Goldenage61
Newbie
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2024
- Posts
- 7
I’m starting to think that the points-flights game is part “numerical” and part “psychological”.
For the newbie like me, it’s a really large part “psychological” – the way you approach the ‘game’.
I’ve been hoarding my Qantas points for years. The (very welcome) responses to my first post were ‘don’t hoard, go out and use them’, to achieve certainty to get business class, and then let the future take care of itself.
I guess this is pricing psychology that I’m about to talk about.
When you have a lifetime habit of buying economy seats on sale, the thought of paying the price tag for business class seems incredibly expensive. It seems wasteful.
But there are people on this forum who don’t seem to blink at a one-way airfare for $3,000 to $5,000. That’s $12,000-$20,000 for a return airfare, which is a lot of five-star hotel nights. And $20,000 over 15 years is $300,000. Nice house deposits for my kids.
(The middle ground is using points to achieve the above – but let’s leave that to the side for this exercise.)
The truth is that my wife and I could probably afford to pay business class for the next 10 to 15 years that we expect to travel, during retirement. Not easily. Not without batting an eyelid. But we could do it and not be on poverty row. And so could a lot of other people I know (like my rich in-laws that don’t).
So, my questions are: How do you think about this? What are the flaws in my thinking… from your perspective (no offence taken)?
For the newbie like me, it’s a really large part “psychological” – the way you approach the ‘game’.
I’ve been hoarding my Qantas points for years. The (very welcome) responses to my first post were ‘don’t hoard, go out and use them’, to achieve certainty to get business class, and then let the future take care of itself.
I guess this is pricing psychology that I’m about to talk about.
When you have a lifetime habit of buying economy seats on sale, the thought of paying the price tag for business class seems incredibly expensive. It seems wasteful.
But there are people on this forum who don’t seem to blink at a one-way airfare for $3,000 to $5,000. That’s $12,000-$20,000 for a return airfare, which is a lot of five-star hotel nights. And $20,000 over 15 years is $300,000. Nice house deposits for my kids.
(The middle ground is using points to achieve the above – but let’s leave that to the side for this exercise.)
The truth is that my wife and I could probably afford to pay business class for the next 10 to 15 years that we expect to travel, during retirement. Not easily. Not without batting an eyelid. But we could do it and not be on poverty row. And so could a lot of other people I know (like my rich in-laws that don’t).
So, my questions are: How do you think about this? What are the flaws in my thinking… from your perspective (no offence taken)?