How Emirates Skywards My Family Works — Including the Major Limitations You Need to Know How Emirates Skywards My Family Works — Including the Major Limitations You Need to Know

How Emirates Skywards My Family Works — Including the Major Limitations You Need to Know

AwardWallet receives compensation from advertising partners for links on the blog. The opinions expressed here are our own and have not been reviewed, provided, or approved by any bank advertiser. Here's our complete list of Advertisers.

Emirates makes it easy for families to combine their Skywards miles through its My Family account. By pooling miles into one shared account, you can reach award redemptions or upgrades faster — and avoid having small, unused balances sitting in multiple accounts.

The program is simple to set up, has clear eligibility rules, and lets you start pooling right away. However, there are a few restrictions on which miles you can combine and who can join your family group. Here’s how the Emirates My Family account works, who it’s best for, and how to decide if you should set one up.

Emirates Skywards Program Details

Emirates Skywards grants travelers elite status for their loyalty to the airline. Skywards miles are earned by flying Emirates, flydubai, and partner airlines, as well as through eligible hotel stays, car rentals, and retail purchases. The program is free to join.

The four elite status tiers of Emirates Skywards are Blue, Silver, Gold, and Platinum. You earn higher status by earning tier miles. Tier benefits include free seat selection, priority check-in at Dubai International Airport (DXB), and more.

an Emirates A380 taking off
Credit: Fabian Joy/Unsplash

Emirates Skywards Blue is complimentary for joining the program. With this tier, you can use Skywards miles to upgrade your seat at check-in or onboard, get waitlist priority, and unlimited onboard messaging. Emirates Skywards Silver is earned after earning 25,000 Tier Miles or taking 25 flights. Emirates Gold requires 50,000 Tier Miles or 50 flights, while Emirates Platinum requires 150,000 Tier Miles and at least one qualifying flight in first or business class.

Tier Miles can also be earned by spending with an Emirates Skywards co-branded credit card like the Emirates Skywards Rewards World Elite Mastercard® or Emirates Skywards Premium World Elite Mastercard®.

Emirates Family Account Program

Within the Emirates Skywards program is the Emirates My Family Account, which is a way for families to pool their Skywards miles together to redeem for flights. To start a My Family account, you must be at least 18 years old and already have a Skywards account. Unlike other airline pooling programs, only immediate family members — including a domestic helper — can be added to a My Family account.

The following relations of the family head can join the family account:

  • Spouse or domestic partner
  • Child or stepchild
  • Parent, parents-in-law, or stepparents
  • Sibling
  • Grandchild
  • Domestic helper

The person who creates the family account is designated as the family head and can invite other family members to join. Skywards members under 18 years old can be directly added to the My Family account by the family account head.

How to Set Up an Emirates My Family Account

1. Log in to your account

To set up an Emirates My Family Account, navigate to your account overview after logging in to your Skywards account. You'll see “My Family” on the list of actions as the screenshot below shows.

Emirates account
Credit: Emirates

2. Click ‘Create a My Family Account'

After clicking “My Family,” you'll be taken to a page that will let you create a My Family account. After clicking on “Create a My Family Account,” a screen will pop up that asks for your Family Name, whether or not you want to contribute Skywards miles, and asks you to accept the Emirates Skywards program rules.

Create My Family account
Credit: Emirates

You can view your My Family account by clicking on your initials in the top right corner of the browser near the menu and scrolling to the bottom. Click on “My Family” to be directed to your Emirates family account page.

3. Add family members

On your My Family account page, you can view how many miles you have, your recent activity, and redeem or pool miles for flights. Near the bottom of the page, you can add family members to your account.

Emirates My Family account page
Credit: Emirates

You can invite adults 18 years or older and manually add children under 18. You can add up to eight family members to your My Family account.

4. Confirm setup

The adult family members you've invited to join your family account should check their email for the link. If it's not there, check your spam or junk folder.

Related: Do Emirates Skywards Miles Expire?

Which Emirates Skywards Miles You Can't Pool

You can't pool all Emirates miles. The following are Skywards miles that you can't pool:

  • Miles you've transferred in from a flexible point currency
  • Miles you've purchased
  • Miles that were in your account prior to setting up the family account

All three of these are major limitations to the Emirates My Family pooling option. That's especially true for U.S.-based travelers who might generate most (if not all) of their miles from transferring points to Emirates or buying Emirates miles.

Who Should (and Shouldn't) Set Up an Emirates Family Account

While Emirates Family Accounts can help you accumulate more miles faster (goodbye to those stranded few sitting in your account), they're not for everyone. There are certain limitations that go along with pooled miles; as you've seen above, not all miles can even be pooled via your Emirates My Family Account.

Who Should Use an Emirates My Family Account

There are plenty of reasons to set up an Emirates Family Account and plenty of folks for whom it'd be a good idea:

  • Infrequent travelers: Emirates miles expire three years after you've earned them. If you don't fly often enough to qualify for an award, pooling your miles can help you use them before they expire.
  • Families with children: Children often don't have a need for their own miles (or the knowledge to use them). Pooling them into a single account is great for ease of access and redemptions.

Who Shouldn't Use an Emirates My Family Account

But what about those for whom an Emirates My Family Account isn't a good idea?

  • Travelers who transfer from flexible point currencies: Since miles transferred in from programs such as American Express Membership Rewards can't be pooled, those who rely mainly on transfers may not want to sign up for family pooling. Instead, transfer the points into a single account and book flights for everyone from there.
  • Frequent travelers: Those looking to earn elite status with Emirates should know that Tier Miles don't pool, only bonus miles. This means that any status earned will be solely due to your flying.

