Why EgyptAir Plus is the Best Airline to Get Star Alliance Gold Status Why EgyptAir Plus is the Best Airline to Get Star Alliance Gold Status

Why EgyptAir Plus is the Best Airline to Get Star Alliance Gold Status

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If you do a quick google search for “which is the best airline to get Star Alliance Gold status,” you will invariably find one answer: Aegean Airlines. It is true that Aegean is a solid program, however, if you look around there is one that is even better, especially for couples or families. With some astute flight planning, you can hit Star Alliance Gold in just one trip! That loyalty program is EgyptAir Plus.

What to Know About EgyptAir Plus

EgyptAir has been a full Star Alliance member since July 2008. The program, EgyptAir Plus, has four membership levels: Blue, Silver, Gold, and Platinum. The different levels align to the following Star Alliance status tiers:

  • Blue = Not Applicable
  • Silver = Star Alliance Silver
  • Gold = Star Alliance Gold
  • Elite = Star Alliance Gold
  • Platinum = Star Alliance Gold

EgyptAir has two types of miles:

  • Award miles: These are redeemable miles that you use for flight redemptions.
  • Tier miles: Your elite qualification miles, which determine your level of status.

The interesting point about these miles is that they're accrued at the same rate. You earn miles when you fly with EgyptAir or other Star Alliance partners, so long as your credit the flights to your EgyptAir Plus account. To move between the tiers, you need to accrue the following:

  • Blue to Silver: 30,000 miles
  • Silver to Gold: 30,000 miles within two years of achieving Silver
  • Gold to Elite: 300,000 miles within two years of achieving Gold
  • Elite to Platinum: 600,000 miles within three years, achieving Elite.

EgyptAir Plus status is valid for 24 months from the date of upgrade. To maintain Gold status, you need to earn at least 40,000 flown miles within 2 years of being upgraded to Gold.

EgyptAir-Gold-Status
Credit: EgyptAir Plus

One of the quirks of the EgyptAir Plus program is that it has a family or household account system. While airlines like JetBlue and British Airways have a similar feature, what makes EgyptAir's program unique is that all miles are pooled. Typically with a family account, the award miles earned by the family member are added to the main accountholder’s account, while the status miles are either not credited at all, or are credited to the individual’s account, not the main household/shared account.

EgyptAir-Family-Program
Credit: EgyptAir Plus

Tier Miles are Credited to the Main Account Holder

This is what truly makes the EgyptAir Plus program unique: they credit both the award miles and tier miles to the main account holder. I'm sure you're thinking to yourself, “No way.” Well, check out my statement from earlier this year showing a flight that I took with my wife from Dublin (DUB) to Cape  Town (CPT) with Lufthansa in Premium Economy. Looking at the statement, it is clear that I received the award miles earned by my wife, but also as the main account holder, I received the tier miles she earned as well.

Screenshot of EgyptAir Plus account activity
Credit: EgyptAir Plus

This double dipping has been the norm for years, and is EgyptAir Plus’ main policy. Below is my statement from nearly 10 years ago showing a flight that I took with my wife from Jakarta, Indonesia (CGK) to Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt (SSH) with Turkish Airlines. Again, it credited my Tier Miles to the main household account.

Screenshot of EgyptAir account activity

This double-dipping is a great way to pick up status, especially for those who do not regularly fly for work, and would find it impossible to pick up elite status from the few flights they take every year. So, what is the most efficient way to pick up EgyptAir Gold elite status — and, by extension, Star Alliance Gold?

The Easiest Way to Get Elite Status

There is NO requirement to fly EgyptAir to earn elite status. You can credit miles flown with partner airlines to EgyptAir Plus, so long as you add your account number to the booking. However, flying EgyptAir itself can boost your miles earning since you benefit from a generous fare class bonus as well as a status bonus.

The easiest way to pick up status for a couple is a vacation to Thailand, while for a family of three or more, it is a quick trip to Egypt to visit the Pyramids, for example. We break down several of the best options below.

The Thailand option

Getting to Thailand, the two most rewarding options are either direct from New York (JFK) to Bangkok (BKK) via Istanbul with Turkish Airlines, or, for maximum earning, New York to Cairo (CAI) on EgyptAir, then on to Bangkok via Istanbul on Turkish Airlines. Depending on how many passengers are flying, the mileage earned should look something like this.

