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⢠Attention, Newbies:Ā Start here ā our basics video will teach you how to earn smarter and travel cheaper.
⢠Holiday Plans: Here are USA Todayās best all-inclusive resorts for a Christmas getaway this year.
⢠Heads Up: Visiting U.S. national parks in 2026? International travelers could pay a new entry fee.
⢠Donāt Miss:Ā What āGTEā means on a boarding pass and how it affects your boarding.

šš¼ Howdy, my friends. Iām writing to you from my business-class cocoon on Cathay Pacific, on my way home!
Since Iām finally back on an airline with Wi-Fi, letās get into the good travel stuff:
- š¤Ā Travel Trivia Tuesday
- šØĀ MASSIVE points return on hotel purchases
- āļø Up to 35% transfer bonus to Aeroplan
- š¬Ā Daily Drop Pro is still 50% off (oops)
- šĀ My quietest (but most useful) travel buddy
- š Travel Trivia Reveal

š¤ Travel Trivia Tuesday
Which airline has been voted the worldās best low-cost carrier 16 years in a row?
The answer is chillin at the bottom of todayās newsletter⦠so keep reading!

šØ MASSIVE points return on hotel purchases
Rove Miles is back on their nonsense today.
They basically took last weekās Black Friday promo and cranked it up even further ā today only, you can earn up to 10,000 bonus Rove Miles on hotel bookings through their portal.
Hereās the deal in plain English:
- Spend $500 ā get 5,000 bonus miles using TRAVELTUESDAY500
- Spend $1,000 ā get 10,000 bonus miles using TRAVELTUESDAY1000
Where this becomes ridiculous is how these bonuses stack on top of Roveās already chunky multipliers.
Let me show you my favorite example.
Say you want to go to Japan during cherry blossom season ā because obviously you do ā and you book this Kyoto machiya for seven nights atĀ a total of $1,208.

For that stay alone, you earn 54,366 Rove Miles.
Add the 10,000-mile Travel Tuesday bonus on top, and youāre walking away with 64,366 total miles ā plus whatever you earn from your credit card spend.
Now, where it gets stupid is the fact that the same exact seven-night stay prices at 33,000 Rove Miles.
As shown right in the screenshot, that shakes out to a 3.7Ā¢ per point redemption.
If you redeem all of your earnings at that rate, youāre getting a 197% return on your spend, which isā¦. hilarious.
But maybe you donāt even want to redeem for another hotel. Maybe youād rather take those miles and turn them into something⦠higher altitude. š
Since Rove has tons of transfer partners ā including Flying Blue ā you could move 60,000 miles over and book this business-class flight to Europe on Air France. š

So yes: booking a cute little machiya for cherry blossom season can also hand you a free lie-flat seat to Europe. Itās completely ridiculous, and I respect it.
A couple of things to keep in mind:
- This only works for first-time hotel bookings with Rove
- You also earn credit card points from the cash spend
- New users get 1,000 bonus miles just for signing up (with this link)
Happy Travel Tuesday, my friends. Go click some buttons. š«”

āļø Up to 35% transfer bonus to Aeroplan
Aeroplan is running one of those transfer bonuses that sounds confusing, but once you zoom out a bit, itās actually fantastic ā especially if you already hold the AeroplanĀ® Credit Card.
Basically, you can get a 15-25% bonus when transferring Ultimate Rewards points to Aeroplan until January 5th, 2026.

The promo is tiered, meaning the bonus jumps as your transfer amount increases:
- 15% bonus on transfers of 1,000ā74,000 points
- 20% bonus on transfers of 75,000ā174,000 points
- 25% bonus on transfers of 175,000+ points
And hereās where it gets spicy: if you do have the AeroplanĀ Card, you already get a 10% bonus when transferring Ultimate Rewards points (minimum of 50,000 points).
Stack that with this promo, and youāre looking at a combined bonus of up to 35%.
The tiers are high ā yes.
But even the 15% tier is better than most programsā headline bonuses. Aeroplanās award chart is already so strong that a modest boost goes a long way.
Take their distance-based pricing for most partner awards. This structure opens the door to some of the best sweet spots in the game.
For example, you can fly from Seattle or Vancouver to Japan in business class for 55,000 Aeroplan points on partners like ANA, because that routing falls into Aeroplanās lowest distance band between North America and Asia.

