How can i retrieve my KLM frequent flier number
John DeLee
It depends on if you are a frequent flier , or a new flier. So if you can lie and say you are a new flier, or you can sign up for there frequent fliers card and get the discounts the long way.
I am from England but live in the USA. I travel frequently. Enroll in one or more airlines frequent flier program and book on their wenbsite and you will start accruing frequent flyer miles
Contact the airline with which you have the frequent flier number.....Normally, possible to reset it online itself and in extreme cases you might have to contact the customer service team. Cheers!
You are able to go on sites such as flyer miles. On this site you can fill out a form and they will tell you how much your frequent flier miles are worth and it is possible to sell it to them.
Frequent travelers typically are members of one or two frequent flyer clubs. They try to minimize the number of airlines that they use so as to easily and quickly accrue large amounts of frequent flier miles on the one or two airlines. By default, then the frequent flier miles quickly accumulate in one frequent flyer program therefore enabling the frequent flyer to have free flights sooner.Airports typically have one or two airlines that are the largest or that have the most flights that arrive or depart from that airport.A frequent flier that travels for business will typically use those airlines because they provide the most options to fit the schedule they need to either fly out or fly home (for example in Dallas, American Airlines would be the choice at the DFW International Airport, while in Atlanta it would be Delta). Since the business frequent flier will be able to get reimbursed for the cost of their flight from their employer, the price of the flight, while important, will many times be a secondary concern. Most companies will have a travel policy that will provide guidelines on the costs that an employee (business frequent flier) can pay for a flight.Additionally, the frequent flier that travels for leisure will try to pay for their flight using their frequent flier miles that they have earned/accrued. If they do not have enough to exchange (a domestic flight is will typically cost 25,000 miles from the freq flier account) then a leisure frequent flier will probably try to balance a low price flight with the schedule that they are trying to achieve.
You should talk to your airline about that. They're the one offering the deals and stuff. And I hear credit card use also contribute to the frequent flier program.s
A number of frequent fliers will have accounts with multiple airlines. Their primary frequent flier number is usually the one associated with the airline they fly with most frequently.
Many frequent flier programs allow you to buy a limited number of miles if you're short of the amount you need to redeem for a ticket. Unless you have most of the miles needed, you might be better off simply buying the ticket and saving your miles for later.
The vast majority of the major airlines around the world have frequent flier programs.
Chevron credit cards do not offer frequent flier miles. However, a Chevron credit card provides its owner with many gas discounts, and up to $300 in rebates annually.