Via Cairo C,D,Z,K Class fare J Class fare 
JFK-CAI-IST-BKKJFK-IST-BKKJFK-IST-BKK
SegmentEarned R/TSegmentEarned R/TSegmentEarned R/T
JFK-CAI22,432JFK-IST15,048JFK-IST12,540
CAI-IST1,906IST-BKK14,004IST-BKK11,670
IST-BKK11,6701 Pax Earning29,0521 Pax Earning24,210
1 Pax Earning36,0082 Pax Earning58,1042 Pax Earning48,420
2 Pax Earning72,0163 Pax Earning87,1563 Pax Earning72,630

Using EgyptAir with a stop in Cairo first would give you instantaneous Gold status on the completion of your trip. Not only that but also you would have 24 months to earn the 18,000 miles to maintain your Gold status. You can also save some money since you can book a lower business class fare bucket (J). The difference in earning is directly related to fare class bonuses.

Opting for the direct route and skipping out the Cairo leg will leave a couple 1,900 miles short of Gold status, which should not be a problem especially if you don’t live in New York since you can pick those miles up flying United to New York, your international gateway on your trip.

Traveling as a family of three or more, you can go direct and use a lower business class fare bucket, and you will hit Gold in one trip.

 TAP To Israel from the US

When it comes to value for money, earning EgyptAir Miles with a partner airline, TAP Portugal, is an astounding option. You will earn a whopping 200% of the miles flown on all business class fares.

Earning-Tap-Miles
Credit: EgyptAir Plus

This high bonus makes it possible to reach Star Alliance Gold status in one round trip. Consider a round-trip business class fare from Los Angeles (LAX) to Tel Aviv (TLV) via Lisbon (LIS) in Tap Business Class.

  • 1 passenger: Will earn approximately 32,777 miles, or enough to reach Silver if starting from zero.
  • 2 passengers: A couple taking the same flight will earn a massive 65,554 tier miles in the primary account holder. Starting from zero, that would take you directly up to Star Alliance Gold

Flying TAP can be incredibly lucrative in terms of miles, so much so that I have a trip booked later this year from Dublin to Rio de Janeiro (GIG) via Lisbon (LIS) for two. This round-trip fare will take me up to Star Alliance Gold, and give me nearly 10,000 of the 40,000 miles required for re-qualification.

A Note on Mileage Calculation

Things can be a little tricky when it comes to working out how many miles you will earn with EgyptAir on partner airlines — the only way I have done it is to call them (+1-212-938-3560) and ask, however, there are a few simple workarounds:

  • For EgyptAir-operated flights, you can use their own mileage calculator
  • To work out the fare class bonus you will earn with partner airlines, you can use EgyptAir’s partner earning page. The page will not give you exact mileage per trip, just the percentage fare class bonus for various Star Alliance members
  • For partner flights, you can use gcmap.com to work out the mileage for each leg of your flight. It is a good indicator since, for most calculations, it will yield a slightly more conservative figure than EgyptAir will award.

What to Do With EgyptAir Miles?

Obviously, no one wants to park thousands of miles in a mileage program that they can’t cash in. However, EgyptAir is a member of Star Alliance, which means its miles can be redeemed on United, Lufthansa, Turkish Airlines, and other Star Alliance airlines. You can review the EgyptAir Plus Star Alliance redemption chart (prices are round-trip). You can also review different regions and zones.

Redeeming your miles on EgyptAir is very straightforward, in my experience, as they don’t seem to have award space allocated. You call the support center and ask for the EgyptAir flight you want, the date, and the class of travel, and they give you the ticket. There doesn’t seem to be any blackout dates.

Redeeming with Star Alliance is slightly more complex since you still have to call EgyptAir up in Cairo to get your redemptions. One thing to keep in mind is that for some utterly odd reason, you cannot call EgyptAir in Cairo if you are outside of Egypt. The main international call center of EgyptAir is based in Dubai, and you can reach it by calling +97144358444. That said the EgyptAir Plus award chart for partner airlines is relatively generous. Highlights of partner awards include:

  • 70,000 miles for a one-way ticket to or from the U.S. to Frankfurt (FRA) in Lufthansa First Class, plus taxes and fees.
  • 60,000 miles for a one-way award from Europe to Asia or the Far East in business class, plus taxes and fees.
  • 60,000 miles for a round-trip in business class from the U.S. to Hawaii.