With a 15% bonus, you only need 48,000 points to book that.
If youāre a co-branded cardholder stacking up to 35%, that drops to just 41,000 UR points ā as long as you transfer enough to hit the right tier.
And thatās just one example. Aeroplan has a pile of sweet spots, plus the ability to add a stopover for just 5,000 points.
I wonāt go deep into that today, but I wrote a whole newsletter about it ā feel free to check that out if you want the full stopover masterclass.
Bottom line: Aeroplan has more partners than any other airline program, some of the best award flexibility out there, and now a transfer bonus that actually moves the needle.
If youāve got the right combination of points and cards, this is one of the smartest ways to stretch your UR points even further.

š¬ Daily Drop Pro is still 50% off (oops)
Want to know a secret?
Daily Drop Pro had a crazy 50% off sale for Cyber Monday yesterday. And our founder, Nate, explicitly told me to shut the sale down before he went offline for the day.
But then he disappeared into whatever wilderness heās in today, I got on a flight back to Indonesia, and somewhere between the layover noodles and the oxygen-deprived delirium of flying for 18 hours⦠I just didnāt do it. š¤·š¼āāļø
All of this is to say⦠Daily Drop Pro is STILL 50% off today, just $75 for the entire year. So if you missed it before, youāre welcome.
And Nate ā if youāre reading this, please donāt fire me.
And if he does fire me, the rest of you can start sending in job offers. My work history includes singing opera and writing about points and miles. š

SPONSORED BY SURFSHARK
š My quietest (but most useful) travel buddy
I spend so much time thinking about flights, points, and hotel status that I completely ignored something basic: the Wi-Fi Iām actually using while I book everything.
Enter: Surfshark.
It takes literally two clicks, and suddenly:
- My data is fully encrypted
- My location is hidden
- And the internet thinks Iām still curled up on my couch in New York (when Iām actually trying to stream Bake Off from a hotel in Zurich).

Now I can securely check my bank account, make purchases, or sneak in an episode of Netflix without wondering who's watching over my digital shoulder ā and Surfshark never tracks, monitors, or stores what I do online.
Bonus Perk: One membership protects unlimited devices at once. Laptop, phone, tablet, fiancĆ©ās phone, random iPad you forgot you owned⦠done.
Whether youāre gearing up for a big trip or just tired of your coffee shop Wi-Fi giving hacker vibes, this is one of those small things youāll wish youād set up way sooner.
š Go to surfshark.com/dailydrop or use code DAILYDROP at checkout to get 4 extra months of Surfshark VPN!

š Travel Trivia Reveal
If you guessed AirAsia, give yourself a quick pat on the back. š

According to Skytraxās 2025 World Airline Awards, people voted AirAsia⦠for the 16th consecutive year. Sixteen. Thatās pretty good, yāall.
A few reasons it keeps winning:
- One-way flights like Kuala Lumpur to Phuket for around $40
- Frequent flash promos (their āFree Seatsā campaign is one example)
- Multiple bundles like āValue Packā and āPremium Flexā that let you add perks without blowing up your fare
As with most budget airlines, the lowest fares typically only include your seat (so luggage, seat selection, and priority boarding are all add-ons).
But people seem happy to deal with that if it means paying less than what most airport meals cost.
Other top picks included: Scoot (Singapore Airlinesā budget brand ā also named best long-haul low-cost carrier), IndiGo, Eurowings, Vueling, and Spirit (lol⦠kidding about the last one).
Want to dig into the full rankings? Theyāre all here.

Thatās gonna do it for today, folks. I hope you all have a wonderful day, and Iāll see you tomorrow.
Sampai jumpa lagi,
Mike DodgeHead Writer, Daily Drop
With contributions by McKay Moffitt

