Miles in the US in 2026 are a parallel financial operating system. Those who understand the logic fly JFK to Tokyo in business for $200 in taxes. Those who don't pay $9,500 and subsidize everyone else's flight. This is the complete map: the seven programs that matter (Chase Ultimate Rewards, Amex Membership Rewards, Capital One Venture, Citi ThankYou, AAdvantage, United MileagePlus, Delta SkyMiles), the cards that move the needle (Sapphire Reserve, Amex Platinum, Capital One Venture X), the advanced strategies (status match Hyatt to Marriott, hidden city via Skiplagged, open jaw, multi-leg awards), what each mile is actually worth in dollars, classic award routes, and the costly errors — starting with redeeming points for a vacuum cleaner. Hub crossing all 36 Voyspark articles on cards, lounges, IOF, status match and hacks.
22 min read
You're on a plane to Tokyo. The guy next to you paid $9,500 for that lie-flat economy-plus seat. You paid $200 in taxes and used 75,000 Aeroplan points you accumulated in 14 months without flying once. He looks at you with envy and asks "how?". You say "miles". He nods as if he understands, but he doesn't. He doesn't because nobody taught him. Miles in the US became a parallel financial system: those who operate, fly for a fraction; those who don't, pay rack rate and finance everyone else's flight.
This guide is the complete map. Not a "blog tip" or "deal of the month". The structure: how the system actually works, which programs matter, which cards move the needle in 2026, how to calculate whether a redemption is worth it, and the mistakes that cost thousands of dollars. Five thousand words so you walk out knowing how to operate.
What miles are (and why they exist)
TL;DRMiles are private currency issued by airline loyalty programs. You accumulate them on flights, on credit card spending linked to the program, on transfers from bank programs (Chase UR, Amex MR, Capital One, Citi ThankYou) and on targeted campaigns. The airline issues this currency because each redeemed mile is cheaper than a cash flight — an empty seat becomes customer loyalty.
Miles are private currency issued by airline loyalty programs. You accumulate them on flights, on credit card spend, on transfers from transferable bank currencies (Chase Ultimate Rewards, Amex Membership Rewards, Capital One Miles, Citi ThankYou Points) and on targeted promotions. The airline issues this currency because each redeemed mile is cheaper for them than a cash flight — a seat that would fly empty becomes customer loyalty.
Important technical distinction: a point is the unit you earn in a bank or card program (Chase UR, Amex MR, Capital One Miles). A mile is what sits inside the airline program (AAdvantage, MileagePlus, SkyMiles). You transfer points to turn them into miles. In everyday language everyone calls everything "miles", but operationally the point lives in the bank and the mile in the airline program. Those who understand this distinction never miss a transfer bonus.
The seven programs that matter in 2026
TL;DRChase Ultimate Rewards and Amex Membership Rewards are the two flexible point currencies that dominate the US market. AAdvantage, United MileagePlus and Delta SkyMiles are the three legacy airline programs. Capital One Venture and Citi ThankYou round out the elite. Master these and you control the entire American miles economy.
1. Chase Ultimate Rewards (UR)
The single most valuable points currency in America. Earned on Chase Sapphire Preferred ($95/yr, 60-80k signup bonus), Sapphire Reserve ($550/yr, 60-80k bonus), Freedom Unlimited (no fee, 1.5x everything) and Ink Business cards. UR transfers 1:1 to United MileagePlus, Hyatt, Air Canada Aeroplan, British Airways Avios, Air France-KLM Flying Blue, Virgin Atlantic, Singapore KrisFlyer and more. Hyatt transfers are the holy grail: $0.025 cash value per UR point easily. Points don't expire as long as you hold any UR-earning card.
2. American Express Membership Rewards (MR)
The number-two transferable currency, often number-one for international business class. Earned on Amex Gold ($325/yr, 4x dining/groceries), Platinum ($695/yr, 5x airfare/hotels), Green and Business cards. MR transfers to Delta SkyMiles, ANA Mileage Club, Air Canada Aeroplan, British Airways Avios, Flying Blue, Singapore KrisFlyer, Hilton (5:1 ratio, weak), Marriott Bonvoy (1:1). ANA transfers are the unicorn for Asia premium cabins. Transfer bonuses 25-40% hit 6-10 times a year.
3. Capital One Venture / Venture X
The simplicity king. Venture X ($395/yr, 75k-100k signup, $300 Cap One Travel credit) earns 2x on everything, transfers 1:1 to most of the same partners as Chase and Amex (Air Canada Aeroplan, Flying Blue, Avianca LifeMiles, Turkish Miles&Smiles, Etihad Guest). No category bonuses to track — just spend and earn. Best card for someone who wants miles without obsessing about which category gets 4x.
4. Citi ThankYou Points (TYP)
The forgotten powerhouse. Earned on Citi Premier ($95/yr, 60-80k signup, 3x dining/groceries/gas/travel) and Prestige. Transfers to Avianca LifeMiles, Turkish Miles&Smiles, JetBlue TrueBlue, Flying Blue, Singapore KrisFlyer, Cathay Asia Miles. Turkish Miles&Smiles is the cheat code for Star Alliance awards (45,000 miles JFK-Europe business class). Underrated in 2026 because Citi cut some partners in 2023, but still elite for the right user.
5. American AAdvantage
The largest airline loyalty program in the world by miles outstanding. Earned via Citi AAdvantage cards, Barclays AAdvantage, direct flights on AA and Oneworld partners (Qatar, British Airways, Cathay, Iberia, Japan Airlines, Qantas, Finnair). Miles expire after 24 months of inactivity — any earning or redeeming activity (even 1 mile) resets the clock. Best use: Cathay Pacific business class to Hong Kong (70,000 miles), Qatar Qsuite to Doha (70,000 miles). Loyalty Points program (introduced 2022) made elite status based on spend, not flights.
6. United MileagePlus
The Star Alliance powerhouse for Americans. Earned via Chase UR transfers, Chase United cards (Explorer $0 first year, Club Infinite $525), direct flights on UA and Star Alliance partners (Lufthansa, Singapore, ANA, Air Canada, Turkish, Avianca, EVA Air, Asiana). Miles never expire. Best use: Polaris business class to Asia and Europe (60-88k saver), partner awards on ANA (90k roundtrip to Japan in business — exceptional value).
7. Delta SkyMiles
The SkyTeam giant. Earned via Amex MR transfers (1:1), Amex Delta cards ($99 Gold to $650 Reserve), direct flights on DL and SkyTeam partners (Air France, KLM, Korean Air, Virgin Atlantic, ITA). Miles never expire. Reputation for being "SkyPesos" because of dynamic pricing — but Virgin Atlantic partner awards (75k one-way to Tokyo in business) and short-haul to Caribbean still deliver. Skyclub access via Reserve card is the best domestic lounge experience in America.

About the author
Curadoria Voyspark
2 years in the Voyspark editorial team
Time editorial da Voyspark — escritores, repórteres, fotógrafos e fixers em Lisboa, Tóquio, Nova York, Cidade do México e Marrakech. Coletivo. Sem voz corporativa. Cada peça com checagem cruzada por um editor regional e um chef ou curador local.
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