If you're a frequent-flying family, look into accumulating miles through Egyptair Plus — as you can pool both miles and elite status credits into one family member's account. That means earning status much faster!

Bottom Line

Family pooling is a nice bonus since a family vacation once or twice a year isn't out of the norm. Being able to credit all those miles to one account will help ensure you won't have to worry about errant miles being lost or forgotten. You're restricted to only including members of your family (rather than being able to invite friends), but if you fly Emirates or flydubai frequently, this is a great way to earn and redeem miles faster. Do note, however, that only the head of the Emirates family account can make award redemptions using the pooled miles.

AwardWallet Tip of The Day
Did you know that you can track loyalty accounts and travel plans for your entire family with one AwardWallet account? Simply add your family members and then add their programs to AwardWallet.
Show me how

The comments on this page are not provided, reviewed, or otherwise approved by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comments

    PRAVIN PATEL says:

    HOW CAN I ACCESS MY FAMILY ACCOUNT AS MY SKYWARD MILES ARE GOING IN FAMILY ACCOUNT

    The pooling of miles is a nice feature.
    Anyway, the Emirates Skywards is not one of my favourite airline frequent flyers. Actually it’s the opposite!

    Let’s hope the competition follows this new trend!

    I hope this starts a trend in the industry now

    This might be useful

    This is a nice option for families but since other parts of the Emirates program have poor benefits (expiration of miles, surcharges) I would still choose to credit the flights to a partner. The few times that I will ever use Emirates would pretty much ensure that my miles would expire before I got to use them.

    Exactly, I don’t see why accruing miles on Emirates. I see no sweet spots. Maybe to redeem on soccer tickets.

    I appreciate that programs offer this but Emirates’ program doesn’t seem especially great on the redemption side.

    I would love to see U.S. airlines offer this.

    Love this idea! Love the fact that some carriers allow pooling of miles. It a cool idea because my miles and my husbands are about to expire and now we can combine so, I guess were lucky on that one!

    This may be of value to some, but our only flights on Emirates are award flights, so nothing gained by us.

    This seems more and more common for the ME and Gulf carriers. Is this more a culture thing? I don’t see it every sticking with the western Airlines where it doesn’t already exist.

      Asian/South Pacific airlines allow this too — and in the US we have JetBlue and of course, BA does this as well. Definitely not a culture thing. You don’t see it with Western airlines because I don’t think they see value in it for them.

    We always love the fact that some carriers now allow pooling of miles, especially as we find it harder to collect Emirates points so will offer a great boost to redeeming.

    Great feature on a still bad mileage program.

    Sebastian says:

    Nice feature, but too late for me…We had 8k miles both – that’s not enough alone and couldn’t combine..so the expired…

    This is a good Thing for a family with members who regularly wind up with a few “orphan” miles.

    Interesting concept. I wish other airlines did that.

    i wish Lufthansa would do this. Very nice for less frequent fliers

    Family pooling is one of the best options a program can have. Allows folks to utilize their points more efficiently

    Excellent idea, hope it spreads.

    Charles J says:

    I doubt I’ll ever use Emirates, but the more programs with family pooling, the better. So far, I’m limited to JetBlue and Hyatt, but maybe I should look into British Airways because of the network of Airlines the miles are usable at.

    Fantastic feature indeed!

    nice.. hopefully US carriers will follow.

    Great idea to pool the miles. Will be interesting to see if US carriers will follow suit at some point.

    This is a very good thing. We can knock them for other issues, but this is a good thing for travelers.

    I’ll never knock any program for making smart changes like this. We can harp on them for other issues, but certainly this is a good thing.

    I’m’ wondering – do you think it can produce domino effect and make US airlines to introduce pooling?

    Great news, it’s like to pool cash from all family members’ wallets – you got richer!

    Bertrand Say says:

    I like the Hilton point pooling better wherein you can transfer after earning the points.

    great idea
    hope others follow suit

    Looks like a great benefit!

    Wow! Love this, looking forward to more airlines taking this approach.

    Great options for families! I hope other airlines copy this.

    miskocina says:

    It certainly makes things easier when miles can be pooled like this, rather than losing all those orphan miles. Thanks for the info about EgyptAir (i.e. pooling status miles) too!

    While I love family pooling accounts, Emirates doesn’t exactly have the best frequent flyer program.

    Family pooling is nice, but I remain hesitant to commit to the program given its inflated redemption rates, significant “fuel” surcharges, and draconian points expiration policy. Much rather credit flights to Alaska…

    Virgin Australia also lets you pool status credits. They partner with Delta.

    Not holding my breath, but it would be great to see the US legacy carriers begin to allow pooling as well.

    oh interesting. I thought it’d be a transfer after someone would travel. It looks like it’s only earning miles from the flight into the family account and not if someone already has miles? For instance, like Hilton lets my husband build up points and then I can transfer them into my account.

    ron_vaughn@hotmail.com says:

    I wish the US carriers would do this!

    Jacqueline says:

    Brilliant to see this news, every loyalty programme should allow family pooling of points.

    Bernard Say says:

    This is a great feature that I also like with Jetblue and Hilton. I wish they would also allow for the extension of the expiry of the miles if there is activity in the account. As of now that is not the case.

      Yes, for my tastes, this new, positive benefit, unfortunately, still does not overcome the expiration problem caused by no extensions for activity.