Introduction

American Airlines AAdvantage is one of the three major U.S. airline programs alongside Delta SkyMiles and United MileagePlus, and it's the only one in the Oneworld alliance. That alliance affiliation matters: AAdvantage's award chart still lets you book partner business class redemptions at fixed point amounts that can deliver 5+ cents per mile when used right, particularly on the long-haul carriers Oneworld members fly.

The program changed structurally in 2022 with the shift to Loyalty Points, replacing the old elite-qualifying-miles (EQM) and elite-qualifying-segments (EQS) framework with a single combined currency. Earning Loyalty Points still happens through paid travel, AAdvantage card spend, and partner activity, but the calculation logic is cleaner and the elite-status thresholds reset annually.

This guide covers how to earn miles in 2026, what's actually worth redeeming for, and which co-branded cards make sense at which spending profile.

Last updated: April 2026.

How earning works

AAdvantage miles accrue through three primary channels:

1. Flying American Airlines and Oneworld partners

Base earning on AA-marketed flights is 5 to 11 miles per dollar spent, depending on AAdvantage status:

  • AAdvantage member (no status): 5 miles per dollar.
  • AAdvantage Gold: 7 miles per dollar.
  • AAdvantage Platinum: 8 miles per dollar.
  • AAdvantage Platinum Pro: 9 miles per dollar.
  • AAdvantage Executive Platinum: 11 miles per dollar.

Oneworld partner flights earn miles based on a distance-and-fare-class table. Long-haul economy on a partner like Qatar typically earns 25 percent of distance flown; business class earns 100 to 150 percent of distance.

2. AAdvantage credit cards

Co-branded AAdvantage cards (issued by Citi and Barclays) earn 1x to 4x AAdvantage miles per dollar in their bonus categories. The full lineup is in the credit cards section below.

3. Shopping and dining portals

The AAdvantage eShopping portal and AAdvantage Dining program earn 1x to 10x miles on online retail and partnered restaurants. Useful for incremental earning, not the primary engine.

How redeeming works

AAdvantage maintains a published award chart with fixed mileage prices for both AA-operated flights and Oneworld partners. Unlike Delta and United, which moved largely to dynamic pricing, AAdvantage retains chart-based partner redemptions, which is where the program's value lives.

Sweet-spot redemptions

The high-value redemptions in 2026:

  • Cathay Pacific business class to Asia: 70,000 AAdvantage miles one-way from the U.S. East Coast to Hong Kong, with onward connections covered. Cash fares for the same routing run $4,500 to $7,000.
  • Qatar Airways Qsuite business class to the Middle East and onward to Asia/Africa: 75,000 AAdvantage miles one-way from JFK or DFW to Doha. Often regarded as the strongest business class product in the world.
  • Japan Airlines business class transpacific: 65,000 to 75,000 AAdvantage miles one-way from West Coast to Tokyo. Cash fares $3,500+.
  • British Airways Club World transatlantic: 57,500 AAdvantage miles one-way from East Coast to London, but the BA fuel surcharges add $400+ in cash, materially weakening the redemption.
  • Domestic AA economy: 12,500 miles one-way for short routes, 25,000 for transcontinental. Useful but not the headline value.

The Cathay, Qatar, and JAL redemptions consistently return 4 to 5 cpp on AAdvantage miles, which is among the strongest values in the U.S. airline-program universe.

Web Special awards

Periodically, AA prices certain routes as Web Special awards, with mileage costs 30 to 50 percent below the published chart. These appear and disappear without notice. Worth checking the AA website weekly if you're holding a meaningful AAdvantage balance and have flexible dates.

Booking partner space

The AA website displays Oneworld partner award space directly. The booking flow accepts AA miles and processes the partner award. The website's partner search has historically lagged the partner's own systems on availability, so cross-reference partner award searches via Qantas Frequent Flyer or British Airways Avios search tools, which sometimes show award space that AA's site temporarily misses. If the partner's site shows space and AA's doesn't, calling AA reservations can sometimes ticket the award.

AAdvantage status

The Loyalty Points threshold for each status tier (per program-year, March 1 to February 28):

  • AAdvantage Gold: 40,000 Loyalty Points.
  • AAdvantage Platinum: 75,000 Loyalty Points.
  • AAdvantage Platinum Pro: 125,000 Loyalty Points.
  • AAdvantage Executive Platinum: 200,000 Loyalty Points.

