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Can These
Miles Be Saved?
ChrisCrossings · July 19, 2002
Q: I saw your
article in which you helped someone get their
American Express points they had lost. I was hoping you could help me.
I had two American Express accounts, a personal and a corporate card.
In January my company switched to MasterCard. Some of the charges on my
corporate account were not paid on time.
In the meantime, I had some personal problems which caused me to travel
quite a bit and my personal account fell behind. Also, National Airlines
charged my account in excess of $1,500 in unexplained charges. It never
disputed the charges once I was able to bring it to American Express'
attention, but it took several months. Anyway, they've now canceled the
account and I have lost over 110,000 frequent flier points - I never used
any.
Can you help?
-- Harry Heck
A: No. But I'm going to answer your question anyway because I've
experienced the same problem that you have, and I suspect others have
too.
Let me explain. About ten years ago I also carried an American Express
corporate card - and I also fell behind on payments. You would think that
a charge card company would like customers who don't pay off their entire
bill but Amex seemed none too pleased.
Several years later, the company used my late payment patterns as an excuse
to not issue me a personal American Express card. This struck me as odd.
I had paid the entire card off, American Express had made its money off
me, but now it didn't want my business. Maybe that's because I didn't
understand the difference between a charge card and a credit card. (American
Express offers both, but it only wants you to pay the credit card off
late - not the charge card.)
Now, to your question. I checked with the company and was told by a spokeswoman
that your miles are lost. "You have to be a cardmember in good standing
and have an active account to redeem earned Membership Rewards points.
If an account is canceled for any derogatory reason, the points are immediately
forfeited," she told me.
It isn't immediately clear if American Express won't fork over your miles
because you canceled your account or because you didn't pay up on time.
But either way, it won't help you recover your points.
I wish there was more that I could do. But the Amex representative quoted
me chapter and verse in the cardmember agreement that clearly states you
could lose your points, and changing the contract is beyond the limited
scope of my influence.
Christopher
Elliott's column appears on weekly on Ticked.com. All e-mailed questions
to ChrisCrossings become property of Ticked.com and may be edited, condensed
or republished at the site's discretion. You may reach Elliott at chris@ticked.com.
Or visit his home page at http://www.elliott.org.
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