āļø TRENDING TRAVEL NEWS āļø
⢠Fly For Free: BermudAir is giving away free winter flights to Bermuda with select hotel stays.
⢠Travel Tool: Check if your points booking is a good deal with our free calculator.
⢠Hotel News: The best hotels in the world for 2025 were just revealed ā did your fave make the list?
⢠Card Tips: Turn your holiday spending into next yearās vacation with the right cards.

Gooooooooooood morning from my spacious suite in the sky. Iām currently in Kuwait Airwaysā first class on my way to Bangkok, and loving every second of it.
And if you want to fly some aspirational seats of your own, Iāve got some tips to help you get there:
šØ Deal Alert: Fly to Tokyo for Just $366 Round-Trip
Looking for cheap flights to Japan? Fly from the West Coast to Tokyo for just $366 round-trip on Hawaiian Airlines with flexible 2026 travel dates.

š¤ Travel Trivia Tuesday
Which U.S. airport ranked highest in passenger satisfaction among mega airports? | 
The answer is at the bottom of todayās newsletter, so keep reading to find out!

š„ This program is (still) insane
Okay, yāall. Remember a couple of weeks ago when I told you about Rove Miles? And how they started offering loyalty-eligible bookings?
Well, there have been a few more updates. And it turns out Rove is even better than I thought ā and Iām kind of freaking out (in a healthy way).

As a reminder, Rove is a program that allows you to book flights, hotels, and more, and earn miles that can be transferred to airlines and hotels just like your bank points.
But whatās unique here is that they make it pretty easy to double or triple-dip and rack up quite a few miles.
What is going on with these earning rates?
The big thing Iāve discovered is that there are a LOT of hotels offering 50-65x Rove Miles per dollarā¦
For example, look at this hotel in London. Itās not glamorous, but it does earn 60x miles.

So, although one night costs $253 (which honestly isnāt totally abnormal for London), youāll earn more than 15,000 Rove miles.
And look how much they charge to book the same hotel with points ā 2,000 miles per night.
That means youāre effectively getting a buy one, get⦠seven.
I just left Jordan a few hours ago, and found this Hilton resort on the Dead Sea. Booked through Rove, it costs about $32 more per night than through Hilton.

But hereās the cool part⦠since youāre earning 42x Rove Miles, booking one night earns you enough Rove Miles to book the same hotel again.
Plus, the 42x rate even includes free breakfast (even without loyalty benefits). š„
Okay, one more example.
This hotel in Tokyo costs $162 per night, all in. BUT⦠it also earns 55x Rove miles. So youāll rack up 9,000 miles from booking a single night.

You could use those miles to book three more nights at the same hotel.
Or, you could transfer them to a program like Avios (which Rove currently has a 20% transfer bonus to), and book a domestic U.S. flight on American Airlines for 9,500 Avios.

New York to Charlotte on AA (booked with Qatar Avios)
If that AA flight costs $162, youāre getting a 100% return on your hotel purchase.
The specific flight I showed you above happens to cost $382 on that day, which would be a 235% return on your spend.
Itās just⦠crazy.
New transfer partner
As I mentioned, you can transfer Rove Miles to programs like Finnair Avios, Cathay Pacific, KLM/Air France Flying Blue, and more.
As of yesterday, you can also transfer them to Miles & More ā the loyalty program for Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian, ITA, and a bunch more.

I donāt know a ton about the sweet spots here yet, but here are a few potential uses, just to give you an idea:
Miles & More often has crazy sales with round-trip business class flights to Europe for as little as 55,000 miles, but you can also get good value booking other Star Alliance partners:
U.S. to South America on United or Air Canada for 62,500 miles in business class
U.S. to Australia or New Zealand for 75,000 miles in business class
U.S. to Southeast Asia in Singapore Airlines business class for 85,000 miles
The point is that Rove has a lot of great transfer partners, and they seem to be adding more and more.
An update to loyalty-eligible bookings
As I told you, Rove also supports hotel bookings that will earn you both Rove Miles AND hotel points, elite bonus, and elite night credits.
Well⦠theyāve also improved that.
Now, payments for loyalty-eligible bookings will be charged directly by the hotel.
This means if you book that Hilton hotel from earlier, choose the loyalty-eligible rate, and use a Hilton credit card to pay for it, youāll earn the bonus multiplier for Hilton hotels that the card gives you.
The same goes for Marriott, Hyatt, and IHG co-branded cards. As long as you see this little text bubble in the search, you know this will be the case. š

One more thing
If you use my personal referral link to sign up, you might get some free miles.
Until October 31, there was an offer to get 500 free miles for signing up with a referral link⦠but it seems to still be live. So give it a try. š¤·š¼āāļø
To be clear, we have no partnership with Rove. They didnāt ask me to write this, and they arenāt paying us anything ā this is my personal link. And Iāll only earn miles if you actually use Rove to earn miles yourself.
Think of it as you helping me to create more great Daily Drop travel content in the future. š
Anyway, Iām super excited about Rove.
Iāve booked a couple of hotels through them for this week, and Iām already looking at more ā thereās really nothing to lose when you can triple-dip with hotel and credit card points. š¤·š¼āāļø

āļø 20% transfer bonus to Avios
Speaking of 20% transfer bonuses to Avios, Rove isnāt the only program offering one.
Until November 22, you can also transfer Capital One miles to British Airways with a 20% bonus.

Itās worth noting that you can freely move Avios between various airlines ā so you could transfer Capital One miles to BA, transfer those to Qatar, and book that American Airlines award I showed you in the last section.
Anyway, this is a solid deal if you have a stash of Capital One miles. And, we do see fairly regular transfer bonuses of 20-30% from other banks as well.
Still, there are lots of great Avios sweet spots you could leverage here.
For example, you could transfer them to Iberia (after first moving them to BA), then fly from New York to Madrid in lie-flat business class for 40,500 Avios. š

Thanks to this bonus, thatās just 34,000 Capital One miles for business class across the pond ā a fantastic deal.
Unlike Rove Miles, you can rack up tens or hundreds of thousands of Capital One miles just from signing up for a card like the Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card or the Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card, making this bonus a little more accessible.
You only have about three weeks to take advantage of this bonus ā so make sure you hunt down some deals before itās too late.

š Travel Trivia Reveal
We asked you which U.S. airport topped the list for mega-airport satisfaction in 2025.

Photo courtesy of Simple Flying
And the correct answer is⦠MinneapolisāSaint Paul International Airport (MSP)! āļø
For the second year in a row, MSP snagged the top spot for airports with more than 33 million annual passengers, scoring 660 on J.D. Powerās 1,000-point scale.
Thatās pretty crazy given record-breaking crowds and long TSA lines across North America this past year.
Soooo, why do people love it, you ask? MSP recently finished some big projects that helped with terminal facilities, food options, and overall travel. Weāre talking local restaurants, smoother check-ins, and so on.
And ok, this is insane ā passengers who described their airport experience as āperfectā spent an average of $42 in the terminal.
Apparently, a better vibe means spending more on an airport IPA? š¤¦āāļø
MSP beat out Detroit (DTW) and Phoenix (PHX), which came in second and third, and you can read the entire list here.

Thatās gonna do it for today, friendos!
I know today was a little tedious with all of that math⦠but leveraging these crazy deals is exactly the kind of nerdy stuff that gets you flying and staying around the world for free.
Take care and see you tomorrow,
With contributions by McKay Moffitt





