What airline/airline alliance for frequent travel between KTM and various airports in the US [closed]









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I'll be flying frequently between KTM, GVA and the US (primarily IAD/DCA and BOS but possibly some SFO/OAK/SJC) and then also some domestic travel in the US. I'd like to stick with one airline/alliance to optimize point collection and get status.



Based on the limited number of airlines that fly to KTM, my airline of choice would be Etihad however their partnerships are pretty weak so I think Qatar Airlines is my go to. As they're in oneworld, I'd be able to fly American Airlines for domestic travel in the states and continue to accumulate points as well.



If I go with this scenario, my questions are:



  • Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?

    • Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles

    • I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar

    • I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA


  • Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.

    • Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?

    • Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?


One more thing to consider: QA is fine for flying KTM <> GVA however GVA (and even ZRH) <> US is prohibitively expensive with oneworld flights.



That's my current state of affairs. If anyone has better suggestions other than the QA/AA combination I'm also all ears.










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closed as too broad by Giorgio, Mark Mayo Aug 20 '17 at 12:50


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • Are you flying USA to GVA to KTM? Or are you flying USA to GVA or USA to KTM? If the later you could look at Star Alliance as Thai flies to KTM.
    – user13044
    Aug 20 '17 at 9:09










  • EY has a partnership and codeshare agreement with AA, in the AAdvantange programme, you can earn miles on EY flights, even though EY is not a oneworld member.
    – Calchas
    Aug 20 '17 at 11:34










  • Tom: USA to GVA to KTM would generally be my pattern but also some direct KTM to USA. Good thinking about Thai. Calchas: Good thinking, I wasn't aware of this
    – captnolimar
    Aug 20 '17 at 15:57















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I'll be flying frequently between KTM, GVA and the US (primarily IAD/DCA and BOS but possibly some SFO/OAK/SJC) and then also some domestic travel in the US. I'd like to stick with one airline/alliance to optimize point collection and get status.



Based on the limited number of airlines that fly to KTM, my airline of choice would be Etihad however their partnerships are pretty weak so I think Qatar Airlines is my go to. As they're in oneworld, I'd be able to fly American Airlines for domestic travel in the states and continue to accumulate points as well.



If I go with this scenario, my questions are:



  • Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?

    • Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles

    • I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar

    • I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA


  • Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.

    • Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?

    • Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?


One more thing to consider: QA is fine for flying KTM <> GVA however GVA (and even ZRH) <> US is prohibitively expensive with oneworld flights.



That's my current state of affairs. If anyone has better suggestions other than the QA/AA combination I'm also all ears.










share|improve this question















closed as too broad by Giorgio, Mark Mayo Aug 20 '17 at 12:50


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • Are you flying USA to GVA to KTM? Or are you flying USA to GVA or USA to KTM? If the later you could look at Star Alliance as Thai flies to KTM.
    – user13044
    Aug 20 '17 at 9:09










  • EY has a partnership and codeshare agreement with AA, in the AAdvantange programme, you can earn miles on EY flights, even though EY is not a oneworld member.
    – Calchas
    Aug 20 '17 at 11:34










  • Tom: USA to GVA to KTM would generally be my pattern but also some direct KTM to USA. Good thinking about Thai. Calchas: Good thinking, I wasn't aware of this
    – captnolimar
    Aug 20 '17 at 15:57













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I'll be flying frequently between KTM, GVA and the US (primarily IAD/DCA and BOS but possibly some SFO/OAK/SJC) and then also some domestic travel in the US. I'd like to stick with one airline/alliance to optimize point collection and get status.



Based on the limited number of airlines that fly to KTM, my airline of choice would be Etihad however their partnerships are pretty weak so I think Qatar Airlines is my go to. As they're in oneworld, I'd be able to fly American Airlines for domestic travel in the states and continue to accumulate points as well.



If I go with this scenario, my questions are:



  • Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?

    • Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles

    • I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar

    • I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA


  • Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.

    • Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?

    • Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?


One more thing to consider: QA is fine for flying KTM <> GVA however GVA (and even ZRH) <> US is prohibitively expensive with oneworld flights.



That's my current state of affairs. If anyone has better suggestions other than the QA/AA combination I'm also all ears.










share|improve this question















I'll be flying frequently between KTM, GVA and the US (primarily IAD/DCA and BOS but possibly some SFO/OAK/SJC) and then also some domestic travel in the US. I'd like to stick with one airline/alliance to optimize point collection and get status.



