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MollyBloom

Joined: 21 Jul 2006 Location: James Joyce's pants
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:30 am Post subject: are you a Korean Air skypass member? |
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JUST joined after all these years. I never really had to take Korean Air too much in the past, but I'll be back for many years this go around. I read about the access to the lounge; is the access worth it? I've never been in one. Thinking about getting that Korean Air Visa credit card though....15,000 miles starting out and double miles added to skypass when taking a KA flight. I just hope for free upgrades  |
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pkang0202

Joined: 09 Mar 2007
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:36 am Post subject: |
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I"m a Skypass Member. Never been in the lounge though. My expat platinum card gives me access to the lounge so I'll try it out when I fly this March.
I have about 60,000 miles and that gets me a free domestic ticket in Korea. So, after flying across the world a few times, and having a Skypass credit card, I've racked up enough miles to fly to Busan or Jeju from Seoul.
Awesome. |
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methdxman
Joined: 14 Sep 2010
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:37 am Post subject: |
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I have a Skypass card from Korean Air as well as Skypass mileage from Samung Card and my KEB Card. How do I go about combining all of these? |
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shostahoosier
Joined: 14 Apr 2009
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:42 am Post subject: |
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I thought it 70,000 miles to fly to abroad.
Its really easy to rack up points if you're here for more than one contract and from what I understand (dont quote me on this as I might have misunderstood), Skypass miles last for like 10 years.  |
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methdxman
Joined: 14 Sep 2010
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:49 am Post subject: |
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pkang0202 wrote: |
I"m a Skypass Member. Never been in the lounge though. My expat platinum card gives me access to the lounge so I'll try it out when I fly this March.
I have about 60,000 miles and that gets me a free domestic ticket in Korea. So, after flying across the world a few times, and having a Skypass credit card, I've racked up enough miles to fly to Busan or Jeju from Seoul.
Awesome. |
60,000 miles for one domestic ticket? That is brutal. |
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Caffeinated
Joined: 11 Feb 2010
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:59 am Post subject: |
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When I fly Korean Air I put my miles on my Delta card (both on SkyTeam but I accumulated Delta miles first) just to avoid having miles all over the place. When I fly Asiana I put those on my ANA card as both are part of Star Alliance. Only needed 17,000 miles plus $60 to fly to Incheon-Sapporo return for lunar new year using those miles on ANA. |
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liveinkorea316
Joined: 20 Aug 2010 Location: South Korea
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 1:19 am Post subject: |
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To upgrase is almost as many miles as a free ticket.
For example, it takes 70,000 skymiles to get a free ticket to the states and 60,000 skymiles to get a free upgrade to prestige class.
In context, you would need to fly return to LA 3.5 times to get one free flight or 3 times to get an upgrade |
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Lee Myung Bak
Joined: 25 Jun 2010 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 1:34 am Post subject: |
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Caffeinated wrote: |
When I fly Korean Air I put my miles on my Delta card (both on SkyTeam but I accumulated Delta miles first) just to avoid having miles all over the place. When I fly Asiana I put those on my ANA card as both are part of Star Alliance. Only needed 17,000 miles plus $60 to fly to Incheon-Sapporo return for lunar new year using those miles on ANA. |
I'm with you. I use my Delta sky-miles number when flying on Korean Air. The miles transfer just fine and then you can land domestic US flight tickets on delta (except Hawaii) for 15,000 miles each way, 25,000 international. You can also use miles to purchase numerous electronics, books, magazines, etc. The perks are so much better. |
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orosee

