Do Flying Blue Miles Expire? What You Need to Know About the Flying Blue Miles Expiration Policy Do Flying Blue Miles Expire? What You Need to Know About the Flying Blue Miles Expiration Policy

Do Flying Blue Miles Expire? What You Need to Know About the Flying Blue Miles Expiration Policy

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If you’re a member of Flying Blue — the joint loyalty program for Air France, KLM, and a few smaller airlines — understanding the Flying Blue miles expiration policy is crucial to preserving your hard-earned miles.

Here’s everything you need to know about Flying Blue miles expiration and how to keep your miles from expiring.

Do Flying Blue Miles Expire?

Yes, Air France-KLM Flying Blue miles expire if you don't have qualifying activity on your account for a two-year period. Per the Flying Blue Terms and Conditions:

“For Explorer Members aged 18 years and older, Miles are valid for two (2) years, after such time the Company shall cancel the Miles in case no registered Earn Activity extends the validity of the Miles.”

However, if you are an elite member (Silver, Gold, or Platinum) in the Flying Blue program, your miles will not expire as long as you retain your elite status. Once you lose your status, the standard 24-month expiration rule applies.

Track your points and miles expiration for 630+ loyalty programs and get email alerts before your miles expire by signing up for a free AwardWallet account.

Twin engines on the wing of a KLM wide-body aircraft
Credit: Emiel Molenaar / Unsplash

How to Keep Flying Blue Miles From Expiring

In its wisdom, Air France-KLM Flying Blue decided that one type of qualifying activity isn't complicated enough. Instead, Flying Blue uses a complex system with two types of qualifying activity: “Overall” and “Partial.” Both types extend the validity of miles earned, though in different ways.

“Overall extending activity”

You can extend the validity of all your Flying Blue miles — regardless of how they were earned — for 24 more months from the date of one of the following activities:

  • Taking a qualifying flight with Air France, KLM, Aircalin, Kenya Airways, TAROM, Transavia, Air Corsica, or with one of Flying Blue's SkyTeam partners. The flight must earn XP to qualify as an “overall extending activity”
  • Use a Flying Blue co-branded credit card to make a purchase.

This is where Air France-KLM's extensive airline partnerships through the SkyTeam airline alliance come in handy. For example, U.S.-based travelers can list their Flying Blue account number on a Delta flight to earn Flying Blue miles and XP. This one flight activity will prevent your Flying Blue miles from expiring for another two years.

SkyTeam Member airlines
SkyTeam member airlines

“Partial extending activity”

All other ways that you can earn Flying Blue miles — including car rental partners, hotel partners, experience partners, and some select airlines — are considered partial extending activities.

Earning miles with any of these partners resets the clock by two years — but only for the miles earned from these types of partners.

Here's an example: If you earn Flying Blue miles from booking a hotel stay, that activity also extends the life of the miles earned from car rentals, experience partners, etc. However, it will not extend the life of miles earned from flying with Air France, KLM, or any SkyTeam members. These Flying Blue miles will expire without an “overall extending activity.”

Earning Flying Blue Miles Through Credit Cards

By far, the easiest option for U.S. residents to earn bonus Flying Blue miles and maintain account activity is by spending on the Air France KLM Visa Signature® Credit Card. The card is currently offering a 70,000 bonus miles and 100 XP after you make $3,000 or more in purchases within the first 90 days of your account opening.

American Express also issues Flying Blue co-branded cards for residents of France and The Netherlands, while residents of Switzerland can apply for a co-branded Mastercard.

Spending on all these cards will ensure your Flying Blue miles don't expire for another two years.

Boosting Your Air France KLM Flying Blue Mileage Balance

You have plenty of options if you need to boost your Flying Blue Mileage. The program is a partner with every single major transferable flexible points currency around.

From
To
Transfer Ratio
Min.Transfer
Average Time
1,000:1,000
Transfer rate improved effective January 3, 2026
-
Unknown
1,000:1,000
-
Immediate
250:250
500
Unknown
Capital One
United States
100:100
1,000
Immediate
1,000:1,000
-
Immediate
3:1
3,000
1 day - 3 days
Barclaycard
United States
7,000:5,000
-
Unknown
1,000:1,000
2,000
Unknown
HSBC Rewards
United States
1,250:1,000
-
Unknown
Livelo (Clube Livelo)
Brazil
1,750:500
35,000
Unknown
Revolut (RevPoints)
1:1
-
Unknown

Just keep in mind that point transfers do not extend the validity of your flown miles. That means you should only transfer points to top off your account right before redeeming miles for the long list of Flying Blue sweet spots, such as the monthly Flying Blue Promo Rewards.