Based on the limited number of airlines that fly to KTM, my airline of choice would be Etihad however their partnerships are pretty weak so I think Qatar Airlines is my go to. As they're in oneworld, I'd be able to fly American Airlines for domestic travel in the states and continue to accumulate points as well.



If I go with this scenario, my questions are:



  • Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?

    • Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles

    • I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar

    • I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA


  • Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.

    • Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?

    • Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?


One more thing to consider: QA is fine for flying KTM <> GVA however GVA (and even ZRH) <> US is prohibitively expensive with oneworld flights.



That's my current state of affairs. If anyone has better suggestions other than the QA/AA combination I'm also all ears.







air-travel qatar-airways oneworld kathmandu airline-alliances






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edited Aug 20 '17 at 8:12

























asked Aug 20 '17 at 8:02









captnolimar

12




12




closed as too broad by Giorgio, Mark Mayo Aug 20 '17 at 12:50


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as too broad by Giorgio, Mark Mayo Aug 20 '17 at 12:50


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • Are you flying USA to GVA to KTM? Or are you flying USA to GVA or USA to KTM? If the later you could look at Star Alliance as Thai flies to KTM.
    – user13044
    Aug 20 '17 at 9:09










  • EY has a partnership and codeshare agreement with AA, in the AAdvantange programme, you can earn miles on EY flights, even though EY is not a oneworld member.
    – Calchas
    Aug 20 '17 at 11:34










  • Tom: USA to GVA to KTM would generally be my pattern but also some direct KTM to USA. Good thinking about Thai. Calchas: Good thinking, I wasn't aware of this
    – captnolimar
    Aug 20 '17 at 15:57

















  • Are you flying USA to GVA to KTM? Or are you flying USA to GVA or USA to KTM? If the later you could look at Star Alliance as Thai flies to KTM.
    – user13044
    Aug 20 '17 at 9:09










  • EY has a partnership and codeshare agreement with AA, in the AAdvantange programme, you can earn miles on EY flights, even though EY is not a oneworld member.
    – Calchas
    Aug 20 '17 at 11:34










  • Tom: USA to GVA to KTM would generally be my pattern but also some direct KTM to USA. Good thinking about Thai. Calchas: Good thinking, I wasn't aware of this
    – captnolimar
    Aug 20 '17 at 15:57
















Are you flying USA to GVA to KTM? Or are you flying USA to GVA or USA to KTM? If the later you could look at Star Alliance as Thai flies to KTM.
– user13044
Aug 20 '17 at 9:09




Are you flying USA to GVA to KTM? Or are you flying USA to GVA or USA to KTM? If the later you could look at Star Alliance as Thai flies to KTM.
– user13044
Aug 20 '17 at 9:09












EY has a partnership and codeshare agreement with AA, in the AAdvantange programme, you can earn miles on EY flights, even though EY is not a oneworld member.
– Calchas
Aug 20 '17 at 11:34




EY has a partnership and codeshare agreement with AA, in the AAdvantange programme, you can earn miles on EY flights, even though EY is not a oneworld member.
– Calchas
Aug 20 '17 at 11:34












Tom: USA to GVA to KTM would generally be my pattern but also some direct KTM to USA. Good thinking about Thai. Calchas: Good thinking, I wasn't aware of this
– captnolimar
Aug 20 '17 at 15:57





Tom: USA to GVA to KTM would generally be my pattern but also some direct KTM to USA. Good thinking about Thai. Calchas: Good thinking, I wasn't aware of this
– captnolimar
Aug 20 '17 at 15:57











1 Answer
1






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up vote
1
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Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?




Unless you are earning a lot of points, it is usually better to put your points in one basket, particularly in the same alliance. Which one is better for you is a matter of personal circumstance. Consider also FlyerTalk's guide. As a rule of thumb, airlines treat their own elites best, so if you do most of your flying on AA, better to be an AAdvantage member than a Qatar Privilege club member. Naturally, there are exceptions.




Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles




This is a useful benefit, particularly if you are able to put your own travel expenses on the card and claim them back later.




I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar




Qatar Airways may have partnerships with American banks, although I did not see any on their webpage.




I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA




AA has a sour relationship with Qatar Airways, which always has the possibility of deteriorating further and affecting earn/burn rates between the two airlines.