Finding EgyptAir Plus Partner Award Space

Unfortunately, you cannot search online for EgyptAir Partner award space. So, when it comes to booking a partner award, you will have to go old school and use some older methods of locating your award space. Your Best option is to lock into the partner award space by searching on United, Air Canada, or ANA. You can then contact EgyptAir to book your award.

Related: How to Find Airline Partner Award Availability

How to Use The EgyptAir Plus Program

The bottom line is that, due to the lack of transfer partners, you will not be able to use EgyptAir Plus like a regular airline program, where you continuously earn and redeem points. Arguably, once you hit Star Alliance Gold, you will only need to credit 40,000 miles to your EgyptAir account every couple of years to maintain your status. The rest of the time, you would probably credit any Star Alliance flights to other programs that are easier to use on the redemption side of things.

Typically, I will accrue around 45,000 miles in my EgyptAir Plus account every few years. This maintains my Gold status, as well as gives me enough miles for the following one-way business class redemptions:

  • Europe to Southern Africa and the Persian Gulf, including Dubai
  • North America to South America
  • North America to Europe

What are the Benefits of Star Alliance Gold Status?

Once you achieve EgyptAir Plus Gold status or above, you'll also get Star Alliance Gold status. With Star Alliance Gold, you'll receive the following benefits whenever you fly on Star Alliance airlines:

  • Priority airport check-in: Access to a dedicated check-in counter at the airport for Star Alliance Gold members, where available.
  • Priority baggage handling: Your bags will receive priority handling, so they'll be the first on and off the plane, minimizing wait time.
  • Airport lounge access: Complimentary entry for you and one guest to more than 1,000 airport lounges worldwide.
  • Priority Boarding: Get on the plane faster by boarding with First and Business Class passengers, regardless of your ticket.
  • Extra Baggage Allowance: Bring an extra 20 kg (44 pounds) where the weight concept applies or an extra piece of luggage where it doesn't.
  • Gold Track: Use dedicated lanes to move through security and immigration more quickly.

Our Take

Chasing elite status when you don’t fly several times a month can be a near impossibility, so any option that allows leisure travelers to earn elite status relatively easily is welcome. The generous habit of crediting tier miles from the whole family to the main account holder’s account makes hitting your Gold status a breeze. Once you have it, the generous 24-month validity makes it much easier to plan your next trip to maintain status!

AwardWallet Tip of The Day
Did you know that you can view your account balances across all airlines within one of the global alliances? Click the alliance icon in the list of accounts next to any airline in an alliance to see the details.
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Comments

    Please be careful, EGYPTAIR PLUS website is often down and many functions are not working, includhing S.A.U.A(STAR ALLIANCE UPGRADE AWARDS), so you won’t be able to redeem mileage for this function and this function cannot be replaced by personnel manually.
    Second, its policy not clear about overflow mileage once you reach its SILVER status, e.g. when you have 36000 which 30,000 make you reach its SILVER, but those 6000 overflow miles, they replied me that it will be carried over to continue count for next tier level earning. Unfortunately, when many people reach this, its system never count those mileage for GOLD and they replied said it won’t be carried over.
    It seems to trick people join and earn miles but then renege what they promise earlier, so no faith on this program.

    You forgot about sectors which can be used to earn/maintain status. A sector is a stop, an example is flying from NY to Cairo via Istanbul (e.g. Turkish airlines) the flight is 2 sectors each way so a return flight is 4 sectors.

    https://www.egyptairplus.com/membership-levels

    “In order to maintain the Gold Tier, you are required to earn 40,000 Tier miles or 36 sectors within 2 years from the date of the Upgrade/Renewal of Gold membership level.”

    Thanks for this. I have one question. You say, “once you hit Star Alliance Gold, you will only need to credit 40,000 miles to your EgyptAir account every couple of years to maintain your status. The rest of the time, you would probably credit any Star Alliance flights to other programs that are easier to use on the redemption side of things.”