Use AwardWallet to Track Flying Blue Miles Expiration

Since Flying Blue miles expire after just two years of inactivity, it pays to keep close tabs on your Flying Blue account. The easiest way to do so is to use AwardWallet to keep track of your balance and expiration date. By doing so, you will receive a timely reminder if you have any miles in danger of expiring.

Flying Blue can be accessed through either of the airline members, meaning you can choose to link either your Air France or your KLM Flying Blue account to AwardWallet. Once linked you are set with AwardWallet keeping an eye on your account.

Related: How to Track Your Rewards Using AwardWallet

Our Take

Flying Blue’s mileage expiration policy is one of the more complex airline expiry policies since it has two types of qualifying activities. That's why it's especially helpful to use AwardWallet to keep on top of your Flying Blue expiration dates. With proper tracking and qualifying activity, you can ensure you never let your Flying Blue miles expire.

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Comments

    I just donated 500 miles to a charity listed on their web site to get my miles extended. Easy peasy.

    This post is a bit wrong. Point transfers do extend the validity of your miles which were trasferred before! But not miles earned from flying.

    help!~ My miles expired! Any way to get them reinstated?

      Flying Blue doesn’t publish a way to reinstate miles. But, if your miles recently expired, I’d recommend calling or chatting with Flying Blue to see if they can make an exception. Either way, we’d love to know what happens!

    I am really Confused, Please help what Can I do to extend the expirey of my miles.
    I have 74730 miles that I gained by Bonus offer of BOA KLM Card and Spending on that card. I cancelled the card back in May 2023. These miles are set to expire in May 2025 if I do not do anything.
    I made a purchase through flying blue shopping portal online at Kohls thinking they will credit the miles and the expiration will be extended but they have not yet credited the miles in my FB account (even though they say it may take 105 days- Don’t even know if they will extend the expiration of 74730 Miles.

    Then I transferred 1000 miles from my marriott acc thinking that will extend the expiration but I came to know they treat transfers as a different bucket and track exipation of those seprately. 1000 miles are to expire in Jan 2027

    Now what are my options to extend the 74730 miles??: I am not in a position to travel domestically or internationally right now.

    If I transfer all my miles back to Marriott what will be the expiry of the transffered Marriott points (Hope they don’t carry the same expiration of May 2025 in Marriott account)

    Does transferring 1000 miles from your CC extend the validity of your miles in 2024.

      Unfortunately, point transfers do not extend the validity of your Flying Blue miles. However, transferring in points can help you top off your account to have enough miles to book an award.

    Peter Koronaios says:

    My memory is that in the past, I could see on Flying Blue something about the miles and when I needed ‘qualifying activity’ to keep my miles active. However, now, when I go on my Flying Blue account I do not see this. Could you tell me if, and if so how, I can see this?

    Here’s a free fast way to keep your points – transfer them to a spouse or significant other.

    1. If your spouse or significant other doesn’t have a Flying Blue account, create one for them.
    2. From the Flying Blue account of your spouse/significant other, Create a Flying Blue Family by inviting you to it.
    3. Accept the invite to your spouse’s Flying Blue Family
    4. From the Flying Blue account of your spouse/significant other, transfer all of the points from your account.

    This is free and resets the timer on your miles to a fresh 24 months.

    Madreblair says:

    I have a question about closing the card while I still have 7k pts, will I lose them?

      JT Genter says:

      If the miles have been earned through the card and transferred to your Flying Blue account, you don’t have to worry about the miles expiring upon closing your card. The normal expiration policy will be in place.

    I’m so confused. I had 20,732 miles that were set to expire at the end of 2022. I got those miles by transferring from a card a long time ago. I recently credited a car rental to Air France and got 500 miles. I thought this would extend ALL my miles but now I see this:

    20,732 valid until December 31, 2022
    500 valid until May 31, 2024

    Is there nothing I can do to extend the bulk of my miles?? Please help!

    Honestly this is so confusing.

    But this article set it straight for me: https://frequentmiler.com/air-frances-flying-blue-miles-are-easier-to-extend-than-i-thought/

    Basically if you have only ever used your FB account via transferred miles to FB (never crediting flown flight miles) then this is the simplest way of understanding the program and how to extend the miles. In this special yet common case for US based folks, the extension of the validity of miles only requires that you complete another transfer from your US based partner credit card – this act alone will extend the miles you previously transferred from FB partners.

    If however you have tainted your pool of miles with flight posting credit(or other), the rules are ultimately more complicated and dictated by “the last flight credit positing/ FB Branded Credit Card activity/Elite Status”. So I believe that if you only ever transferred 100K miles from ie Citi 23mo ago and then credit a flight in the 24th month to extend the points – the miles will be extended – however in order to extend any further in the future – you can only do one of the three things mentioned above to extend. Transferring points will no longer help as they have been tainted.

