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Can my husband and I have the same frequent flyer number?

Can someone else use your frequent flyer number? Absolutely not, because your number is unique to you. They can't make a reservation with your number because the name will not match the number in the airlines records.



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Can I combine my Accounts with anyone else? You may transfer Miles and even merge your profile with another Collector Account in order to pool your collecting efforts and the Miles existing currently in your AIR MILES Cash and Dream Accounts.

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Mileage can only be credited to the SkyMiles Member whose name appears on the credit card used for the reservation. First and last name on credit card must match with name on SkyMiles account provided. SkyMiles number should be provided at the time of booking. Only one SkyMiles number can be provided per booking.

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The rules of most frequent flyer programs are that in order to collect points the name on the ticket and the name on the frequent flyer account must match. And nobody in this day and age is getting on an airplane with a ticket that doesn't match their identification.

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Membership numbers are nontransferable. Only one person may be enrolled per SkyMiles account.

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I signed up for Delta skymiles and added my flight, do I need to sign up for a skymiles account for each of us? Or can I add my wife and kids flights to my account? Everyone needs their own account. no charge for the card first year--cancel at the end.

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Thus, the name on the frequent flyer account and the name on the ticket must match exactly. You can't put your loyalty number on someone else's ticket to receive miles for a flight where you weren't the passenger. Even if you paid for the ticket, only the passenger earns miles from the flight.

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The FFN is critical to tracking activity, ensuring members receive the appropriate mileage or point credit for their flights, and rewards redemption. Members typically provide their FFN when booking or checking in for flights, either online or at the airport.

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You can join multiple member airline frequent flyer programmes if you wish, but they are each managed separately, so you cannot transfer miles or points between them or combine them into one.

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You can register your child with Miles & More from the age of 2 years and above. Airlines generally allocate children their own seat from that age which entitles them to earn miles.

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Only the person who flies, stays or rents will earn the miles. So, if you paid for someone's ticket, the traveler would earn the miles. No. You can only earn credit in one loyalty program at a time.

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Airline miles are divisible property Airline miles are valuable to travelers and can be redeemed for flights, hotel accommodations, car rentals, and other perks. The miles accumulated by you or your spouse during your marriage are considered divisible marital property, even if they are only in one spouse's name.

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Once a hacker has broken into your account, they can quickly use your loyalty points to make travel arrangements in someone else's name, sell them on the dark web, or convert them into gift cards—all before you've noticed anything fishy.

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If you're a very frequent flyer and you're travelling mostly on business, on flights you haven't paid for out of your own pocket, then yes, it's worth it as you'll earn free upgrades once you've built up your status. For everyone else, it's simply not the real deal.

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Miles and points earned on co-branded hotel and airline travel rewards cards do expire usually if you are not active in redeeming them for 12 to 24 months, depending on the terms of the hotel or airline loyalty program.

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Most frequent flyer programs only allow you to credit mileage to the account of the person flying. Inputting the same frequent flyer number for two different passengers wouldn't work, because the name on the account has to match the name on the ticket.

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