thing to note is that there will be no surcharges on reward bookings:
“On any Air Canada flight you purchase with points, we have eliminated additional airline surcharges. That could save you hundreds of dollars in cash at checkout. In fact, only taxes and third-party fees (such as airport fees) are listed in cash, and you can use your points to cover those, too.
If you’re booking a flight reward on another airline, there is a flat Partner Booking Fee of just $39 (per ticket) – which you can also cover with points.”
The second is that stopovers will be permitted on one-way bookings for a 5,000 miles surcharge. Up to 6 segments are permitted per one-way and there is no maximum mileage, although significant backtracking will not be allowed.
The third thing is that families of up to 8 people will be able to pool their miles together.
Finally, ‘Points + Cash’ bookings will be possible. According to the ever-excellent Gary Leff over at ViewFromTheWing, the details on that are as follows:
“All awards can be priced as‘points plus cash’ letting you buy up to 40% of the points required for an award. There will be four options every time you redeem, including spending extra points to cover taxes and fees. And the cash cost will be reasonable at 1.5 to 2 cents a point Canadian (about 0.86p – 1.15p per mile)
Aeroplan Travel Zones
For miles redemptions, Aeroplan has divided the world into 4 Zones:
- North America
- Atlantic
- Pacific
- South America
The number of miles required for travel within and between these zones depends on how far you are flying. You can find all the charts here. Numbers shown are for one-way redemptions:
Any new Air Canada Aeroplan rewards chart redemption sweet spots?
On the face of it, you might think the new charts aren’t particularly interesting. That would be a mistake though…
Admittedly, miles pricing isn’t exceptional (in fact in many cases it has gone up significantly), but the removal of all surcharges is a big win.
The main point of interest though is the generous routing rules (which include the ability to transit third regions) and in particular the stopovers on one-way redemptions for just 5,000 extra miles.
Put COVID-19 concerns aside for a minute and imagine that you needed to travel from the USA to Europe in March 2021 and wanted to fly from Europe to Australia in April 2021. Rather than making two separate bookings, you could just make one, with a stopover in Europe for a few months, for just 5,000 extra miles.
To put some numbers on it, let’s use the following First Class itinerary as a theoretical example:
New York – Frankfurt (stopover for x period of time) – Sydney would be classified as a North America Zone to Pacific Zone redemption (despite the stopover in the Atlantic Zone) and clock in at 14,000+ miles of flying.
As you can see above, it would therefore require 140,000 Aeroplan Miles plus 5,000 more for the stopover – so 145,000 miles in total.
Mixing and matching Star Alliance and other partner airlines is fine, so (assuming reward space was available) you could fly to Frankfurt with Lufthansa and then with Singapore Airlines/Etihad/etc to Sydney.
For context, if you wanted to book just London to Sydney one way with British Airways in First Class, it would require 170,000-200,000 Avios + £100s in surcharges.
Bottom line
It remains to be seen exactly what can be booked (we’ll have to wait until the new programme is live), but it certainly seems that for advanced points/miles fans, Air Canada Aeroplan could well end up being the new Cathay Pacific Asia Miles…
BCTraveler says
Looking forward to using my Aeroplan points again when there is a treatment of effective vaccine.
frank says
But on your example Singapore doesnt make First class seats available to partners.