Alaska Mileage Plan will no longer allow Emirates First Class redemptions as of March 31, 2021, bringing to an end one of the most outlandish award redemption sweet spots I’ve covered here at Prince of Travel.
In this post, I wanted to provide an update on the “Emirates First Class extravaganza” booking trick that I had first written about (and flown) in the summer of 2019, and then flew again in the opposite direction in November 2020 – because it’s now the last chance saloon for anyone looking to burn a big balance of Alaska miles on a once-in-a-lifetime luxury indulgence.
Alaska Awards on Emirates First Class
Alaska Mileage Plan is a known for being a valuable award program thanks to its wide range of airline partners with outstanding premium cabins.
However, its partnership with Emirates commands extraordinarily high mileage amounts: a one-way journey in Emirates First Class from North America to Dubai costs 150,000 Alaska miles. Let’s be honest: that’s an obscene number of Alaska miles to spend on a single flight!
Indeed, with other First Class products like Cathay Pacific or Japan Airlines starting at only 70,000 Alaska miles for a one-way, splurging 150,000 miles per person on a single flight in Emirates First Class is certainly a tough pill to swallow.
But what if I told you that those 150,000 miles could allow you to book not one, not two, but three flights in Emirates First Class, for a combined flight time of 27+ hours?
And what if those three flights could encompass not only the Airbus A380, on which you’ll get to experience the shower in the sky and the onboard bar, but also the Boeing 777 with Emirates New First Class, widely considered to be the world’s absolute best and featuring a fully-enclosed private suite designed by Mercedes-Benz?
Alaska’s Quirky Routing Rules on Emirates
I’ve written in the past about the quirky stopover policies and routing rules that lie within the Alaska Airlines Mileage Plan program.
While the program is valuable enough if you simply stick to one-way and round-trip journeys (after all, it’s one of the few programs to allow a stopover on a one-way redemption), the fun really begins when you start experimenting with stopovers and open-jaws using the multi-city search engine on the Alaska website.
Alaska Mileage Plan negotiates independent agreements with each of their airline partners, so the stopover and routing policies vary from partner to partner. On Emirates, the basic rules are as follows:
- You can only redeem Alaska miles for a trip originating from, or terminating in, a North American city
- The other end of your trip may be in Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, or the Middle East
- You may have a stopover in Dubai on a one-way routing
- Your trip must take place on flights operated by Emirates or Alaska Airlines only (as Alaska awards cannot combine more than one partner airline)
And that’s about it!
Note that there aren’t really any rules on whether or not you can route through the same city twice on a single ticket, or even any kind of maximum permitted mileage (MPM) restriction either.
Many other loyalty programs use these rules to limit how convoluted your routing may be, but Alaska, for the most part, does not.
Three Emirates First Class Flights for the Price of One!
So what does this mean? Well, the multi-city search engine allows you to input two separate searches to be combined into a single one-way redemption. And if you play around with it enough, you can get it to spit out some very intriguing routings…
…such as a North America to Middle East redemption, via the Middle East and Europe!
Yes, you read that right. This routing takes you from North America to Dubai, and then to Europe, and then back to Dubai, all for the price of a single North America–Middle East one-way redemption.
In First Class, that’s 150,000 Alaska miles – which works out to an average cost of 50,000 miles per First Class segment. That’s starting to look like a pretty sweet deal, isn’t it?
In order to pull up this routing on the search engine, you would use the multi-city search function on the Alaska website and input two sectors: the first between your North America departure city and your chosen European “layover” city, and the second between the European layover and Dubai. You’d space out the dates two days apart, so that neither your stay in Dubai nor Europe exceeds 24 hours.
The same principle works in reverse, too. If you’re planning a return trip from Dubai, you can fly round-trip to Europe first before catching your return flight to North America, all for the same 150,000 Alaska miles that it would’ve cost you to book only the Dubai–North America segment.
In this case, you’d again use the multi-city search function to search for two sectors spaced two days apart: the first between Dubai and your chosen European layover, and the second between that European city and your chosen final destination in North America.
Here’s something very important to note: because you’re booking a routing that isn’t technically allowed by the program, Alaska Mileage Plan’s phone representatives are unable to assist with booking or changing these “extravaganza” awards.
