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✓ Verified Formula · Worked Example Included
Are Airline Points Worth It?
How to Calculate Value Per Point
One formula decides it: cents per point (CPP). If your redemption beats the program's baseline (~1–1.5¢), redeeming wins. If it doesn't, pay cash. Here's the math, a verified example, and the levers that move the number.
DIRECT ANSWER
To know whether airline points are worth it, calculate cents per point (CPP):
divide the cash price minus the taxes/fees you'd still pay on the award ticket, by the points required, then multiply by 100.
CPP = (cash price − award fees) ÷ points required × 100.
If that number beats your program's baseline — roughly 1–1.5¢ per point for most transferable currencies (Chase UR, Amex MR, Citi TYP) — redeeming is "worth it."
Below 1¢, pay cash, especially if you hold a 1.5–2% cash-back card.
Premium cabin redemptions on long-haul routes routinely yield 3–5¢/point, which is where miles shine most.
The single biggest mistake is not running this calculation and accepting whatever the airline app suggests.
🧮 Verified Worked Example
1
The flight: New York (JFK) to London (LHR), economy, round-trip.
Cash price on Google Flights: $600.
2
The award offer: 50,000 points + $50 in taxes and carrier fees (you always pay this even on awards).
3
Plug into the formula:
CPP = ($600 − $50) ÷ 50,000 × 100
= $550 ÷ 50,000 × 100
= 0.011 × 100 = 1.1¢ per point
4
Interpret it: 1.1¢ is roughly break-even — just above the 1¢ floor but below the "good" threshold of 1.5¢. You're not losing value, but you could hold out for a better redemption (e.g., upgrade to business or find a route with a higher cash price / lower award rate). If your alternative is keeping points idle, redeeming at 1.1¢ is reasonable.
Math check
$600 − $50 = $550 | $550 ÷ 50,000 = $0.011 | $0.011 × 100 = 1.1¢/point ✔
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate the value of an airline point or mile?
Use CPP: (cash price − award fees) ÷ points required × 100. Always use the cash price of the same flight on the same dates — not an average. Subtract any taxes and fees you'd pay on the award (these are real costs). Divide by the points needed. Multiply by 100 for cents. Compare to 1–1.5¢ baseline.
What is a good CPP for airline miles?
Below 1¢ = poor (pay cash). 1.0–1.5¢ = OK / break-even. 1.5–2.5¢ = good. Above 2.5¢ = excellent. Most domestic economy redemptions fall in the 1–1.5¢ range. Long-haul business class can reach 3–6¢ on the right programs.
Are points worth more than cash for flights?
Only if your CPP exceeds what you'd earn paying cash. If you have a 2% cash-back card, paying $600 earns $12 back — equivalent to 0.8¢/point on a 1,500-point earn. The question is whether your award yields more than that in saved fare. Premium cabin awards nearly always win. Cheap economy tickets often don't.
When should I pay cash instead of redeeming points?
Pay cash when: (1) CPP < 1¢; (2) cash price is very low (< $150) so you'd burn many points for little saving; (3) award fees are high (some carriers charge $400+ in surcharges); (4) you need flexibility — cash tickets change/cancel easier; (5) you're saving for a much higher-value redemption on the same points.
What are good Avios or Chase Ultimate Rewards redemptions?
Avios: Short-haul on American Airlines in North America can yield 2–3¢/pt. Transatlantic on British Airways metal often has high surcharges — check fees. Iberia Plus Avios on Iberia transatlantic business class frequently yields 3–5¢. Chase UR: Transfer to Hyatt for hotels (commonly 1.5–2¢+), or to Air France/KLM Flying Blue, United MileagePlus, or Singapore KrisFlyer for premium-cabin flights. Always calculate your specific trip before transferring — transfers are irreversible.
Should I hoard points or use them now?
Don't hoard indefinitely. Points are a depreciating asset — airlines devalue programs periodically, sometimes by 20–40% overnight. If you have a high-CPP redemption available now for a trip you'd take anyway, book it. A reasonable rule: if you won't use the points within 18–24 months, evaluate whether the program still fits your travel. Idle points earning 0¢ are the worst outcome.
⚠️ Illustrative Disclaimer
The worked example on this page uses illustrative figures only — actual cash prices, award rates, and fees vary by program, route, cabin, and booking date.
Point valuations change when airlines update their award charts.
Always verify the current cash price and award fees for your specific trip before deciding.
WizeLife and WizeTravel provide tools and information — not financial advice.