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The Selfish Years

~ Over 200 cities, 42 countries, 6 continents and counting.

The Selfish Years

Category Archives: Travel Hacking

Additional ways to Earn Miles and Points

01 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

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Selfish Year, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

This is the twelfth and final post on earning miles and points.  Check out my intro post on the topic, “How to Travel Hack your way Around the World.”

While credit card sign up bonuses and banking represent the easiest way to collect miles and points, there are any number of ways one can earn miles and points on a daily basis.

Below is a list of different ways to earn miles and points, along with links to additional information.

Shopping Portals

Earning miles from online purchases is one of the easiest things you can do to earn extra miles on a daily basis.

Buying flowers for Mother’s Day?  Earn 30x AAdvantage miles or United Miles per dollar spent, by shopping through American Airlines or United’s shopping site.

Next time you need to buy something online, I highly recommend using sites like evreward to determine how to get the most bang for your buck when shopping online.

Car Rentals & Hotel Stays

Renting a car, or staying at a hotel can often earn you airline miles or hotel points in addition to points you’d normally earn.  Be careful, however, as some car rental companies will charge you more money if you use a hotel or airline promotional code.

Frequentflyerbonuses has aggregated a ton of data on bonus offers for just about everything.

Dining Programs

Earn miles or points by registering for affiliated dining programs.  Register a credit card and earn bonus miles by eating at one of the many restaurants in the Dining Program.  There’s usually some sort of bonus when you initially sign-up, e.g. earn 1000 extra miles by spending $30 at one restaurant in the first 30 days.

This is an easy way to earn miles & points, but personally I wouldn’t go out of my way to eat at any of the participating restaurants unless it was a place I wanted to eat at any way.  It does stack well with other offers, however, like American Express’s Small Business Saturday.

The Points Guy has a great breakdown of the current dining programs.

Advanced Techniques

The following are additional ways to earn miles and points.  These are extremely *hardcore* techniques, and I would spend a decent amount of time researching how they work, if you’re at all interested in the black arts of travel hacking.  Be warned, they involve a lot more effort than the methods I’ve outlined above, and can involve a decent amount of risk.

Double Dipping

This technique involves clicking through a shopping portal once to buy gift cards, then going through a second time with those gift cards to buy what you really want.

Mrs. Selfish and I have tried this a few times with some success, but if you’re really interested in how this works, please do yourself a favor and check out the Frequent Miler, who is the authority on the subject.

Gift Card Churning

Not to be confused with double dipping, gift card churning is a very labor-intensive way to earn extra miles and points.  The basic principle involves buying gift cards through a cash-back portal with a miles or points earning credit card, then selling the card through a third party site.  You earn miles and points when purchasing the gift card, and hopefully sell the gift card at a small loss or, even better, a small gain.

Again, the Frequent Miler is probably the best authority on the subject.

Manufactured Spending

Simply put, this involves making purchases to earn miles or points while spending little to no actual money. Some techniques involve buying large value gift cards ($500+), depositing the money into a debit account like Bluebird, then use the gift card money to pay off the credit card bill. These techniques get shut down frequently, but seem to spring up just as frequently, thanks to ingenious travel hackers.

Other techniques involve using free-after-rebate purchases to help meet minimum spend, or to rack up spend in a bonus category.

This technique has become so useful in the last year that Flyertalk has opened a new forum to handle the topic.

Does anyone have any additional techniques?  If you have any tools or tips (especially ones that work while traveling), we’d love to hear them!

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The Costs of 8 Months of Selfish Traveling

19 Friday Apr 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

If you’re just joining us, Mrs. Selfish and I have been traveling the world for the last 8 months – largely on miles and points – or are we? While Mrs. Selfish touched on our favorite memories yesterday, today I thought I’d take a look and see what our trip has meant from a cost perspective.

Within our Selfish Year of travel (or 369 days) we’re visiting a total of 91 cities – 78 we’re staying in, while 13 are day trips.  Here’s what that looks like:

Of those 91 cities, so far we’ve visited a total of 66.  So we still have a lot of fast traveling ahead:

So far we’ve visited 21 of the 25 countries we set out to see.  I was a little surprised by that number myself, considering we’re only 66% of the way in.  Then I looked at the country breakdown:

It turns out our upcoming stays in Japan and Australia account for 21.6% of the amount of time we’re spending abroad – probably two of the more expensive countries on this trip – whoops!

