Anonymous wrote:For long haul international 5 months is the sweet spot to get the best price. Milage flights are always last to be made available so they always hold those back as they want people to pay in cash.
Anonymous wrote:For long haul international 5 months is the sweet spot to get the best price. Milage flights are always last to be made available so they always hold those back as they want people to pay in cash.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve booked domestic flights on United with miles, but this is my first time booking an international flight. Below are the details on pricing. Does this seem normal?
-three days ago nonstop economy flight from IAD to Paris (CDG) was 40,000 points
-two days ago, same nonstop flights, IAD to CDG, are 70,000 points
-today there are no nonstop flights with miles for the same trip
Now I wish we had grabbed the seats for 40,000 points. Didn’t pull the trigger, because the trip isn’t until June and now seems like way too early to book the trip. Do you think the nonstop award flights will come back? I feel like United bots are tracking me and trying to price gouge me!
Did you look at the seat map to see how full the flight is currently? That can give you an idea (though not guaranteed) of whether the lower mile awards will open up again. I would just wait. They’ll likely go back down - if you know your dates and you see 40,000 points, book it, because it won’t go lower than that. My husband is global services on United so I’m on that site a lot!
OP here…again.
Thanks, I will check the flight. I think there are two United nonstops from Dulles. I can’t imagine them being that full already, but you never know.
They aren’t full. United is only going to release X seats on points and right now they are already gone for that date. Someone has to cancel and/or United has to decide to release more award seats. You can’t book for points every seat that is available for cash. It’s a very limited amount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40k is the lowest you will find for an economy seat one way to Europe. So yes, if you see that option, you should book it. And sometimes they do come back. If you have flexibility on the day of travel, look for options a few days before or after.
Also this website is great for seeing what's out there: https://seats.aero/
On United, maybe. On AF, this can be a round trip ticket.
OP, do you have only United miles? No flexible points?
Only United miles. Been hoarding them, so our summer vacation flight will most likely need to be on United. Occasionally, will see a fare that’s too good to pass up- flew to Germany a couple years ago on United for only $600 roundtrip. For this summer trip, since we have the miles, would prefer to use them since I don’t think we are getting sub $1000 flight to Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40k is the lowest you will find for an economy seat one way to Europe. So yes, if you see that option, you should book it. And sometimes they do come back. If you have flexibility on the day of travel, look for options a few days before or after.
Also this website is great for seeing what's out there: https://seats.aero/
On United, maybe. On AF, this can be a round trip ticket.
OP, do you have only United miles? No flexible points?
Only United miles. Been hoarding them, so our summer vacation flight will most likely need to be on United. Occasionally, will see a fare that’s too good to pass up- flew to Germany a couple years ago on United for only $600 roundtrip. For this summer trip, since we have the miles, would prefer to use them since I don’t think we are getting sub $1000 flight to Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:40k is the lowest you will find for an economy seat one way to Europe. So yes, if you see that option, you should book it. And sometimes they do come back. If you have flexibility on the day of travel, look for options a few days before or after.
Also this website is great for seeing what's out there: https://seats.aero/
On United, maybe. On AF, this can be a round trip ticket.
OP, do you have only United miles? No flexible points?
Anonymous wrote:40k is the lowest you will find for an economy seat one way to Europe. So yes, if you see that option, you should book it. And sometimes they do come back. If you have flexibility on the day of travel, look for options a few days before or after.
Also this website is great for seeing what's out there: https://seats.aero/
Anonymous wrote:I’ve booked domestic flights on United with miles, but this is my first time booking an international flight. Below are the details on pricing. Does this seem normal?
-three days ago nonstop economy flight from IAD to Paris (CDG) was 40,000 points
-two days ago, same nonstop flights, IAD to CDG, are 70,000 points
-today there are no nonstop flights with miles for the same trip
Now I wish we had grabbed the seats for 40,000 points. Didn’t pull the trigger, because the trip isn’t until June and now seems like way too early to book the trip. Do you think the nonstop award flights will come back? I feel like United bots are tracking me and trying to price gouge me!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve booked domestic flights on United with miles, but this is my first time booking an international flight. Below are the details on pricing. Does this seem normal?
-three days ago nonstop economy flight from IAD to Paris (CDG) was 40,000 points
-two days ago, same nonstop flights, IAD to CDG, are 70,000 points
-today there are no nonstop flights with miles for the same trip
Now I wish we had grabbed the seats for 40,000 points. Didn’t pull the trigger, because the trip isn’t until June and now seems like way too early to book the trip. Do you think the nonstop award flights will come back? I feel like United bots are tracking me and trying to price gouge me!
There are always limited seats offered on points, especially at the lower levels. When you see what you what you have to pounce (on points, not money) especially if you need more than 1 or 2 seats. Award seats on that flight are likely gone for good.
Agreed on this except the bolded. Lots of fluctuations this far in advance. Just gotta keep checking
Best award availability (for more than 1 seat) is upon release or 1-2 months before the travel date (as people release what they have been holding or airlines reassess based on how many seats are unsold.)
Generally true, but also there are still fluctuations in the intervening time, as OP discovered 4 months after schedule opened. I track some flights closely when looking to book, it changes periodically, that's a huge advantage of United's free award change/cancellation policy.
I mean yes, but OP seems unaware that every free seat on the plane is not available to book on points. Was trying to give her the cliffs notes.