logo
How changes to Aeroplan's point system will affect you

How changes to Aeroplan's point system will affect you

CTV Newsa day ago
Air Canada's loyalty program which allows members to earn and redeem points for travel, is changing how its points are earned next year.
Aeroplan, Air Canada's loyalty program that allows members to earn and redeem points for travel, is changing how its points are earned next year, making it easier for the higher paying customers to now earn more.
Air Canada said the new changes will let all members earn points on their flights based on the dollars they spend, instead of the distance travelled.
'Our new design aims to provide more for members who are most engaged – regardless of where they fly,' Air Canada's website read.
Barry Choi, a personal finance and loyalty points expert says three types of people will benefit the most from this change – those with an existing status, frequent short-haul business travellers and the retired individuals who spend heavily on their travels.
The new system aims to encourage higher spending and simplify status levels, according to Choi.
'Instead of earning points or miles or segment hints under the old system based on distance, it's now going to be based on spending,' he told CTVNews.ca on Thursday. 'So, some people will come out ahead, some people will come out below.'
Status Qualifying Credits: What are they?
Currently, Aeroplan members earn points based on a combination of elements – all of which can vary due to routes, class and cost, Choi explains.
Status qualifying segments, which are the number of flights flown.
Status qualifying miles, which is the distance flown.
Status qualifying dollars, which is the amount of money spent.
From Jan. 1, 2026, Aeroplan members will earn one point on each dollar spent on an Air Canada flight , excluding taxes and third-party fees. Elite members will be awarded more points based on their status tier.
In the coming year, Status Qualifying Credits (SQC) will replacement all older requirements. To earn status from next year, travellers will require 25,000 SQC for 25K status, 35,000 SQC for 35K status, and so forth.
'While each member's activity will determine their new status level, we expect many of our current Elite Members will benefit from the expanded ways to accumulate Status Qualifying Credits,' Air Canada said.
However, the basic economy ticket fares will not be eligible for SQC.
'If you want higher status with Air Canada, you're going to have to spend a lot more, also because the status qualifying credits are now capped on spending on the premium credit cards,' Choi said. 'It's not necessarily beneficial for you to keep spending on those cards.'
'Reward the people who spend the most'
It all comes down to revenue, Choi explains. The new system is designed aiming to encourage more spending from high-value customers using different kinds of incentives.
'People who have figured out this the old system and gamed it, those tricks have been eliminated,' Choi said. 'People will have to kind of figure out new ways (to get benefits), and it's going to be a lot harder when it's mostly based on spending.'
According to him, all major airline loyalty programs are using this kind of a revenue-based system to increase their profits and reduce the number of people with status, so those who have the benefits get an opportunity to use them.
'One argument may be made that there's too many people with status, which kind of dilutes the product,' Choi stated.
'They want to reward the people who spend the most, give them the most. And strictly from a loyalty standpoint, it makes sense.'
Meanwhile, Canadians are not just collecting loyalty points, they want to use them, said Amra Durakovic, head of communications, Flight Centre Travel Group.
'From seamless upgrades to straightforward redemption, they're looking for loyalty programs that make travel feel simple, rewarding and worthwhile,' Durakovic told CTVNews.ca.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's East Wing expansion requires a reimagined White House tour
Trump's East Wing expansion requires a reimagined White House tour

CTV News

time2 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Trump's East Wing expansion requires a reimagined White House tour