AA does have a partnership with Etihad, including a codeshare on Middle Eastern flights. AAdvantage members can earn points and miles on EY-coded Etihad flights even though Etihad is not in oneworld. To my knowledge, no other oneworld programme offers this. I would look carefully at this option.




Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.




That is correct.




Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?




Note that the AAdvantage programme now has a concept of Elite Qualifying Miles, Elite Qualifying Segments, and Elite Qualifying Dollars. You need to earn the miles, plus the appropriate number of either EQSes or EQDs.



Miles you earn through spend with the cards are not elite-qualifying, but on some cards after you pass a certain annual spend threshold (either $20,000 or $40,000 depending on the card) you receive a large lump sum of Elite Qualifying Miles. Similarly you can obtain Elite Qualifying Dollars in a lump sum at a spend threshold, but mostly EQDs are earned through spending directly on AA tickets. You also earn EQDs in a different way when you buy qualifying flights on non-AA ticket stock. This is complicated. See also FlyerTalk's guide on EQDs.




Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?




No.






share|improve this answer



























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    1
    down vote














    Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?




    Unless you are earning a lot of points, it is usually better to put your points in one basket, particularly in the same alliance. Which one is better for you is a matter of personal circumstance. Consider also FlyerTalk's guide. As a rule of thumb, airlines treat their own elites best, so if you do most of your flying on AA, better to be an AAdvantage member than a Qatar Privilege club member. Naturally, there are exceptions.




    Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles




    This is a useful benefit, particularly if you are able to put your own travel expenses on the card and claim them back later.




    I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar




    Qatar Airways may have partnerships with American banks, although I did not see any on their webpage.




    I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA




    AA has a sour relationship with Qatar Airways, which always has the possibility of deteriorating further and affecting earn/burn rates between the two airlines.



    AA does have a partnership with Etihad, including a codeshare on Middle Eastern flights. AAdvantage members can earn points and miles on EY-coded Etihad flights even though Etihad is not in oneworld. To my knowledge, no other oneworld programme offers this. I would look carefully at this option.




    Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.




    That is correct.




    Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?




    Note that the AAdvantage programme now has a concept of Elite Qualifying Miles, Elite Qualifying Segments, and Elite Qualifying Dollars. You need to earn the miles, plus the appropriate number of either EQSes or EQDs.



    Miles you earn through spend with the cards are not elite-qualifying, but on some cards after you pass a certain annual spend threshold (either $20,000 or $40,000 depending on the card) you receive a large lump sum of Elite Qualifying Miles. Similarly you can obtain Elite Qualifying Dollars in a lump sum at a spend threshold, but mostly EQDs are earned through spending directly on AA tickets. You also earn EQDs in a different way when you buy qualifying flights on non-AA ticket stock. This is complicated. See also FlyerTalk's guide on EQDs.




    Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?




    No.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      1
      down vote














      Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?




      Unless you are earning a lot of points, it is usually better to put your points in one basket, particularly in the same alliance. Which one is better for you is a matter of personal circumstance. Consider also FlyerTalk's guide. As a rule of thumb, airlines treat their own elites best, so if you do most of your flying on AA, better to be an AAdvantage member than a Qatar Privilege club member. Naturally, there are exceptions.




      Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles




      This is a useful benefit, particularly if you are able to put your own travel expenses on the card and claim them back later.




      I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar




      Qatar Airways may have partnerships with American banks, although I did not see any on their webpage.




      I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA




      AA has a sour relationship with Qatar Airways, which always has the possibility of deteriorating further and affecting earn/burn rates between the two airlines.



      AA does have a partnership with Etihad, including a codeshare on Middle Eastern flights. AAdvantage members can earn points and miles on EY-coded Etihad flights even though Etihad is not in oneworld. To my knowledge, no other oneworld programme offers this. I would look carefully at this option.




      Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.




      That is correct.




      Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?




      Note that the AAdvantage programme now has a concept of Elite Qualifying Miles, Elite Qualifying Segments, and Elite Qualifying Dollars. You need to earn the miles, plus the appropriate number of either EQSes or EQDs.



