Is Lifetime Frequent Flyer Elite Status A Goal Worth Chasing?

The Flight Detective
a plane flying in the sky

Imagine holding a high level of frequent flyer status for a lifetime. Sounds good, doesn’t it? It is one of those perks that some airlines offer in their loyalty scheme.

This is the reward for sticking with the same airline for what could be years on end. It means that if you retire and no longer travel for work, you can keep your elite level forever.

Is Lifetime Status Achievable?

British Airways offer Gold for life in their Executive Club. You need 35,000 tier points to achieve this, which is quite a lot. Considering you need 1,500 each year to achieve Gold, it would take you over 23 years to get this forever.

Once you have it, you will be Emerald in the oneworld alliance, giving you access to the first class lounges of all the member airlines. It sounds pretty sweet!

Fellow oneworld carrier Qantas offers lifetime Silver and lifetime Gold. This means achieving 7,000 or 14,000 status credits and it gives you Ruby or Sapphire in the alliance.

Considering it takes 700 status credits to reach Gold, it means a 20 year journey if you hit that mark every year. Sapphire gets you business class lounge access and the associated perks, so it’s not as good as what British Airways offer.

Is It Worth Chasing?

While it would be nice to have, I think chasing it would be a little difficult unless you had a lot of money. I have 3,999 status credits with Qantas, which are pretty much dormant since I switched to British Airways many years ago.

Since then, I have managed to rack up just 6,215 tier points with BA, meaning I am quite far away from the goal of 35,000. I’d sure like to have lifetime status, but I think it is going to be out of my reach unless I do some serious flying in the next 20 years.

Overall Thoughts

Lifetime status is a pretty cool goal to aspire to if you’re serious about your frequent flyer level. Some airlines don’t offer this at all, so you would be smart to make sure you’re a member of a programme that does offer it.

You never know, you might just reach it naturally! Do you have lifetime elite status with your airline programme? Has it changed your flying habits at all? Thank you for reading and if you have any comments or questions, please leave them below.

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Featured image by Gary Lopater via Unsplash.
Sunset image by Vincent Versluis via Unsplash.

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Lee @ BaldThoughts

Elite status with airlines used to mean so much more. But now that there are so many elites, unless you are top-tier, mid-level status gives you about the same rewards as being a cardholder of the airline’s co-branded credit card. To me, there simply isn’t enough reward for the average flyer.

rjb

Why bother? the airlines just keep moving the goalpost and taking benefits away. (I’m looking at YOU, United.)

DavidB

You younger FFers fail to recognize the concept of Lifetime Elite Status was established so loyal customers approaching their retirement years could be recognized for that loyalty and continue to receive on-the-ground (and some in-the-air) treatment when they had to buy their own (generally economy) tickets and fly less often. That’s why the European carriers like LH and BA set their thresholds so high, assuming 20-30 years of regular business (and some leisure) flying. LH at one time even had an age requirement of at least 60. Of course, US airlines cheapened the practice and pretty much made it a… Read more »

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