Only 8% of earned miles are ever redeemed for a flight. MileIntel analyzes your miles, status, and certificates across every program and tells you the smartest move for every trip. Connect Gmail once and it starts automatically.
No credit card required · 14-day free trial · Cancel anytime
Airlines are sitting on $23 billion in miles they hope you'll never use. The average elite flyer has $3,400 in unused value across upgrades, miles, and lapsed credits.
Other tools track your balances. MileIntel tells you what to do with them.









That certificate is worth $3,200 on the Tokyo route and $400 domestic. Not next flight. Whole year.
That certificate is worth $3,200 on the Tokyo route and $400 domestic. Not next flight. Whole year.
That certificate is worth $3,200 on Tokyo vs $400 domestic. Don’t waste it guessing.
The difference between 1.4 cpp vs 10.6 cpp is knowing which partner to transfer to.
Airlines call it breakage: 10–20% of all points earned are never redeemed. MileIntel matches expiring assets to upcoming trips.




Most of the value is automatic. You'll spend about 60 seconds on setup. MileIntel handles the rest.
One OAuth click. MileIntel starts scanning your inbox for booking confirmations, loyalty program updates, and travel-related emails. Your calendar feeds in upcoming trips.
AI parsing extracts your balances, status tiers, upgrade certificates, and trip itineraries. Related bookings get linked into coherent trips automatically: flights, hotels, car rentals, all correlated.
Your digital wallet shows everything: 142K United miles, 87K Delta, 2 upgrade certificates expiring in October, Premier 1K status 12,000 qualifying points from renewal. One screen. Real-time.
Best Path doesn't just show options. It recommends: "Use your upgrade certificate on the Washington to Tokyo segment ($3,200 value), hold plus points for the December San Francisco to London." Intelligence, not just information.
Here's the problem: you have an upgrade certificate, a trip to Tokyo in March, and a domestic flight next week. Most people use the certificate on whatever's next. But MileIntel knows that certificate is worth $3,200 on the Tokyo route and about $400 on the domestic. It also knows your plus points expire in April, so it tells you: use plus points on the domestic, save the certificate for Tokyo. That's not tracking. That's strategy.
Use upgrade certificate on UA 2065 Washington→Las Vegas
Economy → First Class · 87% clear rate
Use plus points on DL 1034 Las Vegas→Cincinnati
Premium Economy → Business · 72% clear rate
142,500
Premier 1K · 2 GPUs
87,200
Diamond · 4 RUCs
215,000
Titanium · 3 SNAs
325,000
Platinum Card
You know you have miles in United, Delta, Marriott, and Amex. But how many? When do they expire? What certificates do you have left? MileIntel pulls all of it from your email automatically and keeps it current. The spreadsheet you've been maintaining? This replaces it.
You book a flight on United, a hotel on Marriott, and put "Vegas Conference" on your calendar. And somehow you're still managing three separate things. MileIntel turns all of that into one trip, automatically, with a full lifecycle from first search to wheels-down.
Las Vegas Trip
Washington → Las Vegas → Cincinnati → Washington · 3 flights
Tokyo Trip
San Francisco → Tokyo → San Francisco · 2 flights
MileIntel is watching, so you don't have to be.
Apr 15 · Delta One
DEPARTURE
2:45 PM
Terminal 7, Gate B42
13h 45m
ARRIVAL
5:30 PM+1
Terminal 1, Narita
United Polaris Lounge
Tokyo · 18°C
¥ 149.3 / USD
List position: #2
87% clear rate
Award availability and transfer bonuses tracked on your routes. Business class opens up — you know first.
Clearing probability, seat map shifts, and price drop alerts. Your odds change — MileIntel tells you whether to hold or switch.
Gate changes, delay alerts, lounge access, and upgrade list position — pushed to your phone before the board updates.
Miles earned, status progress, and what to do with your points. Your portfolio updates automatically.
Every plan includes a 14-day free trial. No credit card to start. Your miles are devaluing at roughly 15% a year. The longer you wait, the less they're worth.
Those are excellent single-purpose tools. AwardWallet tracks balances. Point.me searches award availability. ExpertFlyer monitors seat maps. But expert travelers still spend weeks manually piecing that data together to plan their whole year's strategy.
MileIntel is the strategic layer on top. It takes what you have(wallet), what you're planning (trips), and what's possible (availability and clearing rates), and tells you the optimal move across all of it.
They answer "what's out there?" MileIntel answers "what should Ido, across my entire travel year?"
Had 280K Amex points, always booked economy
Didn't realize those Membership Rewards points could transfer 1:1 to airline partners. Was about to pay $4,200 for two economy tickets to Tokyo.
MileIntel identified an ANA business class transfer: 85K points each, two lie-flat seats for the same trip.
$2,840 saved vs. booking economy cash
Former United Premier 1K, hadn't checked accounts in 14 months
Had 2 upgrade certificates expiring in 6 weeks, 167K miles across three airlines, and a family trip to London already booked in economy.
MileIntel caught the expiring certificates, matched them to the London trip, and confirmed an 81% clearing probability for business class.
$5,120 in upgrade value recovered before expiration
First year of work travel, 4 airlines, no idea what they had
Flying weekly for a consulting gig, earning miles on whatever airline the company booked. Had never logged into a loyalty account.
MileIntel synced Gmail and found 47K United miles, 31K Delta, and 18K Southwest points. Enough for 3 free flights home.
$1,370 in flights from miles they didn't know they had
Two travelers, overlapping airline and hotel programs
Planning an anniversary trip to Italy. Between them: Amex points, Marriott free night certificates, and some random airline miles across Delta and United.
MileIntel mapped a plan combining Amex transfers for Delta One seats and Marriott certificates for 4 hotel nights in Florence.
$3,680 saved across flights and hotels
Everything you need to know about tracking your loyalty assets with MileIntel.