If you make a booking through the Alaska website, it’s essentially locked in place, and Alaska agents are unable to change the dates, routing, or class of service.
The only way to change your booking would be to cancel it and book a new one, although you’d take the risk that the First Class availability doesn’t immediately go back into the award inventory. Being flexible in terms of travel dates would help immensely in this regard.
Moreover, after March 31, it won’t be possible to cancel and rebook anymore, since Alaska will no longer be able to access Emirates First Class award space – so it’s truly going to be a lock-and-load approach in these last few days.
Airbus A380 vs. Boeing 777
If you’re interested in booking this crazy experience for later in 2021 or early 2022, there are a few things to take note of as you optimize your routing.
Emirates offers three versions of its world-renowned First Class product:
- Emirates A380 First Class, with the onboard shower and bar
- Emirates 777 New First Class, with the fully-enclosed suites, ultra-modern interiors, and LED virtual windows
- Emirates 777 Old First Class, which is similar to A380 First Class without the shower and bar
An ideal three-flight routing would encompass both the A380 First Class and the 777 New First Class, allowing you to sample both of Emirates’s best onboard experiences.
(Meanwhile, 777 Old First Class is by no means slumming it, but it doesn’t quite carry the same glamour factor of the A380 and New 777 First Class that you’d be looking for if you’re splurging 150,000 Alaska miles purely for the love of flying.)
The tricky part, however, is that the 777 New First Class product is only available on nine of Emirates’s Boeing 777 aircraft, so it’s a rather elusive product to book successfully.
Most of Emirates’s North America routes, including its sole Canadian route to Toronto, are scheduled to be operated by the Airbus A380 throughout the rest of 2021 and 2022. The exception is the New York JFK–Dubai route, which operates 777 New First Class until June 30, 2021.
If you’re booking an Emirates First Class extravaganza for a date after June 30, your best bet will be to hunt for 777 New First Class on the routes between Dubai and Europe – specifically Brussels (EK183/184), Geneva (EK83/84), and Frankfurt (EK47/48).
To verify which Boeing 777 services have New First Class and which have Old First Class, you can use ExpertFlyer to look at the seat map – if there’s six seats in First Class, it’s the new product. Alternatively, you could use Google Flights to search for seven First Class seats on the direct route – if there are any dates that show up in the availability calendar, then it’s obviously going to be the Old First Class.
There’s one caveat to note about New 777 First Class availability: it seems like there’s a maximum of one seat available when booking far in advance.
(Sure, more seats might open up on a last-minute basis, but that’s not helpful here when all Alaska awards on Emirates First Class are ending on March 31.)
If you’re interested in booking this once-in-a-lifetime experience for at least two passengers, then you should at least be able to find two First Class award seats on the North America–Dubai segment on the Airbus A380.
But after that, you’ll either need to split up on your own individual 777 New First Class jaunts (say, one passenger goes to Brussels and back, while the other goes to Geneva and back), or you’d continue on the shared journey on another set of Airbus A380s or perhaps the 777 Old First Class suites.
“Normal” Emirates First Class Awards Also Ending Soon
Here’s what’s so crazy about booking three Emirates First Class flights for the price of one.
Imagine if you had only booked a flight from North America to Dubai, and then from Dubai to Europe (so without the final flight at the end). That would count as a North America–Europe redemption, which costs a whopping 180,000 Alaska miles!
You’re therefore basically saving 30,000 miles per person by adding an additional seven-hour First Class flight into the mix. Funny how that works, eh?
Now, for practical purposes, this routing option likely won’t be of much use if you actually need to travel to or from Europe. That’s because it isn’t possible to actually have a stopover in Europe – the time between your flights from/to Dubai must be shorter than 24 hours, or else the search engine won’t return anything.
So really, this quirky routing is only useful for those of you who want to maximize your Emirates First Class experience to the fullest possible, because you must complete all three flights in quick succession of each other. But hey, I know there’s many such avid flyers out there, for whom this would be a killer opportunity!
Of course, as stunning of an experience as it is, the Emirates First Class extravaganza isn’t necessarily something that will appeal to everyone. Many collectors of Alaska miles might simply prefer to – hmm, I don’t know – fly on a routing that actually makes sense en route to a destination that they want to visit.