U.S. President Donald Trump's long-term vision to expand the White House's entertaining capacity is going to have short-term impacts on Americans seeking to visit the complex now. A residence, a workplace and a museum, the White House is the only home of a head of state in the world that is also open to the public most days. Hundreds of thousands of people enter the People's House for free tours each year, gaining firsthand access to the Blue Room, where President Grover Cleveland married Frances Folsom, the Red Room, where first lady Dolley Madison entertained, and the Diplomatic Reception Room, where President Franklin Delano Roosevelt held his radio 'fireside chats.' But that could stop next month when construction on Trump's 90,000-square-foot ballroom – which will overtake the current footprint of the East Wing – gets underway. Tour bookings have been halted temporarily, sources familiar with the matter tell CNN, because construction will directly impact the current tour screening process and entry point. With the exception of visiting heads of state, guests arriving at the White House for receptions, dinners and tours currently enter through Sherman Park, just behind the US Treasury building, and get screened by US Secret Service in a temporary visitor center. Multiple previous efforts over the last two decades to build a permanent structure have failed to get the necessary funding from Congress or the Department of Interior to proceed. Once visitors have passed through checkpoints and security, they enter through the East Wing, which was first constructed in 1902 and took its current structure during the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration. Trump's ballroom is expected to expand out beyond the site of the current East Wing, which is home to the Office of the First Lady, the Military Office, the Visitors Office and the Office of Legislative Affairs. East Wing In this December 2021 photo, people make their way through the East Colonnade of the East Wing of the White House in Washington, DC. Kent Nishimura/The Losvia CNN Newsource A spokesperson for first lady Melania Trump — whose office oversees tours — downplayed the disruption, saying only new tour bookings have been paused. 'There have been zero tour cancelations due to the addition of the State Ballroom. Instead, new tour bookings were paused proactively while a collaborative group of White House, U.S. Secret Service, National Park Service, and Executive Residence staff work to determine the best way to ensure public access to the White House as this project begins and for the duration of construction,' Nick Clemens said in a statement to CNN. 'The White House tour route has evolved over presidencies, and we look forward to near-term updates about the new State Ballroom. The President and First Lady remain committed to continuing the tradition of public access to the People's House in the present and for the future.' Officials are currently assessing how to move the screening process and likely truncate the tour while still capturing the essence of a White House visit during the construction. The scope of construction, a source familiar with the situation told CNN, is 'going to be invasive to what is the norm now [for tours]. They're going to have to put up temporary screening mechanisms. They're going to have to reroute the parameter of Secret Service protection.' In a reimagined route, the source said, visitors would miss entering by the first lady's office, walking through the East Colonnade past the family theater, and the area known as 'Booksellers Hall' where state dinner guests are received. But there will likely still be access to the home's most historic spaces: the State Floor, State Dining Room, Red Room, Blue Room, Green Room, East Room, Library, Vermeil Room, and Diplomatic Reception Room. The adjustments may also impact how many tickets are administered. 'The tours are not going to be canceled,' the source added. 'They're going to find a solution – but I think they're going to probably have to manage the numbers that come in and out now. There may have to be some changes.' White House Ballroom The White House Ballroom will be separated from the main building of the White House. McCrery Architects PLLC/The White House via CNN Newsource Construction is expected to get underway in September and is 'expected to be completed long before the end of President Trump's term,' according to a statement from the White House that included renderings of the new structure, which is nearly double the square footage of the main White House mansion. Trump has said that he, along with other donors, will privately fund the project, which is currently projected to cost US $200 million. Officials from the White House, Secret Service, National Park Service, and Executive Residence staff are working quickly to reassess the tour flow, another source familiar with the matter said, but changes to White House tours have taken years to enact in other circumstances. During the Biden administration, first lady Jill Biden unveiled a multimillion-dollar upgrade to the tour to make it more accessible and interactive, including new digital screens in the East Colonnade, a three-dimensional model of the White House's architectural transformations over the years, and tactile 'reader rails' with detailed information about each room on the tour. Those upgrades took more than two years to come to fruition in close coordination with the East Wing, the National Park Service, which oversees all improvements to the White House, the White House Historical Association, the White House curator's office, and executive residence staff.

