Quantcast
Channel: Frequent Miler
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2330

Taking Spirit for a spin to test the value of the Savers Club and Free Spirit points

$
0
0

I recently flew the first half of a round trip on Spirit Airlines, which gave me a chance to give a few aspects of the Spirit Airlines Free Spirit and Saver$ Club experience a spin, including the discount for booking at the airport vs the Savers Club and both of those as compared against using Spirit Free Spirit points to book. I don’t often think of Spirit or its programs, but this experience left me thinking that I really ought to consider using Spirit more often….while simultaneously teaching me now to get not just low value, but negative value from their points.

My experience not using my Savers Club discount

At the time of writing, the Spirit “Saver$” club costs $69.95 per year and provides discounts on airfare, “bags, seats, and other options such as shortcut security, and shortcut boarding”. Based on my handful of searches, it looks like the per-passenger discount can be as little as $8, though sometimes it can be $20-$30 per passenger. The nice thing is that only one family member needs to join the Saver$ Club. So long as a Savers Club member is the primary passenger on the itinerary, other passengers on the same itinerary also get the discount.

At the holidays, the kids got sick and we had to change plans last-minute. Spirit ended up being our best option to get to see family when booking at the last minute and buying the $69.95 Savers Club membership saved me a little bit on that specific trip (it wasn’t much better than break-even, but it wasn’t worse). At the time, i figured that if I used the discount one more time over the course of the year, I’d be ahead of the game.

I thought the time had come for me to get ahead when I ended up making sort of last-minute plans to visit family in Myrtle Beach this week and it turned out that buying a round trip Spirit flight from Hartford, CT to Myrle Beach was a better option than award tickets with other airlines out of my primary airport. We don’t live close to Hartford, but the price was right and the flights were nonstop (and there is a tiny Escape lounge in the Hartford airport that made for a free lunch).

However, speaking of the price, you might be surprised to hear that I didn’t make use of the Savers Club discount on this trip.

That’s because I have family in Myrtle Beach and I remembered that several low-cost airlines, including Spirit, charge less for tickets purchased at the airport than those purchased online (One Mile at a Time has more detail about why this is the case). Specifically, there is a “passenger usage fee” of about $23 each way that they charge when booking online, but not when booking at the airport. Since it wasn’t terribly inconvenient for a family member in Myrtle Beach to take a ride to the airport, I sent them to try buying tickets at the airport ticket counter.

At the time when I made that call, I was assuming that my Savers Club discount would stack with the $23 off in each direction for booking at the airport. It was only as my family member was on the way to the airport that I discovered that the only way to get the Savers Club discount is to book online.

In my case, it was a situation like this (these numbers aren’t exact, but were approximately the deal):

  • Full price for the flights I wanted was about $60 each way
  • Savers Club fares were about $49 each way
  • Buying at the airport cost about $37 each way ($23 off of the $60 price tag without the Savers Club)

As you can see, buying at the airport saved me about $12 per passenger each way. For a family of four, that meant that we saved about $92 round trip over what we would have paid with the Savers Club membership. If I didn’t happen to already have the Savers Club membership, then we would have saved $184 round trip by purchasing at the airport over the “full price” cost online.

Obviously the value of booking at the airport varies with how much you’re saving from the Savers Club. If the Savers Club discount were larger, the purchase-at-the-airport-and-avoid-the-passenger-usage-fee trick likely still would have saved us a few bucks, but potentially only about $5 over the Saver$ Club fare. I might not sign up for the hassle of driving to the airport and parking at the airport to save $5 per passenger, but YMMV.

However, keep in mind that sometimes the Savers Club discount will be larger than the discount for booking at the airport. For instance, I looked up New York to St Martin and found that on a randomly-selected day, the Savers Club fare would save $29 over the “standard” price.

In that case, booking the Savers Club fare online for $107 would be cheaper than buying the standard price at the airport (which I’d expect would be $113). In that case, the Savers Club would save $6 per passenger over airport booking (on top of saving you the trip to the airport).

As for the savings on baggage and seat selection, don’t get too excited. You’ll save a whopping $1 on both bags (checked or carry-on) or $1 on seat selection as a Savers Club member. Buying a bundle that included some combination of baggage and seat selection would cost $3 less per passenger as a Savers Club member. Over a family of four, that adds up to something on a round trip, but not a lot.

In my opinion, the moral of the story is that whether or not the Savers Club is a good deal probably depends on how close you live to the airport and what type of tickets you’re likely to book. If it’s really easy for you to go the airport to buy tickets, then you’ll probably come out ahead buying your tickets at the airport as opposed to joining the Savers Club. That’s also more likely to be true if you’re more likely to book very cheap fares where the Savers Club discount is likely to be less than $23. On the other hand, if it isn’t convenient to get to the airport ticket counter, or if you’re mostly flying Spirit on more expensive routes, then you can probably come close enough to replicating or even exceeding the buy-at-the-airport discount with a Savers Club membership. The nice thing is that the cost to buy a Savers Club membership isn’t outrageous, so it could probably pay for itself in one use.

A note regarding the hassle involved with buying tickets at the airport: I landed in Myrtle Beach at 4pm and got to the ticket counter at about 4:30pm looking to buy a ticket for a separate trip. I was surprised to find this sign indicating that they only sell tickets between 8am and 4pm from Monday through Friday. My wife inquired as to whether 4pm was a firm deadline. I wasn’t surprised when they confirmed that it was.

