Transfer Amex Points To JetBlue TrueBlue With 25% Bonus

Transfer Amex Points To JetBlue TrueBlue With 25% Bonus

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Amex Membership Rewards has just rolled out its newest points transfer bonus, which some members might find to be valuable.

Amex offering 25% JetBlue TrueBlue transfer bonus

Between October 10 and November 30, 2023, you can receive a 25% bonus when you transfer Amex Membership Rewards points to JetBlue TrueBlue. Points generally transfer from Amex to JetBlue at a 250:200 ratio, so during this promotion, they’d transfer at a 250:250 (or 1:1) ratio.

Transfer Amex points to TrueBlue with a 25% bonus

This promotion is being offered on Amex’s end (in the United States), and is hard coded into the transfer ratio, meaning you should see the bonus at the time that you make the transfer. You can take advantage of this offer an unlimited number of times, though you’re limited to transferring 999,999 points per transaction (not that this is a limit that will impact many people).

There are lots of fantastic cards for earning Amex Membership Rewards pointsTransfers from Amex to TrueBlue are generally instant. Keep in mind that transfers from Amex to US frequent flyer programs are subjected to a federal excise tax of 0.06 cents per transferred point, up to a maximum of $99. In other words, transferring 100,000 points would cost $60.

JetBlue Airbus A321neo

Should you transfer Amex points to JetBlue TrueBlue?

JetBlue TrueBlue is a revenue based frequent flyer program, meaning the cost of an award ticket varies based on how much a ticket would cost in cash. The thing is, the pricing isn’t totally linear, so it’s not that one point consistently gets you the same amount toward the cost of a ticket.

I find that you can usually get somewhere around 1.4 cents of airfare per TrueBlue point. Personally I value JetBlue TrueBlue points at 1.3 cents each, to account for the points you’re forgoing when you redeem points rather than booking a revenue fare.

So in other words, with this promotion you could be looking at redeeming Amex points toward JetBlue tickets at roughly the rate of 1.4 cents per point.

One way to get even more value is if you have the JetBlue Plus Card. That’s because the card offers a 10% refund on all redeemed points, which helps stretch your points even further. So assuming you have the card, you should be able to get over 1.5 cents of value per Membership Rewards point, which is pretty good.

Now, personally this still wouldn’t be my preferred way to redeem Amex points, given all the great ways there are to use them for international tickets in premium cabins.

Redeem TrueBlue points toward JetBlue airfare

Bottom line

Through November 30, 2023, Amex Membership Rewards is offering a 25% bonus when you transfer points to JetBlue TrueBlue, meaning you can transfer points at a 1:1 ratio. If you fly JetBlue frequently, this could be a way to get solid value with your Amex points, better than most other ways to cash out these points. The value is even better if you have a co-branded JetBlue card.

However, personally this still wouldn’t be my preferred way to redeem Amex points.

Do you plan on taking advantage of Amex’s 25% transfer bonus to JetBlue?

Conversations (6)
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  1. Fox Guest

    For JetBlue, I prefer to book through the Chase Travel Portal using UR at 1.5 cents each and still earn JetBlue points. I did this on a Mint sale to LHR and spent way fewer points than booking at JetBlue. This is most effective on lower priced flights.

    1. MM Guest

      What happens if you need to cancel or change the Jetblue trip booked with UR points on the Chase Travel Portal?

    2. mgrappy New Member

      In that situation, you have to call the Chase travel number, explain repeatedly that you want to change the flight and not cancel it, then finally get transferred to a "specialist" after 20 minutes of repeated explanations and holds. The specialist then can make any change for you pretty easily, and you just pay any fare difference in $$ (and can't use points to cover that difference).

  2. Scott Guest

    Another reminder that 1. Idk why the standard transfer rate isn't just 1:1 and 2. Why doesn't amex just eat the excise tax like every other bank program? It's IMHO kinda tacky and cheap that they charge it for domestic carriers.

    1. henare Diamond

      They used to eat this cost. I guess they've figured out that they don't have to do this anymore ...

    2. Joiseph Guest

      Sites like this over value Amex points compared to other systems because they don't take this 6% tax into account.

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The comments on this page have not been provided, reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any advertiser, and it is not an advertiser's responsibility to ensure posts and/or questions are answered.

Joiseph Guest

Sites like this over value Amex points compared to other systems because they don't take this 6% tax into account.

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mgrappy New Member

In that situation, you have to call the Chase travel number, explain repeatedly that you want to change the flight and not cancel it, then finally get transferred to a "specialist" after 20 minutes of repeated explanations and holds. The specialist then can make any change for you pretty easily, and you just pay any fare difference in $$ (and can't use points to cover that difference).

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henare Diamond

They used to eat this cost. I guess they've figured out that they don't have to do this anymore ...

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