Sooo... now that I have enough CitiRewards points I sent through a price match request for my already-ticketed J Classic Award MEL-xSYD-LAX;DFW-xBNE-MEL.
Just received a call from a lovely lady on the Citi Travel team (actually the same person I've spoken with from there before) and she confirmed they can price match what I sent them. Confirmed I'd be on exactly the same QF flights, gave me a quote for the all-up cost, etc.
I want to do it, but one thing is stopping me: they said I need to cancel the J Classic Award before Citi can book the price-matched flight (they reckon QF will cancel both tickets if I end up with two tickets in my name on the same flights). Despite their assurances about being able to price-match this flight, this makes me a little nervous given I'm stepping into unknown territory here... I'd much rather have the Citi Travel price-matched ticket in my "hands" before I cancel the Classic Award.
What does everyone think? Should I do it?
OK, so I sucked it up and pulled the trigger on this today - and everything appears to have worked as planned
Here's what I achieved:
Original Booking (now cancelled):
- MEL-xSYD-LAX;DFW-xBNE-MEL in J on QF metal
- Booked into U class - Classic Award, only possible due to QF Premium Desk releasing a J seat for me on both SYD-LAX (QF11) and DFW-BNE (QF8).
- Total cost of 208,000 QFF points and $687.83 in taxes & surcharges
Citi Travel Price-Matched Booking:
- Exactly the same flights
- Booked into C class, which from what the Citi Travel TA told me sounds like it's fully flexible (each price-matched booking will be different though - they book cheapest available class in the same cabin).
- Total cost of 208,000 CitiRewards points and $1,034.11 in taxes and surcharges ($883.05 tax + $90 booking fee + $2,080 for points at 1c/pt + $61.06 CC surcharge = $3,114.11, minus $2,080 cashback in 2 weeks).
- You could technically say this also cost me 5,000 QFF points due to the cancellation fee on the Classic Award.
To break that down, for an additional cost of $346.28 I'm gaining:
- a small benefit on the raw points cost, as I'd value 208,000 Select CitiRewards points at a bit less than 208,000 QFF points
- 42,904 QFF points earned on the flights
- 460 SC, which will actually be doubled to 920 SC as I got the double SC offer and this new fare is both booked and flown during the offer period. The SCs will also mean I don't need to do a previously planned one-day SC run to retain WP, so that saves me another 48,000 points and roughly $300.
So, all up, I'm "gaining" around 100,000 QFF points and 920 SC for less than $100 (after taking into account points and money saved on SC run)
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I think between my experience above and the recent experiences posted by others we can now say that Citi Travel Price Match:
1) Makes the Select and Signature cards effectively 2 / 1.5 QFF point per dollar cards
2) Allows the WPs amongst us to turn a premium-desk-released award seat into the equivalent of a cheap ASA
Pretty brilliant I reckon! The process of booking the price-matched fare was super-simple too - all done in 5 minutes over the phone (with PNR provided immediately - took comfort from that!) and the e-Ticket arriving via e-mail within 15 minutes.
Finally, a few other tidbits of info that some may find useful / interesting:
- Once I spoke to Qantas it turned out that you won't actually need to cancel the award booking
before making the Citi Travel booking - there
is duplicate-booking checking in their system and having a duplicate booking can result in both being cancelled, but the checking is only run once a day (overnight). So, as long as you cancel the Classic Award
on the same day that you make the Citi Travel booking you will be fine, even if you make the Citi Travel booking before cancelling the Classic Award.
- You can use CitiRewards points at 1pt = 1 cent to cover the $90 booking fee via Citi Travel if you wish - but you can't use CitiRewards points to cover the taxes & surcharges, nor the CC surcharge.
- One of the e-mails Citi Travel send you after booking shows the
actual cost of the fare booked, with Citibank picking up the difference between this amount and what you're actually charged (plus they deduct points, of course). In the case of my fare above the actual cost was an eye-watering $17,038.11, meaning Citibank are picking up a $16,004.00 tab for 208,000 CitiRewards points - or ~7.7c/pt. No idea how this is commercially viable for them... but good for us!