My experience trying to use Free Spirit points

Interestingly, the answer to the question “How much are Spirit points worth?” can vary from “literally nothing” to “almost nothing” to “quite a bit” depending on three things:

  • Whether you book more than 28 days in advance or less than 28 days in advance
  • Whether or not you have the Free Spirit Mastercard or Spirit Elite status
  • Whether you have a Saver$ Club membership

As you’ll see in a second, the first two bullet points matters far more than the third, but depending on your answers you may be surprised about the value of Spirit points — whether that’s an amusement sort of surprise at how laughably ridiculous Spirit points are or a genuinely impressed sort of surprised at just how well you can do with them is a matter of perspective.

I needed to book another Spirit flight for a different upcoming trip and I figured that this might be a perfect opportunity to use the Free Spirit points that I’ve picked up over my couple of Spirit trips within the past year. It initially looked like I would get excellent value for points. The flight I wanted to book would cost either $47 with my Savers Club membership or $66 without.

Using Free Spirit points, the same flight would cost 3,500 points with a Savers Club membership or 5,000 points without.

That initially looked great. As compared to cash rates, those rates looked akin to getting ~1.3c per point. That looked awesome at first glance.

Then, I clicked through to book one of those flights — and I had a good laugh when a fare that would cost me $47 to book outright as a Savers Club member would alternatively cost 3,500 points and $55.60 to book as an award.

In other words, using points would cost me ~$8 more than not using points. In this scenario, points would actually be worth around -0.2c per point. Yes, that’s right — I’d be getting negative two tenths of a cent per point using Spirit points.

If I weren’t a Savers Club member, I’d be looking at spending 5,000 points plus $55.60 instead of paying $66, so the five thousand points would be saving me about $11 for a value of about 0.2c per point — that’s positive, but not very positive.

However, the $50 redemption fee is not unavoidable. In this case, I was looking at a flight that will occur within the next month. That $50 redemption fee only applies to “close-in” bookings:

  • Departures within 0-28 days: $50 booking fee to use Free Spirit points
  • Departures 28 days or more in advance: $0 booking fee to use Free Spirit points

My problem here was not planning far enough in advance. If I booked the same route on a day with the same cash prices more than 28 days in advance, the award prices were actually a little bit less:

In that case, booking the Savers Club fare would just cost the 3,000 points and $5.60.

In that case, the Savers Club cash fare was listed at $47 or the award would cost 3,000 points and $5.60. In that scenario, the value of Spirit points is considerably higher:

  • $47 – $5.60 = $41.40 / 3,000 points = 1.38c per point

That is far more value per point! In fact, between our tickets and the cost of our bags and seat selection for the one-way flight to Myrtle Beach, earned a total of about 4,900 points, which would be a solid rebate if I were able to use it at a value of 1.38c per point.

As you can see, the value of Spirit points depends highly on whether or not you pay the $50 redemption fee. There are a couple of other ways to avoid that $50 redemption fee:

  • Free Spirit Mastercard holders pay no award redemption fees
  • Free Spirit Silver and Gold members pay no award redemption fees

In other words, if I were a cardholder or an elite member, I’d avoid the $50 redemption fee and get solidly decent value for points even for my close-in booking:

  • $47 – $5.60 = $41.40 / 3500 = 1.18c per point

That’s a little less value per point for the close-in booking since Spirit wants an additional 500 points for that one, but that’s still far better than the negative two tenths of a cent per point that I’d get as a non-cardholder or elite member booking within 28 days of departure.

Spirit no longer charges change or cancellation fees. I don’t know whether the old United Airlines trick of booking a flight that’s more than 28 days in advance and then changing to a flight within 30 days of departure would work here, though I suspect that Spirit might force a cancellation and rebooking that wouldn’t help you avoid the fee (but I don’t know).

Value for points varied a bit on other flights I checked, but ran around the 1.3-1.5cpp on many routes. For example, that itinerary to St Martin would yield 1.3-1.45cpp depending on whether you’re a Savers Club member or not.

The key issue is that you’ll either need to plan more than 28 days in advance or have the credit card or elite status, otherwise the $50 redemption fee really kills the value of the points.

It’s worth noting that cardholders and elite members can also create a points pool, so that’s another benefit of having one or another. Between our round trip at the holidays and the first half of our current trip, my family of four has earned almost 17,000 Free Spirit points in total. If and when I want to use those points, I would probably want to consider either getting the credit card or seeing if there is a match to elite status available in order to use all of the points on a single booking. I did recently take note of an increased offer on the credit card, but I won’t be hopping on it unless and until I have a future use for the points. Still, if you eliminate the booking fees, the welcome offer on the card could yield nearly as much as you’ll spend to earn the offer.

Bottom line

I enjoyed a mini dive into the Spirit Savers Club and Free Spirit points (and it makes me curious about a deeper dive in the future!). We don’t often have call to cover Spirit’s programs. For me, that’s simply because Spirit doesn’t serve my home airport, so it is rarely convenient for me to fly Spirit (I have to drive nearly 3 hours each way to the closest airports served by Spirit, so that’s not often my preference when traveling domestically). However, each time I’ve flown Spirit over the past couple of years, I’ve been happy enough with the in-flight experience. If I lived closer to an airport served by Spirit, I think I’d probably consider maintaining a Savers Club membership (rather than driving to the airport each time I wanted to buy a ticket) and I’d probably find Spirit points more valuable. As things stand, Spirit is more likely to come into my plans as a last-minute option when fares and awards on other airlines are expensive. Through that lens, Spirit points aren’t terribly valuable for me since I’d get hit with the $50 close-in booking fee. However, knowing that much will at least have me thinking farther in advance the next time that Spirit points might be useful — and maybe one of these days I’ll consider opening the Spirit Mastercard to pool my family’s points and avoid the close-in fee.

The post Taking Spirit for a spin to test the value of the Savers Club and Free Spirit points appeared first on Frequent Miler. Frequent Miler may receive compensation from CHASE. American Express, Capital One, or other partners.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2330

Trending Articles