Well, if you’re interested in redeeming 150,000+ Alaska miles for a more “normal” Emirates First Class routing to somewhere in Europe, Africa, Asia, or Australia, then you should also take action before March 31, as all Emirates First Class awards on Alaska miles will be ending soon.
(Remember, on these “normal” awards, you get to have a stopover of extended duration in Dubai as well.)
After March 31, the best way to book Emirates First Class awards will likely be through the airline’s own Emirates Skywards program, in which we can earn miles by transferring Amex US MR points at a 1:1 ratio.
Even though the mileage amounts may still be somewhat competitively priced (with the best sweet spot being 135,000 Skywards miles for a round-trip between New York and Europe on a fifth-freedom route), the possibilities for crazy routings like the “extravaganza” will very much be consigned to the history books.
Conclusion
Unparalleled privacy, floor-to-ceiling sliding doors, virtual windows, the shower in the sky, and the onboard bar – all with free-flowing caviar and Dom Perignon throughout, accompanied with gourmet cuisine, fine wines, and world-class service.
If you plan to travel between North America and the Middle East with a somewhat flexible schedule sometime over the next year, and you’re happy to simply indulge in Emirates First Class for as long as possible, then a quirk in the Alaska Mileage Plan booking engine can offer you a fantastic opportunity to splurge 150,000 Alaska miles for no less than three flights on Emirates First Class.
You’d better take action soon, though, because the opportunity is ending on March 31 as all Emirates First Class awards are being phased out from Alaska Mileage Plan and other partner programs.
So I went ahead and booked SFO to DXB to BRU to DXB using your truck and have the ticket confirmed using Alaska points. My question now is will I have any issue re luggage that i need to check in?
Awesome! No issue – the luggage would follow you along the same flights and you’d pick them up in DXB at the end.
Couldn’t resist before this disappears….YYZ-DXB-JNB-DXB..+29 hours.
If I booked the “extravaganza” for 150000 miles on Alaska website, would I still be able to call Alaska and add a stopover for example DXB to HKG First Class for a extra 30000 miles? On the website and on the phone I can do a multi city JFK to Dubai w a stopover and Dubai for HKG for 180K
I highly doubt it, as the “extravaganza” routing isn’t technically an allowed routing; it’s just through a quirk of the online search engine that it’s bookable.
Booked with the only bummer being that middle seats are not available on either of my new F flights. For both, one is greyed out and one is for a bassinet. Is it possible that close to my trip, a middle seat may become available?
Call Emirates to book the bassinet seat; you’ll just have to agree to be moved if there is a baby onboard.
FWIW, my friend is a pilot at Emirates – flies the 777 – they’re now doing some flights between Toronto and Dubai on the 777 – not the A380 – I haven’t researched frequency or anything – but I would no longer assume Toronto – Dubai route is A380.
They’ve been running the 777 to Toronto throughout the pandemic period, but it looks set to be replaced by the A380 again starting in the summer (although this could be subject to change).
when will alaska unveil the new award chart?
I have a feeling we’ll see some action on April 1 or soon after that.
Do you think this could be done now with all the lockdown restrictions and closed borders? For example, ZRH and GVA have sterile connection areas, where you actually never enter ZRH. Do you think though that Emirates would let you on, knowing that you’re just connecting/turning around?
I had done this in November 2020 with Paris as my turnaround point but without the right to enter Paris. Emirates let me board after I explained what I was doing.
Also when leaving DXB, did they check you in for your return. Or did you have to leave the sterile area and go check in with Emirates again?
I received all three boarding passes (and so was checked in for all three legs) all the way back in JFK where I started.
Well you can book up to 11 months out… no need to select a date for any time soon.
Hi Ricky,
Alaska had no issues search for the F availability that had opened up 2 days prior? I ask because on the alaska website, DXB-BRU won’t give any results although its visible on EF. I want to ensure that Alaska reps can see the open award space even if its not searcheable on their website.
No issues at the time that I did this booking. Do you see any other flights within 2 days that have New F seats available?
I think this trick is dead
Still looks alive to me!
Not sure where you’re searching, but even the Alaska agents can’t even find any!