We spent the least amount of time in Monaco (1 day), followed by Switzerland, and Austria.  Interestingly, we’ll have spent 3 nights in the air – 2 nights on our way to Singapore (a red-eye + the time change), and 1 night on our upcoming leg from Japan to Australia.

Continue reading →

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Earning Miles with Banking & Brokerage Services

15 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Bank Direct, Travel Hacking

This is the eleventh post on earning miles and points.  For a list of other posts, check out my post on how to travel hack your way around the world.

While credit cards represent the easiest way to collect miles and points, changing the way you bank can be a really easy way to passively accumulate boatloads of miles.

Banking & Brokerage Services

If you have money to invest or save and you live in the United States, you have a few options for earning miles.  Especially if you are interested in accumulating American Airlines miles:

BANK DIRECT

Earn up to 23,000 AAdvantage miles by opening a Bank Direct account:

  • 1,000 miles for opening a new account
  • 1,000 miles if you are referred by a friend (plus 1,000 for the friend)
  • 1,000 miles if you open the account with $100,000 or more
  • 10,000 miles for enrolling in direct deposit
  • 5,000 miles for using their debit card 12 times a month for 3 months
  • 5,000 miles for using bill pay for at least 3 payments a month for a year.

*UPDATE* Bank Direct has reduced the cap on the amount of miles you can earn based on the money you have deposited from $200,000 to $50,000. So you’ll only earn 100 miles per $1000 for the first $50,000, after which you’ll earn 25 miles for each additional $1000 in your account.

This reduces the maximum you can (easily) earn in a month from 20,000 to 5,000. You can also open a Money Market account, which earns 50 miles per $1000 in your account for the first $50,000, which will net you 2500 miles a month.

I can still do referrals if anyone is interested, but with the new changes BD isn’t quite as attractive as it used to be. 

Additionally, you’ll receive 100 miles every month for every $1,000 you have deposited in your account, up to the first $200,000. Mrs. Selfish and I bank with Bank Direct and thus far I can offer up two downsides:

1) $12 Monthly Fee – this occurs no matter how much money you have in your account, and cannot be waived.

2) Unfortunately Bank Direct has to have the clunkiest interfaces of any banking site I’ve ever seen.  If you can get around that their customer service is decent, though expect to speak to one of 6 representatives – seriously, their company is that small.

Analysis: If you’re a high roller with a lot of money in savings I would strongly consider opening a Bank Direct account. Being able to earn 240,000 miles for little to no effort definitely outweighs the $144 you’ll pay in annual fees in my opinion, and interest rates are at an all time low.  To put that in perspective, 240,000 miles is enough for 9 round trip tickets across the continental US, or for a first class ticket to anywhere in the world with points to spare.

If anyone is interested in a referral, leave a comment and we’ll hook you up – Mrs. Selfish and I could always use the extra 1,000 miles!

  Continue reading →

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How Suite it is… at the JW Marriott Hong Kong!

07 Sunday Apr 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Accommodations, Asia, China, Marriott, Travel Hacking

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

JW Marriott Hong Kong, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

For our stay in Hong Kong I booked a last minute 5-night award to the JW Marriott HK only a week before we arrived.  Under the old category definitions, the JW was a category 7 hotel, meaning it cost 35,000 Marriott reward points a night.  Thankfully, Marriott Rewards gives you the 5th night free on award bookings, so our stay cost 140,000 Marriott Reward points.

Since Mrs. Selfish and I both applied for the Chase Marriott Rewards card, we both had a free night and 70,000 Marriott Reward points to burn!  Marriott is also nice because multiple family members can apply points toward one award, allowing me to Mrs. Selfish’s points if I fell short.  This was especially useful, because for our time in China I was planning on getting platinum status.