    But alternatively you could have just transferred a new 1K miles into your account (instead of flight credit positing) and you could have extended the miles that way and retained the ability to indefinitely extend (as long as you do not taint the pool of miles with any flight credit positing/ FB Credit Card Spend/ Elite status)

    Ana Maria del Rosario Valencia says:

    I am glad Flying Blue extended the expiration deadline of my accrued miles but, better than that, I am glad that I can credit miles (and therefore extend the expiration deadline) through domestic flights of Aerolineas Argentinas. This helps a lot!!

    With the rate that Omicron is going, I think they should just drop the 24 month expiration and have no expiration.

    24 months is a good period of time for trying to keep your miles alive

    Believe I got an email last month saying they were extending my expiration another year- only had 500 points there but it was from a partial chase transfer- wish chase wouldn’t make you transfer points as a set of 1,000.

    I got the Air France/KLM Mastercard around Halloween, and did a test transfer of MR points using the November transfer bonus, and it DID update/extend my mileage expiration date. All of my miles come from transfers or co-branded card spending, and it’ll be awhile before I ever have miles earned from revenue flights, so YMMV. VFTW noted that using the Flying Blue shopping portal also extended miles as well. The AF/KLM Mastercard has been quietly pulled from BofA’s website, and there’s a better bonus available for $100 statement credit and 50,000 miles via a dummy booking on KLM (the route I took, credit to DoC). Interestingly, I hit the spending requirement at the beginning of the month, and BofA posted the $100 credit today, well before the statement closed.

    They should follow other airlines and just get rid of the expiration policy.

    so much easier with AA
    I have miles with flying blue but lost them already ones
    So I’ll try to book a flight as soon as this pandemic has quieted

    Efigenia Adoracion L Ragasa says:

    As of now I’m not so sure anymore if when can fly again as I’m already forgood here in my country the Philippines. So I would like to know if what will I’m going to do with my remaining miles.
    Kindly advice

    Yours Truly

      Please note that we at AwardWallet are not related or affiliated with the programs we support, thus if you have any questions related to your miles please contact FlyingBlue representatives directly.

    celesta hunt says:

    I have miles that are expiring Feb 2021. We had transfered them from Chase and then had to cancel our trip. What is the best way to extend the life of the miles without flying? If I get a credit card for me am I able to transfer miles between accounts without a fee?

      Flying Blue’s expiration policy is quite strange. The good news for your situation is that non-flying activity (“Partial extending activities”) will extend the expiration of your points – since they were from a non-flying source (“Partial extending activities”).

      As Flying Blue states: “You can also extend the validity of Miles earned with all other partners (car rental partners, hotel partners, and experience partners) for 2 years by earning Miles with any of these other partners. These “Partial extending activities” with other partners will extend the validity of Miles earned with any of these other partners by 2 years from the date of the activity.”

      So, you can transfer 1,000 more miles from Chase (or another bank) or earn a few points by making an online purchase through Flying Blue’s shopping portal (https://earnonline.flyingblue.com/en/)

    I have a Air France credit card so I don’t have to follow closely the expiration date of miles.
    It’s a little more complicated as the extension is possible I think only by a qualifying flight.

      Can you clarify what you mean? Are you saying that if you only have credit card activity but do not have any flights, your miles are going to expire? Even though you have a credit card?

        They are only restating #2 of the extending activities above: that if you have an Air France credit card and have activity on it, that keeps extending the expiration… so they’re covered and don’t have to worry about losing their miles.

    this year it’s harder to keep track of everything that might expire but thankfully awardwallet makes it easier

    Mauriciomagadan says:

    24 months in the current context of pandemic does not sound much

    I think that Flyng blue is not a good miles program!

    Macarena Callegari says:

    Thank you; you would think it’s easy to make the connection between airlines in the same team but for some reason I always remember only the bigger airlines.
    Gonna go and try to get all the missing miles from the partner airlines.

    Leonardo Sakurai says:

    Good news !! I hope everything comes back to normal soon !!

    Thank you, in some ways it is obvious that Delta can be credited to KLM but for some reason I never thought of this idea!

    I think all airlines/hotels should extend their window for miles/points until travel gets back to normal.

    In my opinion, Flying blue is, by far the best FFP within Skyteam.

    A good perk is other AF/KL’s partners airlines (non Skyteam) such as JL, G3, QF are considered qualifying flights so you can earn XP points and of course, miles.

    Pablo Quilis says:

    All airlines should ensure that their mileage programs do not expire until the end of 2021. In this way, we can travel better next year

    Wow, the “partial extension” mechanism is sneaky!

    We have a couple of vouchers/credits expiring. Any tips?

    Robert Fulton says:

    Question – does flying on Air Antwerp, booked on KLM website, qualify for extension of points validity period?