The Alaska website…
Hey Ricky, just curious how did you get the MBNA WB now that you’re in QC? Or did you apply with your US address? Thanks!
Hey Ricky, if you wanted more flight time, was it possible to book Dubai – Tokyo – Dubai – Toronto, for 150k? I noticed you mentioned the new first class on 777 is available on the Tokyo flight. Cheers.
I don’t think so. I think the "trick" only worked with cities in Europe, Middle East, and Africa.
Hey Ricky – Is this routing not bookable any more?
Still looks bookable to me!
Looks like dead. Tried to copy the same itinerary but it came out error.
Still working for me!
For those of you wanting to book an Emirates first class flight using points/miles without having to spend 150k AS miles and a convoluted routing, I suggest redeeming JAL miles (earned via a transfer from Marriott points) for a flight departing from one of several cities that have low or no surchages (e.g. Hong Kong).
Good suggestion, Jules. Sad that there aren’t any "easy" ways to get Emirates First Class now, after Alaska devalued their partner award chart in 2016.
What an amazing find and trip. Very curious how you managed to amass 150k AS miles, especially when MBNA typically only offers 30k miles on sign up? Did you churn it a couple times and also convert from another points currency to AS miles?
A few churns, some light MS back in the day on the AC Conversion Card, and several Marriott Travel Packages like Jules mentioned below.
@Todd: Ricky was most likely able to amass a large stash of AS miles by redeeming Marriott points for the previously lucrative Hotel & Air Packages which gave 120k airline miles in addition to a 5 night or 7 night stay for only 235k or 270k Marriott points, respectively. Unfortunately, these packages are no longer available.
Wow that is really awesome. I’ve gotta start saving Alaska miles and buying them on sale!
Epic job Ricky! Love your blog, just booked my first mini-RTW thanks to your information! Quick question, does converting AMEX MR to Bonvoy and then to Alaska to get enough points for an Emirates first class make sense to you? Or can the Amex MR be better spent?
Cheers!
You’d need 300k MR points, which would become 360k Bonvoy points and then in turn 150k Alaska miles. That’s a lot of MR to part with and many would argue there’s a better use, unless you’re totally rolling in MRs and really really want to fly Emirates First Class.
Ya i have applied for the MBNA Alaska Airlines card also, but you would need to apply 10 times to get enough points for 2 people to fly Emirates First Class, I was thinking more like topping off with MR/Bonvoy points than just straight paying 600k MR for 2 people, that is a lot of Mini-RTWs in Business!
Using MR/Bonvoy to top up your existing Alaska holdings makes more sense, yes.
Hi Aleks,
I’d suggest getting the MBNA Alaska Airlines card to get Alaska Miles directly to earn the majority of your points for a trip like this. If you needed a few more points to redeem for the trip of a lifetime, then I’d convert from Bonvoy to Alaska for miles earned directly from the Bonvoy cards, before looking at converting Membership Rewards Points to Bonvoy, and then to Alaska.
It all depends on your travel needs and what currencies you have, if you have a lot of Membership Rewards points, then doing the conversion you mentioned can make sense.
Thanks Andrew!
Love it! Great job Ricky.
Congratulations on succeeding in booking Emirates’ new first class!
I flew Emirates’ new first class last month in April when they operated the plane on some of the US routes temporarily.
Spending 15 hours in the new first class cabin was just about the right time to fully enjoy it. 🙂
What was the route?
Sorry I see you were asking @JL – if I had to guess it would be one of the flights from Dubai to Houston, Dallas, or Seattle, since Emirates had briefly put their new 777s on those routes during the scheduled closure of DXB’s second runway in April and May.
Lucky man! Good on you for jumping on that opportunity.
I’ll be on New F for a total of 13.5 hours, so hopefully that’ll be plenty of time to play with all the fun features 🙂
Haha yeah it was a gamble just like it was for your case, but IMHO it was worth it.
One thing I forgot to check out on the plane was the "zero gravity mode" of the seat they advertise.
I still don’t know if that is something you need to turn on explicitly or if it’s something that’s built into the seat naturally, but would you mind asking the crew about it when you’re onboard and let us know? 😛
Congrats Ricky and enjoy your luxurious time in the air