    Do you actually do this? If you credit to some other program, that means that on your boarding pass as well as when booking, the carrier does not know that you are Star Alliance Gold. So do you get any of the benefits? I guess you could show your star alliance gold card at the lounge, but what about for extra baggage, or priority boarding? How do you get those perks without crediting to the program that has your Star Alliance Gold?

    Does this still work in 2025?

    Does this still work in 2025? The website doesn’t allow to join the program.

    Hi I want to apply on EgyptAir. Blue card

    That is definitely a very interesting post and an amazing opportunity to hit the Gold status. Is it still valid at the end of 2019 or the plans have changed significantly that it doesn’t allow that any more?

      Yup! Still works. I signed up for it November 2019 just in time for my December family trip. It’s a really good way to get *A Gold if you fly, or going to fly, often as a family or if you want to pool miles for redemption.

      Just note that you can only add up to 5 first-degree relatives as per Egyptian law, which they classify as: spouse, mother, father, son and daughter. Do note that they don’t allow siblings to be added as family.

        Wow! thanks for the update ! I am currently a gold member in Aegean but it is good to have it in mind as an alternative or a parallel program.

    212-938-3560 is the number to contact for Frequent Flyer related queries and also family mileage membership

    Great advice!! I wish I had known about it years ago… Now, I’m afraid you’ve ruined by making it “so public”! Hope not! Still, not being able to transfer or buy miles on the program, and the 3-year expiration are serious drawbacks.

    Just stumbled across this – really useful post, thank you!

    If I become the main member and add husband and kids as extra members, I understand that it’s only me that will achieve gold status. If I then make bookings for all 4 of us to travel on other airlines, e.g TAP, Air NZ, United (or even Egyptair, if we ever find a way of using them?) will it only be me that is allowed to make use of the benefits of that status, e.g lounges, priority check-in, seating etc? Or do they include everybody on the booking on status perks as long as the Gold member is travelling too? Sorry, maybe that’s a dumb question, but other than all 4 of us finally making it to Bronze in the BAEC we’ve never had status of any kind as we’re just holiday travellers, half a dozen long haul flights a year! Thanks for any info.

      Benefits vary by airline. In general for lounge access, you’re allowed one guest, but lounges may allow children in for free. Infants are allowed but children would be at the discretion of the lounge.
      Full details on the program are here: http://www.staralliance.com/en/gold-status

        Thanks. Although it sounds great on the face of it then, there’s probably not much benefit – we very rarely fly anywhere without the kids, and lounges usually class a 12yr old as an adult, so not much point in having gold membership if I can’t make use of it.

    If you have status with another Star Alliance airline – in my case Silver with United – does it help at all with achieving Gold on Egypt any faster?

    According to the table, what it takes from US to Frankfurt in Lufthansa First class and from Europe to Asia or the Far East in Business class are double as what you said. They are 140,000 and 120,000, not 70,000 and 60,000.

    Please correct.

    […] quick Google search showed me that all of the details were already posted by the AwardWallet blog (hat tip to Mommy Points for hat tipping […]

    Thanks for info!
    I was only considering Aegean for Star Alliance. Turkish Airlines is not too bad either but this family perk is absolutly great and those tiers miles to main account make the status much easier.
    I have to check if there buckets which don’t qualify for this program (many deep discount don’t count for Aegean for instance) but many thanks, I was totally unaware of this.

    Timely piece! My wife and I’ve had a trip to Italy scheduled via Turkish Airlines since Sept, but hadn’t chosen a FF plan until I read your article. Now I have a mission to go for the gold! Thank you so very much!!

    Fuel surcharges on bookings?

      They pass them on. If you visit http://matrix.itasoftware.com/ and find your specific flight, you’ll see the YQ or YR broken out, which represents the surcharges.

        Shaheem Badat says:

        Do family members have to be registered first then their details emailed to egyptair or do you just email names and pp copies and how long did process of adding them take

          The only way to add members to your account if they are not already an Egypt air plus member, is to email them with the names and copies of the relevant documentation. They will then issue them their own FF number and they will be added to your account. The whole process takes a few days, they don’t give a timeframe but they got back to me within 4 days when I added my wife to my account.

    Egypt air Platinum might be the most exclusive status yet since you need 1,000,000 miles on that airline to reach it.

    So Plat would give me 1k level benfits?