Unlike other hotel chains, Marriott allows just about anyone to try their “Taste of Platinum” challenge. By completing 9 paid stays in 3 months, plus the month you request the challenge, you’ll earn Marriott’s platinum status for the next calendar year.  Although it’s an amazing shortcut, the biggest benefit is the “taste” itself – for the duration of those ~3 months you’ll actually get platinum status, which gets you free internet, breakfast, a welcome gift, your choice of amenities, and an upgrade to a better room. We pulled a similar trick in Spain with Mrs. Selfish, but the AC Hotels didn’t really recognize platinum status quite the way Marriott-branded hotels in Asia do.

In Asia, they do one better, since there’s a great chance you’ll be upgraded to a suite.

Continue reading →

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One last day in Singapore

06 Saturday Apr 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Accommodations, Asia, Hilton, Singapore, Travel Hacking

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Conrad Singapore, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

After surviving many cab debacles in Kuala Lumpur, Mrs. Selfish and I finally got wise and arranged for a cab to pick us up from the Sheraton Imperial.  After 3 days in Kuala Lumpur, surprisingly our most honest cab driver was the one that took us to the airport.

Nevertheless it was slightly uncomfortable with all of our bags.  The standard cabs in Kuala Lumpur were slightly different from home, and we found we always had to put one of our bags up front next to the driver.  The reason being that a lot of the trunk’s space is occupied by a natural gas tank!

But no matter!  We were off to our last stop in South East Asia, a one day stopover in Singapore.

Continue reading →

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Last stop in SE Asia: Kuala Lumpur

02 Tuesday Apr 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Accommodations, Asia, Malaysia, Starwood, Travel Hacking

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Selfish Years, Sheraton Imperial Kuala Lumpur, Travel Hacking

After catching breakfast at the Double Tree Phuket, Mrs. Selfish and I were ready for Kuala Lumpur!  We weren’t really sure what to expect, but having grown somewhat familiar with Malaysian cuisine, we were excited to see what Kuala Lumpur had to offer.

After a little research, I settled on booking the Sheraton Imperial Kuala Lumpur, which was a little bit out of the center of town, but was highly ranked on Trip Advisor.  Since we were running low on Starwood points, I decided to pay in cash. A little searching found an offer online – 3 nights for the price of 2 at Starwood Properties in South East Asia – score!  The price was normally 444 MYR a night, which is roughly $143, so at 66% we were getting close to $96 a night before taxes.

Getting there, was a little bit of a challenge, but fortunately Kuala Lumpur removes most of usually airport taxi headaches.

Continue reading →

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Honeymooning in Phuket

01 Monday Apr 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Accommodations, Asia, Hilton, Thailand, Travel Hacking

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Accommodations, Double Tree, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

After escaping the tetanus-ridden raft houses of Khao Sok national park, Mrs. Selfish and I were ready to high-tail it out of there!  Unfortunately, this meant spending the night in Phuket, one of Thailand’s seediest cities!

After leaving the decidedly-beautiful-but-extremely-rustic Khao Sok national park, we were transported back to the Bamboo Orchid Tree House to pickup our suitcases. Unfortunately, midway through the hour long drive it decided to rain, and we were in a semi-open air pickup truck.  We arrive at the Tree House, slightly soaked, grabbed our bag, and hopped in a car to Phuket!  Two hours later we arrived in civilization at the Double Tree Resort Phuket, on Surin Beach.

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They have baby elephants in Khao Lak!

31 Sunday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Accommodations, Asia, Thailand, Travel Hacking

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Accommodations, Le Méridien Khao Lak Beach & Spa Resort, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

When planning the Thailand portion of our trip, Mrs. Selfish and I decided to spend a week on the west coast of Thailand.  We knew we wanted to dive Richelieu Rock, and visit Thailand’s Halong Bay, the man made Khao Sak lake, but getting there was a problem.  The closest airport to both natural wonders is in Phuket, which is known as one of the seediest places in Thailand – even the natives warned us against going there.

Fortunately, Khao Lak was only a one hour drive north.  While searching for accommodations, I found Le Méridien Khao Lak Beach & Spa Resort with one important benefit: a baby elephant.

Continue reading →

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Understanding Transfer Partners: Starwood (Bonus)

29 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Credit Cards, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

This is the 10th post in my intro series to travel hacking.  For a list of other posts, check out my post on how to travel hack your way around the world.

While not a bank card, the Starwood Preferred Guest card offers a great alternative to some of the aforementioned programs.

