If you’ve looked at your American Airlines account recently, you’ve likely seen two numbers: miles and Loyalty Points. Although Loyalty Points and American Airlines AAdvantage miles are related, they differ greatly — and since Loyalty Points reset to zero every year on March 1, it’s important to know the difference.
So, here’s what you need to know.
American Airlines miles vs. Loyalty Points
When you open the American Airlines mobile app or log in to your account online, you’ll see two prominent numbers: award miles and Loyalty Points.
In short, award miles are what you can redeem for flights, upgrades and seats, while Loyalty Points are the metric by which American Airlines awards elite status and Loyalty Point Rewards. Let’s take a closer look at each.
Related: Why American Airlines AAdvantage has become my most valuable rewards currency
What are American miles?
You earn award miles — also called American miles or AAdvantage miles — when you credit paid flights on American Airlines and select partner airlines (including Oneworld alliance partners like Alaska Airlines and British Airways) to the AAdvantage program. You can also earn American miles through other avenues, including using the AAdvantage eShopping portal and taking advantage of SimplyMiles shopping offers.
You can redeem American miles for flights, upgrades, seats and more. Award miles don’t reset to zero or expire as long as you are the primary cardmember of an open AAdvantage credit card, you are under 21 years old, or you earn or redeem miles on American or with an AAdvantage partner at least once every 24 months.
Related: 5 reasons why I believe American Airlines miles are worth more than United Airlines and Delta Air Lines miles
What are Loyalty Points?
Loyalty Points, on the other hand, are the metric by which you earn American Airlines elite status and Loyalty Point Rewards. Some, but not all, award miles you earn give you Loyalty Points. You can also occasionally earn Loyalty Points through promotions or by holding select AAdvantage credit cards and meeting specific spending or Loyalty Point thresholds.
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You can’t redeem Loyalty Points for award flights; they’re only good for earning American Airlines elite status and Loyalty Point Rewards. As a reminder, Loyalty Point Rewards are extra benefits you earn as you reach specific amounts of Loyalty Points throughout your qualification period.
Each year, you must requalify for American Airlines elite status and work toward earning new Loyalty Point Rewards during the airline’s elite qualification period. Instead of the calendar year qualification period used by most other programs, American AAdvantage uses a March 1 to Feb. 28 (or Feb. 29 in leap years) period. So, just as your Marriott elite night credits reset to zero Jan. 1 each year, Loyalty Points reset to zero every March 1.
Related: How I earned 29,000 Loyalty Points and 23,000 AAdvantage miles on a single $800 hotel stay
Bottom line
Your Loyalty Points balance — the metric American Airlines uses for elite status qualification and Loyalty Point Rewards — will reset on March 1. But your award miles — the ones you can redeem to book flights — won’t reset then. You’ll keep your American Airlines miles as long as your account is active, you’re under 21 or you’re the primary cardmember on an AAdvantage credit card.
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