Loyalty Points accrue on:

  • Paid AA flight base miles.
  • Paid Oneworld partner flight base miles.
  • AAdvantage credit card spending (1 Loyalty Point per $1 on most cards, capped at $200,000 annually).
  • AAdvantage Dining and shopping portal earnings.

The credit card path is the most accessible route to status for non-frequent flyers. A Citi/AAdvantage Executive cardholder hitting $80,000 in annual spend earns 80,000 Loyalty Points, enough for AAdvantage Platinum status without flying a single paid mile.

AAdvantage co-branded credit cards

AAdvantage MileUp Mastercard (Citi)

  • $0 annual fee.
  • 2x miles at grocery stores and on AA tickets.
  • 1x miles on everything else.
  • Welcome bonus typically 10,000 to 15,000 miles after $500 spend.

The entry-level card. Worth holding for incremental Loyalty Points earning at no cost, but the welcome bonus is too small to be the primary acquisition.

Citi/AAdvantage Platinum Select Mastercard

  • $99 annual fee, often waived first year.
  • 2x miles on AA tickets, dining, gas.
  • 1x miles on everything else.
  • First checked bag free for cardholder and up to four companions.
  • Welcome bonus typically 50,000 to 75,000 miles after $2,500 to $3,000 spend.

The mid-tier sweet spot. The free checked bag covers the annual fee with one round trip; the welcome bonus is enough for a Cathay business class one-way.

Citi/AAdvantage Executive World Elite Mastercard

  • $595 annual fee.
  • Admirals Club membership (worth roughly $850 standalone).
  • 4x miles on AA purchases, 1x on everything else.
  • 10,000 Loyalty Points bonus after $40,000 in annual spend.
  • Welcome bonus typically 70,000 to 100,000 miles after $5,000 to $7,000 spend.

The premium card. The Admirals Club value alone covers the annual fee for any traveler who flies AA more than three times a year. The Loyalty Points threshold for Platinum status (75,000) is achievable with $80,000 in card spend plus the welcome bonus.

AAdvantage Aviator Red (Barclays)

  • $99 annual fee.
  • 2x miles on AA tickets.
  • 1x miles on everything else.
  • First checked bag free for cardholder and up to four companions.
  • Welcome bonus typically 60,000 miles after first purchase plus paying the annual fee.

The Barclays counterpart to the Citi Platinum Select, with a notably easier-to-hit welcome bonus (often just one purchase). Worth holding alongside a Citi card for the welcome-bonus stacking.

What to redeem for

The hierarchy of AAdvantage redemption value, best to worst:

  1. Oneworld partner business class long-haul (Cathay, Qatar, JAL, Iberia): 4 to 5 cpp.
  2. Oneworld partner first class (Cathay, JAL, Qatar, when available): 5+ cpp on the cash-rate comparison, but availability is rare.
  3. Web Special awards (when they appear): 2 to 4 cpp depending on routing.
  4. AA-operated business class long-haul: 1.5 to 2.5 cpp; less compelling than partner redemptions.
  5. AA economy domestic: 1.0 to 1.5 cpp; reasonable on expensive routes.
  6. British Airways via AAdvantage: 1 to 2 cpp net of fuel surcharges; the chart looks great but the surcharges undermine it.

Avoid redeeming for non-flight uses (magazine subscriptions, hotel bookings, gift cards). Mile values on those redemptions typically run 0.5 to 0.8 cpp, well below cash floor.

When AAdvantage miles expire

AAdvantage miles expire after 24 months of inactivity. Any earning or redemption activity resets the 24-month clock. Holders of any AAdvantage co-branded credit card who use the card monthly will never trigger expiration.

Status-derived bonus miles (the 7 to 11 mile-per-dollar earning) follow the same rules.

Bottom line

AAdvantage is one of the U.S. airline programs where miles are still worth earning intentionally. The Oneworld partner redemptions, particularly Cathay Pacific and Qatar Qsuite, deliver consistent 4 to 5 cpp value that puts the program ahead of dynamically priced competitors like Delta and United on most international long-haul redemptions.

The fastest path to a usable balance for a partner business class redemption: the Citi/AAdvantage Platinum Select and the Barclays AAdvantage Aviator Red welcome bonuses combined yield 110,000 to 135,000 miles inside 90 days, enough for a Cathay or JAL business class one-way to Asia. For travelers who fly AA frequently enough to justify the Admirals Club, the Citi/AAdvantage Executive adds the Loyalty Points engine that makes Platinum status achievable without 50+ paid flight segments per year.

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