    Do all your miles expire on the expiration date, i.e. 24 months after last quakifying flight activity ?
    What if I transfer miles from chase or amex, when I only have 1 month left to the expiration date. Will the transferred miles also expire on the expiration date (i.e. one moth after they were transferred) ???

      No, provided there is qualifying activity on your account, none of your miles expire. If you have no qualifying activity on your account for 24 months, all of your miles expire.

    I figure the answer is no – but just checking – if I book a Delta flight (using Delta miles/award ticket) would that extend my Flying Blue expiration date? Or does it have to be a Delta flight that was paid for with cash. I see some general posts online that say award tickets don’t generate miles for frequent flyer accounts but can’t find a specific mention of Flying Blue (and also don’t care about earning miles, just pushing the expiration a bit farther). Any advice? Thanks

      Hey there, an award ticket doesn’t earn any redeemable miles, so that won’t reset an expiration date. If you put your flying blue number on a paid reservation with Delta, you’ll earn FB miles and reset the expiration date. Note that transfers from Amex, Chase, Citi, and Capital One do not reset the FB expiration date.

    Appreciate these types of all-in-one-place document. I am planning on transferring some Citi TYP points over and this artile puts my mind at ease that I will have 24 months to use it. thanls.

    You can now use your miles in AF’s shopping portal, or so they say!

    Sad that this program has so limited options to extend life of the miles.

    Air France is really not great for miles unless you are an elite member. You can’t use miles for first class if you are not.

    This is my pet peeve! I do understand that it’s a frequent FLYER program and in order to extend your points validity you actually need to FLY but I find that the lack of other options for that purpose is somewhat user-unfriendly. Great program overall but I wish Flying Blue would add other options too!

    Seems like a program best suited for redemptions using “just in time” transfers from transferable points programs. Otherwise probably best to credit AF/KLM flights to Alaska…

      I have been a flying blue member since 2017. I have been flying every 2 months with Kenya Airways and every 4 months with KLM (long distance flight). I have noticed the following:

      Some miles are simply not calculated, often I needed to calim them by providing a bording pass after.

      My silver status is about expire in 30.06.2019 if I do not gain 100xp.

      I am wondering how is this possible and what am I doing wrong? Can someone advise me I am new in this and not very consumeristic oriented so for me all this is rocked science. But I am shocked that I fly so often and my miles will expire.

        Hi Sara,

        I think only your status will be downgraded from Silver to Explorer. Your miles should be fine. I also fly Kenya Airways a lot, and it seems totally random the way the miles are automatically added to your Flying Blue account: sometimes they reflect same day or next day after a flight, and other times I have to manually claim them on the Flying Blue website.

        Hope that helps.

    Wow, we are on an expiration kick lately ;o) I appreciate all the info though, don’t get me wrong, I’m not complaining! Love anything that reminds me to keep everything up to date. That’s why I am with AwardWallet :o) No where better to get info and reminders!

    Not too worried since I don’t have AF/KL miles. A couple less to worry about ;o)

    You can also earn Flying Blue miles by doing E-rewards surveys but since you say that E-miles doesn’t extend the expiration date, I wouldn’t risk it by trying E-rewards either. (Do you know if it does or does not?)

    Although I have heard of their great discounted awards, this is a difficult enough program to keep active that I probably won’ t participate. Though the tip about using the Flying Blue number on a Delta flight might just sway me. Especially since Skymiles is such a poor value program.

    The_Bouncer says:

    This is the one thing I really don’t like about the Flying Blue program and the reason I don’t credit flights to it.

    The only time I ever use it is for promo awards, and I transfer in from Amex.

    ANGELO FONSECA says:

    Flying Blue is also a GOL Airlines partner (smiles), is it correct?

    I have a Flying Blue account which I do not use anymore. I only fly KLM once every two or three years and for me it is easier to credit to those miles to my SkyMiles account.

    This is one of the harder accounts to keep active if you don’t use it regularly, since there is no shopping portal, etc. But then again, if you aren’t using it regularly you probably don’t have the card or care I suppose.

    Hmm. I did not even think about replacing my frequent flyer number on a Delta flight in order to extend the AF/KLM miles if needed. Good tip!

    In the article there is no mention that the expiration policy has recently changed: before you needed a qualifying activity every 20 months now it is every 24 months.
    This is a big improvement because in practice only flying with SkyTeam airline is considered a qualifying activity.
    Actually, I am very surprised that the co-branded credit card exists only in France, Netherlands and Switzerland.

      The increase from 20 to 24 months really isn’t significant news. Sure, it is nice, but the requirement to earn miles with a flight is there. If you weren’t going to fly is 4 months really going to make a difference? Maybe, but it isn’t all that significant — at least we don’t think so.

    Adam Parsons says:

    Great update, I can transfer some points over to flying blue to take advantage of the routes on offer at present, thanks.