      Miles you earn through spend with the cards are not elite-qualifying, but on some cards after you pass a certain annual spend threshold (either $20,000 or $40,000 depending on the card) you receive a large lump sum of Elite Qualifying Miles. Similarly you can obtain Elite Qualifying Dollars in a lump sum at a spend threshold, but mostly EQDs are earned through spending directly on AA tickets. You also earn EQDs in a different way when you buy qualifying flights on non-AA ticket stock. This is complicated. See also FlyerTalk's guide on EQDs.




      Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?




      No.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        1
        down vote










        up vote
        1
        down vote










        Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?




        Unless you are earning a lot of points, it is usually better to put your points in one basket, particularly in the same alliance. Which one is better for you is a matter of personal circumstance. Consider also FlyerTalk's guide. As a rule of thumb, airlines treat their own elites best, so if you do most of your flying on AA, better to be an AAdvantage member than a Qatar Privilege club member. Naturally, there are exceptions.




        Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles




        This is a useful benefit, particularly if you are able to put your own travel expenses on the card and claim them back later.




        I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar




        Qatar Airways may have partnerships with American banks, although I did not see any on their webpage.




        I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA




        AA has a sour relationship with Qatar Airways, which always has the possibility of deteriorating further and affecting earn/burn rates between the two airlines.



        AA does have a partnership with Etihad, including a codeshare on Middle Eastern flights. AAdvantage members can earn points and miles on EY-coded Etihad flights even though Etihad is not in oneworld. To my knowledge, no other oneworld programme offers this. I would look carefully at this option.




        Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.




        That is correct.




        Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?




        Note that the AAdvantage programme now has a concept of Elite Qualifying Miles, Elite Qualifying Segments, and Elite Qualifying Dollars. You need to earn the miles, plus the appropriate number of either EQSes or EQDs.



        Miles you earn through spend with the cards are not elite-qualifying, but on some cards after you pass a certain annual spend threshold (either $20,000 or $40,000 depending on the card) you receive a large lump sum of Elite Qualifying Miles. Similarly you can obtain Elite Qualifying Dollars in a lump sum at a spend threshold, but mostly EQDs are earned through spending directly on AA tickets. You also earn EQDs in a different way when you buy qualifying flights on non-AA ticket stock. This is complicated. See also FlyerTalk's guide on EQDs.




        Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?




        No.






        share|improve this answer













        Would it be more beneficial to park all of my points in QA or AA?




        Unless you are earning a lot of points, it is usually better to put your points in one basket, particularly in the same alliance. Which one is better for you is a matter of personal circumstance. Consider also FlyerTalk's guide. As a rule of thumb, airlines treat their own elites best, so if you do most of your flying on AA, better to be an AAdvantage member than a Qatar Privilege club member. Naturally, there are exceptions.




        Since I'm a US resident, the benefit of AA is that I could get their credit card to accrue more miles




        This is a useful benefit, particularly if you are able to put your own travel expenses on the card and claim them back later.




        I don't think I can get the QA credit card as I'm not a resident of Qatar




        Qatar Airways may have partnerships with American banks, although I did not see any on their webpage.




        I imagine that I'll be doing more flying with QA than AA




        AA has a sour relationship with Qatar Airways, which always has the possibility of deteriorating further and affecting earn/burn rates between the two airlines.



        AA does have a partnership with Etihad, including a codeshare on Middle Eastern flights. AAdvantage members can earn points and miles on EY-coded Etihad flights even though Etihad is not in oneworld. To my knowledge, no other oneworld programme offers this. I would look carefully at this option.




        Based on what I've been able to figure out, I can't directly get status with AA credit card.




        That is correct.




        Are miles that I accrue with my card status earning?




        Note that the AAdvantage programme now has a concept of Elite Qualifying Miles, Elite Qualifying Segments, and Elite Qualifying Dollars. You need to earn the miles, plus the appropriate number of either EQSes or EQDs.



        Miles you earn through spend with the cards are not elite-qualifying, but on some cards after you pass a certain annual spend threshold (either $20,000 or $40,000 depending on the card) you receive a large lump sum of Elite Qualifying Miles. Similarly you can obtain Elite Qualifying Dollars in a lump sum at a spend threshold, but mostly EQDs are earned through spending directly on AA tickets. You also earn EQDs in a different way when you buy qualifying flights on non-AA ticket stock. This is complicated. See also FlyerTalk's guide on EQDs.




        Do other perks of the credit card transfer to when I'd fly QA?




        No.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Aug 20 '17 at 11:56









        Calchas

        32.7k379133




        32.7k379133













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