SPG points transfer at a 1:1.25 rate when converted into bundles of 20,000 points.  Unlike Chase and American Express, partner transfers typically run 1-2 weeks. On the other hand, while Chase has only 9 transfer partners, and American Express has 15, Starwood has a staggering array of transfer partners: 31 airlines:

  • Airline Partners

Aeroplan (Air Canada) – 1:1
Air Berlin – 1:1
Air China – 1:1
Air New Zealand – 65:1
Alaska Airlines – 1:1
Alitalia MilleMiglia – 1:1
All Nippon Airlines – 1:1
American Airlines – 1:1
Asia Miles (transfers to Cathay Pacific) – 1:1
Asiana Airlines – 1:1
British Airways (Avios) – 1:1
China Eastern Airlines – 1:1
China Southern SkyPearl Club – 1:1
Delta Airlines – 1:1
Emirates – 1:1
Etihad Airways – 1:1
Flying Blue (Air France/KLM) – 1:1
Hawaiian Airlines – 1:1
Japan Airlines – 1:1
King Club Miles – 1:1
LAN LANPASS – 1:2
Mexicana Frecuenta – 1:1
Miles and More – 1:1
Qatar Airways – 1:1
Saudi Arabian Airlines Alfursan – 1:1
Singapore Airlines – 1:1
Thai Airways – 1:1
US Airways – 1:1
United Mileage Plus – 2:1
VARIG Smiles – 2:1
Virgin Atlantic Flying Club – 1:1

Continue reading →

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Understanding Transfer Partners: Citi

28 Thursday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

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Credit Cards, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

This is the 9th post in my intro series to travel hacking.  For a list of other posts, check out my post on how to travel hack your way around the world.

Citi is the ugly stepchild of bank transfers, and their ThankYou points aren’t nearly as flexible as Chase or American Express. However, if you’re maxed out on Chase and American Express they may be a decent alternative, since all signs points to Citi increasing their transfer partners in upcoming years.

Thank You points typically convert to cash at a 100 to $1 ratio. With Citi Premier you’ll get a 33% bonus on travel, so you can convert 10,000 Thank You points into $133 worth of airfare instead of a $100 gift card.

Transferring ThankYou Points

Citi Thank You points currently only have one transfer partner in Hilton, and transfer into HHonors points at a 1:1.5 ratio. Points can be transferred another person’s account, but the transferred points must be used within 90 days.

Citi ThankYou Cards

There aren’t a lot of Citi ThankYou cards with sign-up bonuses worth getting excited about.  At the moment only the Premiere card looks alright, though my understanding is that the bonus periodically increases to 50,000:

Citi ThankYou Premiere Card: 25,000 ThankYou points after spending $2000 in 3 months. No foreign transaction fees. Annual fee of $125 is waived the first year.

Conclusion

While I wouldn’t rush out and start applying for ThankYou cards willy-nilly, Citi’s ThankYou points program is one to keep an eye on.

Although they only have one transfer partner at the moment, it’s quite likely Citi will try to increase its transfer options if it wants to compete at the same level as Chase and American Express. Couple that with a few cards with bonuses of 50,000 points or more and the bonuses they give on occasion for opening a Citibank account (sometimes upwards of 30,000 TY points!) and I’d consider investing in the ThankYou points program.  Until then, I’d stay away.

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Understanding Transfer Partners: American Express

27 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

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Credit Cards, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

This is the 8th post in my intro series to travel hacking.  For a list of other posts, check out my post on how to travel hack your way around the world.

American Express’s Membership Rewards has a ton of transfer partners 14 vs. Chase’s 8. Unlike Chase, however, the transfer rates vary.  While most transfer at a 1:1 ratio, some partners transfer at a rate as low as 3:1, while others transfer as high as 1:1.5.

Whereas Chase usually caps their sign-up bonuses at 50,000 points, American Express tends to run bonuses upwards of 75,000 to 100,000 MR several times a year.  They can also be extremely generous with point transfer promotions, such as the 50% bonus to British Airways back in January, or the 35% transfer bonus to Flying Blue last September.

Continue reading →

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Understanding Transfer Partners: Chase

26 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

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Credit Cards, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

This is the 7th post in my intro series to travel hacking.  For a list of other posts, check out my post on how to travel hack your way around the world.

