Jet Airways enhances domestic redemptions, guts international premium redemptions across network w.e.f. September 1, 2014

Earlier Posts:


Whenever an airline makes it very easy to earn miles, they also come to a point where they devalue them, and call them adjustments. However, in the case of Jet Airways, they released the new redemption rules by mistake last week, and my determination was that the airline is slashing miles required on many a domestic routes but redemptions on international routes are going to be hit very hard.

image

Today, they officially released the new redemption chart, and have given us a month to utilise the old redemption chart before they go through with the new rates for redemption. Take note, this announcement is only for Jet Airways and Jet Konnect flights on various routes. There is no mention on the requirements for partner flights.

Minimum miles for a redemption: JetPrivilege has raised the bar on redemptions. While earlier the minimum redemption requirement was a minimum of 4000 JPMiles, now the minimum miles required for a redemption are 5000 JPMiles.

Fuel Surcharges are eliminated: Jet Airways has adjusted the number of miles required on nearly all routes and knocked off fuel surcharges from the ticket prices. Henceforth, you only need to pay the statutory charges to redeem your ticket such as airport taxes.

Domestic Redemptions are getting much better: Like I mentioned in my post the last week, most redemptions for domestic flights are slightly being adjusted. While the 4000 JP Miles minimum flights are all moving to 5000 JP Miles minimum, there are a lot of routes going down in terms of redemption value as well. And that too with fuel surcharges going away. With this, Domestic redemptions become the sweet spot of Jet Airways JetPrivilege programme.

Out of the 244 routes published by Jet Airways in the domestic redemption table, 174 will now cost a lesser number of miles, and 70 will cost more number of miles. The upside is at best 25% more miles, while on the downside, there are routes which now require 50% miles less as well in some cases, such as Bhopal – Chandigarh.

International Redemptions are getting much much expensive: Like I mentioned earlier, travelling on Jet Airways’ own metal, abroad, is going to get very very bad. The fuel surcharges are going away, however, the number of miles required is going up significantly in most cases, including the premium classes.

  • Neighbouring Stations: No trends here. Kolkata-Dhaka, Colombo-Chennai, become 50% more expensive, while Delhi-Kathmandu, Abu Dhabi-Kuwait become 50% cheaper for redemptions.
  • Regional Routes: No adjustment when you fly from Delhi/Mumbai – Dhaka, Mumbai – Colombo/Muscat/Kathmandu/Dhaka/Abu Dhabi.
  • Flights between India – Middle East: Most flights between India and the Middle East are going up by 12-50% in terms of number of miles required.
  • Flights between India – South East Asia: All flights to South East Asia will now require 50% more miles across the board from September 1, 2014.
  • Transatlantic Flights: Flights between Europe and North American on Jet Airways’ network will cost almost double now using JPMiles. For instance, the business class which used to cost 40,000 miles will now be 75000 miles between Brussels and Newark.
  • India – Europe/North America Flights: India to Europe/North America will see an inflation of 57-60% in terms of number of miles required in all classes of service.

Why do I call this gutting the premium cabin charts: When I redeemed miles for an India/USA business class round trip on Jet Airways a few years back, fuel surcharges on a round trip were about INR 25,000. In today’s day and age, they are about INR 39,000.  So, a Jet Airways business class between Mumbai and New York today costs me 188000 miles + 39000 INR Fuel Surcharge + INR 6300 statutory charges. A revenue ticket costs me INR 230,000. Hence, the value of 188000 miles is worth INR 185000, so near about INR 1 in value per JPMile.

From September 1, 2014, Jet Airways wants to charge me 300000 JPMiles for the same round trip in Business Class. Which means, in mileage terms, for the same ticket of INR 230,000 they want to charge me 300000 JPMiles. Hence, the value of a mile reduces from INR 1 to INR 0.75.

Economy cabin redemptions might just work out better: Another example, for economy class this time. A BOM-HKG economy class round-trip ticket costs INR 30000. In the current redemption structure, which is anyways stupid for this kind of route, they wanted us to pay 40000 JP miles + INR 14000 Fuel Surcharge and INR 3076 as Airport taxes. Hence, the value of a JP Mile came down to a lowwwwwwwww INR 0.33.

Under the new structure, they want you to pay 60000 JP Miles + INR 3076. Which means for the same fare, you now get a value of INR 0.45.

For India – Europe, lets say a revenue ticket costs INR 53000 for a roundtrip. In the current redemption structure, with INR 25000 fuel surcharge, you end up paying 54000 JPMiles+25000 INR (YQ)+INR 5000 (airport taxes etc) to get there, bringing the value of a mile to INR 0.42.

Under the new structure, it is going to be 85000 JPMiles for a roundtrip to Europe in economy, so you at least get INR 0.56 of value.

The best part is, I have not even accounted/adjusted for the potential miles you earn on a revenue ticket to come at the valuation for international segments.

Bottomline: Jet Airways clearly wants you to redeem domestically and not on their international flights. If you like the older structure better, you could redeem miles now for your travels upto 331 days out. Else, wait for the new structure to kick in on September 1, 2014.

Join over 3600 people who check-in daily to find out about the best in travel.
Free emails (once-a-day) | RSS Feeds | Facebook Updates | Twitter | Instagram

About Ajay

Ajay Awtaney is the Founder and Editor of Live From A Lounge (LFAL), a pioneering digital platform renowned for publishing news and views about aviation, hotels, passenger experience, loyalty programs, travel trends and frequent travel tips for the Global Indian. He is considered the Indian authority on business travel, luxury travel, frequent flyer miles, loyalty credit cards and travel for Indians around the globe. Ajay is a frequent contributor and commentator on the media as well, including ET Now, BBC, CNBC TV18, NDTV, Conde Nast Traveller and many other outlets.

More articles by Ajay »

Pingbacks

Comments

  1. Hi AJ,
    I plan to use JP miles to book award tickets on Etihad Abu Dhabi to Bombay for Nov 2016.(My son wants to travel on A380 Business only).The seats are available for redemption. However JP says that I cannot make any change in date or cannot cancel the ticket, else I have to forfeit 40000 miles one way for Business class. Actually the JP agent was clueless on the rules and wasted 15 mins without a satisfactory response.

    Well 40000 miles penalty is tooo much to ignore!

    I suggested him that I will book a PNR and block the seats of November 16 and will purchase the tickets by paying taxes and miles ,closer to the departure date. He spoke to the supervisor and came back saying that it is possible.

    In the same breath however he was saying that PNR time limit is system generated and is usually up to 4 day from the date of booking which contradicts the possibility of hanging on with the blocked seats for a long time.

    Any suggestions on this plan ? How do I go about it??

  2. Amazing – the international F and J redemptions *still* have a YQ included!

    I thought that they were eliminating this and increasing the mileage requirements.

    This is absolutely ridiculous.

    Jet is really shooting themselves in the foot now – what is the point of flying them if their miles are worthless too??

  3. I wonder why they’ve published redemptions for MAA-CMB-MAA, that route was terminated a long time ago!
    Furthermore, almost ALL of the international routes have a first class figure given..even for the 737 flights!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *