Six tools. Plain language. Real examples. If you have credit card points, frequent flyer miles, or just want to find a cheap business class seat, this page shows you exactly what each tool does and how to get the most out of it. No airline jargon, promise.
You probably have points scattered across credit cards (Amex, Chase, Capital One, Bilt) and maybe some airline miles too. There are dozens of ways to turn those points into a flight, and most of them are bad. This tool checks every reasonable option and tells you which one needs the fewest points and the smallest fees.
The same trip can cost 50,000 points one way and 250,000 points another way, just because of how different airlines price the same seat. Picking the right way to redeem can save you the equivalent of a whole separate trip.
You have 200,000 Amex points and 80,000 Chase points. You don't know which airline to send them to.
The tool ranks every viable airline. It will probably tell you to move points to Virgin Atlantic and book ANA business class for 47,500 points one way, instead of the obvious 110,000-point option.
You're already loyal to one airline. You want to know if it's worth using your miles directly or if there's a cheaper way.
The tool will show you that 22,500 KrisFlyer miles is the right number for that route, plus about $40 in taxes. You'll also see if a partner airline can do it cheaper.
Airlines only release a few business class seats per flight that you can book with miles instead of cash. Some dates have those seats. Most dates don't. This tool shows you a 90-day calendar with green squares for dates that have seats and red squares for dates that don't.
You can't pick a date first and then hope a seat exists. You have to flex your dates around what's actually open. Saving 100,000 points means nothing if there's no seat to use them on.
Pick the route, pick business class, hit search. You'll see a calendar showing every date with seats over the next 90 days.
Click any green date to see exactly how many seats are open, on which airline, for how many miles, plus a link to verify on the airline's own website before you transfer your points.
Use the carrier and program filters to narrow the calendar. Pick "SQ - Singapore Airlines" as the carrier and "Singapore KrisFlyer" as the program.
The calendar now shows only dates where Singapore Airlines specifically has KrisFlyer seats open. No noise from other programs you can't use.
You already paid cash for an economy or premium economy ticket and you want to fly business instead. Most airlines let you do this by spending miles plus sometimes a small cash fee. This tool tells you which programs allow it on your route, how many miles you'll need, and how much cash on top.
Upgrading with miles is often way cheaper than booking a business class ticket from scratch. If your work paid for the economy ticket, this is how you fly business for the cost of just the miles.
You picked SQ as the operating airline and KrisFlyer as the program. The tool tells you 25,500 miles one-way upgrades you to business, with no cash fee.
That's about 51,000 miles for a round-trip upgrade, which matches what regular travelers actually spend.
You picked EY as the carrier. The tool returns Etihad Guest at 44,000 miles plus $400 in cash.
You compare that to buying business class outright at maybe $3,500. The upgrade saves you about $3,100 in cash.
You're scrolling Google Flights or an airline website and you see a business class price. You don't know if it's a steal or a rip-off. Paste the route, cabin, and price into this tool and it tells you exactly how that fare compares to normal pricing on that route.
Business class fares can vary 5x or more for the same route depending on the day, the airline, and any sale that's running. Without a reference, you can't tell if $3,200 is amazing or terrible. This gives you that reference instantly.
You see a JAL flash sale. Paste the route and price.
The tool returns a "Steal" verdict because the typical fare is around $4,400. You're paying less than half. Book it.
You're tempted because it's a famous route. The tool grades it.
The result says "Premium" or "Expensive" because the median is around $3,000. You're paying way over. Wait for a sale or book a different airline.
The same long flight to your destination often costs much less if you start from a different city. Sometimes 20-50% less. This tool finds those alternate starting cities for you, and tells you which airlines fly that pattern.
Airlines price the same exact business class seat differently from different origins. Starting from Colombo instead of Bangalore, or Toronto instead of New York, can save you thousands of dollars on the long flight, even after buying a cheap connecting ticket to get to the cheaper city.
You search and the tool suggests Colombo as a starting city. Singapore Airlines and Emirates routinely sell the same business class seat for around $3,900 if you start from Colombo instead.
A short economy flight from Bangalore to Colombo is cheap. You save about $1,600 even after the position leg.
The tool suggests Dublin as a starting city. British Airways and American sell the same JFK route for about 18% less from Dublin.
You take a cheap Ryanair flight to Dublin, then connect onto your business class flight. You save several hundred dollars.
Banks and airlines run promotions where moving your points becomes 25% to 100% better for a few weeks at a time. There are usually a handful of these running at any moment. This tool lists every active promo and which credit card points it applies to, so you don't transfer points at the wrong time.
If Amex is running a 30% bonus to Virgin Atlantic this week, 50,000 of your Amex points become 65,000 Virgin miles. If you transfer the day before the promo starts, you waste those extra 15,000 miles. Timing is the easiest free upgrade in the points world.
You check the promo list and see Amex is running a 30% transfer bonus to Virgin Atlantic this week.
You transfer 100,000 Amex into 130,000 Virgin miles. Then you book ANA business class to Tokyo using Virgin's famous sweet spot. The 30% bonus saved you the equivalent of weeks of credit card spending.
The list always shows Bilt Rent Day at the top on the 1st. Pay your rent today through Bilt and earn double points.
You also see Flying Blue's monthly Promo Rewards drop, which always lands on the 1st. You browse the discounted routes and find a cheap business class redemption.
Travel pros throw around terms that mean nothing to normal humans. Here's a translation guide so the rest of the platform reads cleanly.
The app is free. No signup. Your point balances stay in your browser.
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