Most serious points travelers carry cards across multiple issuers—Chase, Amex, Capital One, Citi, Bilt. The problem: your points sit in separate silos, making it difficult to accumulate enough in any single program for a premium redemption. Pooling strategies solve this by funneling points from multiple sources into one airline or hotel account. Here is how to make it work.
Why This Matters
A common scenario: you have 40,000 Chase points, 30,000 Amex points, 25,000 Capital One miles, and 20,000 Citi points. None of those balances alone is enough for a business class flight to Europe. But Air France Flying Blue and Virgin Atlantic are accessible from all four programs—meaning you can combine 115,000 total points into one airline account with a single strategy.
Below, we map every shared transfer partner across the five major credit card programs, show you which airline and hotel programs accept points from the most sources, and provide specific combination strategies for common award bookings.
The Shared Partner Map
Air France Flying Blue and Virgin Atlantic are accessible from all five major programs. Points from five different cards can flow into one airline account for a single premium booking.
Example
ANA first via Virgin Atlantic (60,000 one-way): 30,000 Chase UR + 20,000 Amex MR + 10,000 Capital One = 60,000 Virgin Atlantic miles. Three cards, one world-class flight.
Practical Tips
- Transfer all points before booking. Multiple transfers take 24-48 hours each.
- Confirm availability first. Airline miles cannot be returned to credit cards.
- Time transfers around bonuses for maximum value.
See pooling opportunities at Pointify Points Comparison.
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