    Great post. One question. If the main account holder gets gold, does it mean that the other account holders will get gold too? Also, is there any way to do a status match to Egypt Air? Thanks.

    Great post. One question. If the main account holder gets gold, does it mean that the other account holders will get gold too? Also, is there any way to do a status match to Egypt Air? Thanks.

    Redemption is still pretty good when compared to the rest

    This looks like a hidden secret, that I would not have known about without the article.
    thanks for the post

    do they partner with Amex,SPG, Cit and etc ?

    What a surprise!
    The airline needs customers and so the programme has very good conditions. Anyway, as with Aegean, the devaluation is something that could happen.

    does it work the same for lifetime miles and status?

    I’m all over this. Howie, how did you go about setting up the family account? I noticed when I set my account up, I got an instant 1,000 mile bonus. Could I set up an account for all of my family members to get the bonus on each account, and then combine them? Or is the process to add them as relatives completely different?

      You need to send in proof of the relationship and they add the person to your main account. Long story short, they’re linked in your profile but don’t actually have a username/password to log in. Just a FF number. You can call EgyptAir at 212-581-5600 and they’ll step you through the process. You wouldn’t earn 1,000 bonus miles.

    Such an informative post! Without having read this article I doubt seriously if I”d have ever researched this program on my own. Thx so much!

    Hi great article. Pity I flew with them last year . So if I credit any star partner would that do it as I fly SAA often ? Is their a maximum number of family members ?

    Good to know but having to call an agent in Egypt just to book a reward flight in 21st century is a no-go for many including myself, besides there are some safety and security issues regarding this airline.

    Sounds nice. A few days ago when I was searching for ticket from DXB to LHR, I saw a flight with connection on Egypt Air but I wasn’t sure if Visa is required for Egypt for a 6hrs connection? What’s the transit visa rule?

    Bertrand Say says:

    How do you get elite status with Egyptian Airlines without flying with them?

    ADAM PARSONS says:

    Thanks for sharing, another FF programme to collect to.

    This is amazing! Might almost tempt me away from OneWorld

    wow. just wow.

    This does not seem user friendly if I would have to call Cairo to redeem my miles on a Star Alliance carrier.
    I can redeem my United miles online for most Star Alliance carriers. I am going to pass on Egypt Air.

    Nice. Thanks for the informative details, will definitely look to try it out.

    This is very surprising but good to know

    Never flown on EgyptAir before. No plans to go to Egypt any time soon either but good to know this information.

    How is the flying experience on Egypt Air? How does it compare to other airlines like Singapore Air?

    Reading through FAQs at EgyptAir Plus I saw these 2 items:

    28. What is required to redeem miles for a reward?
    The necessary amount of miles must be present in a member’s account. Reservation must be made confirmed and booked in reward reservation class. No wait list is permitted.
    A reward request form together with the copies of EGYPTAIR Plus membership card and ID must be handed over to the EGYPTAIR Sales Office for the issuance of the award tickets..

    29. Where should I go to claim a reward ticket?
    Reward tickets can be picked up from any EGYPTAIR sales office upon presentation of a valid identification card. .

    Do they still require this? Or can these be booked over the phone?

    Prashant Gangwal says:

    Good to know about Egypt Air!

    Could this work as a Backup on my LH-Sen?

    Good implementation of family bonus concept

    So I’m unclear… Do status miles get awarded to the flyer AND go to the main account holder? Or do they only go to the main account holder?

    In other words, if 2 people take a trip and earn 10k miles each. Does main account holder get 10k from both? OR… does main account holder get 10k from both AND the other person in the pool also gets 10k?

    That is very generous allowing household miles to count for status. I wish there was a oneworld airline that did the same.

    Very well-written and informative piece. Egypt itself is in my future plans, so it’s something I might consider now knowing this.

    So let me see if I get it.

    Fly 30K within 24 months (or how long?) to get Silver. Clock resets. Fly another 30K within 24 months to get Gold. Clock resets. Fly another 30K within 24 months to keep Gold? Clock doesn’t reset?

    Very interesting approach to a lesser-known program.
    I love posts like this: thank you for posting!

    Pretty wild. I had no idea. This one actually might be worth doing; thanks for sharing it!

    Looks like I have a new airline to star using to get a new status. LOL