Chase’s Ultimate Rewards program is the best in the industry, hands down.  Transferring Ultimate Rewards points into partner programs is quick and painless, taking minutes for some programs (e.g. United and Hyatt) and upwards of 48 hours for others (e.g. Marriott).

chase-ultimate-rewards-travel-transfer-partners

Points transfer from Ultimate Rewards into partner programs at a 1:1 ratio.  Partners Include:

  • Airline Partners
  • United Airlines
  • Korean Airlines
  • British Airways
  • South West Airlines
  • Hotel Partners
  • Hyatt
  • Marriott
  • Priority Club (Holiday Inn, Intercontinental, etc.)
  • Ritz Carlton
  • Other Partners
  • Amtrak

Continue reading →

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Understanding Credit Card Transfer Partners

24 Sunday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

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Credit Cards, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

This is the 6th post in my intro series to travel hacking.  For a list of other posts, check out my post on how to travel hack your way around the world.

Credit cards that give you miles or points come in two flavors: cards that give you miles or points for a particular airline or hotel, and cards that give you points in the banks’ own currency.

 

Airline/Hotel Credit Cards

When you sign up for a card like the American Express Hilton Honors card and receive the 50,000 points those points deposit straight into your Hilton Honors account and are now yours.  The banks buy points and miles directly from companies like Hilton or American Airlines at a reduced rate and then use them as bonuses to lure in new customers.

Should you cancel a co-branded card, the points you received are yours to keep, and will remain in your account.  In rare cases the points can be “clawed back” by the provider, but the general rule of thumb is that this can be avoided by keeping the card open for at least 6 months.

Co-branded cards are probably the easiest to understand. For instance, with the American Express Hilton Honors card you’ll earn 6x points at hilton properties, drugstores, supermarkets, gas stations, and phone/internet/cable purchases, and 3x points for all other purchases.  These points automatically deposit into your Hilton account after your billing statement closes, and are indistinguishable from any other Hilton points you have in your HHonors account.

 

Bank Issued Credit Cards

Bank issued cards are a different beast altogether.  Using their own currency, these types of cards come in two types: points that effectively become money, or points that transfer into miles or points.

While cards like the Capital One Venture One card give you $1 back for every 100 points you earn, the programs we’re really interested in are the Chase’s Ultimate Rewards Program, American Express’s Membership Rewards Program, and Citi’s Thank You Points program.

 

Conclusion

While co-branded credit cards are a great way to earn points on your airline or hotel of choice, padding your wallet with a few bank issued cards are a great way to increase your award options.  Over the next few days I’ll cover the 3 major programs.

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When to Cancel a Card

23 Saturday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Travel Hacking

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Credit Cards, Credit Score, Selfish Years, Travel Hacking

This is the 5th post in my intro series to travel hacking. For a list of other posts, check out my post on how to travel hack your way around the world.

Most credit cards with a good sign up bonus also come with an annual fee. Fortunately, the vast majority of these are waived the first year. Unfortunately, most people get rid of the card immediately after getting the bonus, which can be a huge mistake. Not only will the credit card company take notice, but it may negatively impact your credit score much more so than waiting until the end of the year.

So what do you do when your annual fee hits on all of the new cards you just applied for?

As I see it you have four options: keep the card, convert the card, downgrade the card, or cancel the card.

Continue reading →

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Beyond the Infinity Pools of the Conrad Koh Samui

20 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by misterselfish in Accommodations, Asia, Thailand, Travel Hacking

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Conrad, Conrad Koh Samui, Hilton, Infinity Pool, Koh Samui, Mr. Samui Samui, Selfish Years, Thailand, Travel Hacking

After a week of roughing it at the Sanctuary, Mrs. Selfish and I packed our bags and left Koh Phangan, heading for its sister island, Koh Samui. While planning the Thailand portion of our trip, I scheduled us for 4 nights at the Conrad Koh Samui.

Why?

Three words: Private infinity pool.

Continue reading →

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Who’s Selfish?

Mr. and Mrs. Selfish are an obsessively organized couple who sold all their junk to travel abroad for a year. Now settled in San Francisco, they have since visited over 200 cities in 44 countries over 6 continents. This site chronicles their travels.

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