Landlord says Ruby Liu's plan for Bay properties ‘defies commercial common sense'
Landlord says Ruby Liu's plan for Bay properties ‘defies commercial common sense'

CTV News

time2 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Landlord says Ruby Liu's plan for Bay properties ‘defies commercial common sense'

Billionaire Ruby Liu tours a former Hudson's Bay-owned Saks Off 5th department store after a "handover ceremony" where she received the keys to the space at Tsawwassen Mills shopping mall that she owns, in Tsawwassen, B.C., on Thursday, June 26, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck Cadillac Fairview says a plan from a B.C. billionaire hoping to take over 25 former Hudson's Bay leases 'defies commercial common sense' and thus, she should not be allowed to move in. In filings made with the Ontario Superior Court on Saturday, Cadillac Fairview says it is 'resolutely opposed' to Liu becoming a tenant at some of its malls because she has no detailed or credible business plan. The mall owner also says Liu, who owns three B.C. shopping centres herself, has no brand, experienced staff or track record in retail. Her business is 'an empty shell without any guarantee of financial means beyond Ms. Liu's bare assertion that she will keep it afloat,' said Rory MacLeod, Cadillac Fairview's executive vice-president of operations, in an affidavit. 'All of the indications are that (her company) will run out of money before the first store opens.' MacLeod's affidavit ups the ante in a battle that has been festering between Liu and landlords since the Bay announced in May that it had chosen her to buy 28 of its leases. The first three got court approval and were transferred in short order because they were at Liu's three malls. The remaining 25, however, have been much more fraught. Those leases cover some of the country's most prized retail space and came with cheaper rent and very attractive terms for the Bay, which filed for creditor protection under the weight of tremendous debt in March. For example, the Bay paid $1.3 million in annual rent for 152,420 square feet at Fairview Mall in Toronto, court documents show, which is a fraction of what non-anchor tenants would pay. Unable to get most landlords onside with a lease transfer, the Bay asked a court at the end of July to force property owners to accept Liu as a tenant. Liu and the Bay have until next Tuesday to respond to Cadillac Fairview's allegations. A judge will hear the matter at the end of the month. Liu has said she wants to turn the Bay stores she is hoping to buy into her own department store named after herself. She has repeatedly told The Canadian Press her stores will not just offer retail space but also dining, entertainment, kids play and recreation areas. MacLeod says she's also talked of outfitting Bay spaces with grocery stores, educational centres, senior's facilities, robotics and musical performances. Cadillac Fairview says leases at the six malls she wants from the company — Fairview Mall, Sherway Gardens, Masonville Place and Markville in Ontario, Market Mall and Chinook Centre in Alberta and Richmond Centre in B.C. — don't allow for anything other than a department store to be operated there. 'Despite her private assurances that she intends to respect the lease terms, Ms. Liu has consistently presented a different idea to the public, one that would not be compatible with the leases,' MacLeod said. His affidavit also raised concerns with the timelines and budget in her business plan. Liu has said she will be ready to open at least 20 stores within 180 days of obtaining leases and will spend $120 million on 'overdue' repairs to roofs, HVAC systems, washrooms, elevators and escalators and $135 million on initial inventory. Cadillac Fairview says her proposed timeline is 'entirely unrealistic' for a new brand, let alone an established one, and her plan is underfunded based on the high number of repairs properties need and expensive terms suppliers will require her to agree to. MacLeod estimates the stores will need more than $15.8 million in repairs before the end of 2026 to bring the leases into good standing. By 2027, Liu will need to spend another $5.7 million on repairs, not including taxes, permits or fees for expedited labour. Over the next 10 years, he estimates Liu will be required to spend at least $43.1 million on the Cadillac Fairview leases alone. He also took issue with her staffing estimations, which show she will need 1,800 employees to carry out her plan. If all 1,800 are sales staff that would only leave 64 people on the floor of each of her 28 stores. Macleod said such staffing levels are 'inadequate to support a countrywide chain' and 'inconsistent with a retail location even a fraction of that size.' 'With my decades of experience in commercial real estate, it is apparent to me and Cadillac Fairview that (Liu) will fail and again leave these stores vacant,' he said. This report by Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press, was first published Aug. 9, 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store