Joined: 07 Mar 2008 Location: Hannam-dong, Seoul
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 5:36 pm Post subject: |
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If you can use Asiana instead of KAL, you can get a lot of benefits much earlier. I'm already at Diamond level with less than 50,000 miles, which seems to allow me access to the business class lounge and lots of extra kilos of luggage (20 or 30 on top of the normal allowance, if I understood their maths).
Plus Asiana is part of Miles&More, where you find the commonly used airlines and nust just the rare exotics.
Only drawback with Asiana is when you're taller than 5' because they have in my experience much less legroom than KAL. Plus they seem to have installed metal boxes for life vests under every second seat now which means that you better have only one leg. Still a great deal for one-legged midgets.
I was very happy with my last few KAL flights though; the entertainment system is top notch and I found USB power connectors on every cattle seat. Plus they use standard headphone plugs so you can use your own comfortable headphones rather than the cheap itchy airline ones.
KAL has a very low allowance for extra luggage at the basic skypass level (5 instead of 10kg) but last time I managed to smile my way down to only 3kg excess charge for a 34kg piece.
Anyway I avoided KAL for 7 years after they left me stranded for two days in Mumbay despite me having a reservation (I also avoided India for 5 years), but these days I like their service etc. |
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rkc76sf
Joined: 02 Nov 2008
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 5:55 pm Post subject: |
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Lee Myung Bak wrote: |
Caffeinated wrote: |
When I fly Korean Air I put my miles on my Delta card (both on SkyTeam but I accumulated Delta miles first) just to avoid having miles all over the place. When I fly Asiana I put those on my ANA card as both are part of Star Alliance. Only needed 17,000 miles plus $60 to fly to Incheon-Sapporo return for lunar new year using those miles on ANA. |
I'm with you. I use my Delta sky-miles number when flying on Korean Air. The miles transfer just fine and then you can land domestic US flight tickets on delta (except Hawaii) for 15,000 miles each way, 25,000 international. You can also use miles to purchase numerous electronics, books, magazines, etc. The perks are so much better. |
Most domestic flights are 25,000 miles. I use my Skypass for free flights in the U.S., no problem and it used 25,000 miles. I've done that a couple of times and also flown to Japan from Korea using free miles. It can be pretty selective though, seems that only certain times you can get those free miles or reserve it really early. I've added my wife and son and now we can all collect miles together. |
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daeguowl
Joined: 06 Aug 2009 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 9:36 pm Post subject: |
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pkang0202 wrote: |
I"m a Skypass Member. Never been in the lounge though. My expat platinum card gives me access to the lounge so I'll try it out when I fly this March.
I have about 60,000 miles and that gets me a free domestic ticket in Korea. So, after flying across the world a few times, and having a Skypass credit card, I've racked up enough miles to fly to Busan or Jeju from Seoul.
Awesome. |
A domestic free ticket should cost 10,000miles. 60,000 should get you anywhere except Europe or the Americas... |
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daeguowl
Joined: 06 Aug 2009 Location: Seoul
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 9:39 pm Post subject: |
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methdxman wrote: |
I have a Skypass card from Korean Air as well as Skypass mileage from Samung Card and my KEB Card. How do I go about combining all of these? |
Are all the Skypass numbers different? The easiest way is to have KAL amend your KAL skypass card to match one of the bank cards and then reissue the other bank card with the first one's Skypass number. |
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redaxe
Joined: 01 Dec 2008
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 10:32 pm Post subject: |
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I'm a Morning Calm member and I have 69,948 miles. 52 freaking miles short of a free international ticket. I feel like they must have done that on purpose to make me have to pay to fly with them again before getting my free ticket. |
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pkang0202

Joined: 09 Mar 2007
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 11:04 pm Post subject: |
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daeguowl wrote: |
pkang0202 wrote: |
I"m a Skypass Member. Never been in the lounge though. My expat platinum card gives me access to the lounge so I'll try it out when I fly this March.
I have about 60,000 miles and that gets me a free domestic ticket in Korea. So, after flying across the world a few times, and having a Skypass credit card, I've racked up enough miles to fly to Busan or Jeju from Seoul.
Awesome. |
A domestic free ticket should cost 10,000miles. 60,000 should get you anywhere except Europe or the Americas... |
You are right, domestic is 10,000 miles offpeak, and 15,000 peak.
Japan is 30,000 offpeak, 45,000 peak.
Europe/Oceania/North Am/Middle East 70,000 offpeak, and 105,000 peak
Southeast ASia is 40,000 offpeak, 60,000 peak. |
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madoka

Joined: 27 Mar 2008
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Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 11:05 pm Post subject: |
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redaxe wrote: |
I'm a Morning Calm member and I have 69,948 miles. 52 freaking miles short of a free international ticket. I feel like they must have done that on purpose to make me have to pay to fly with them again before getting my free ticket. |
Instead of feeling persecuted, just ship something back home with Hanjin Express and show your Korean Air Skypass. Boom! 100 miles. |
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