Travelling as a family on points is a completely different game from solo travel — it requires more planning, smarter earning, and understanding how programs handle multiple passengers. But the payoff is enormous. A family of four in business class on points is genuinely achievable for Canadians who know what they're doing.

The Challenge With Family Travel

Points redemptions are almost always per-person. A business class flight that costs 100,000 Aeroplan points solo costs 400,000 for a family of four. That's a lot of points to accumulate — which is why family points travel requires both partners to be earning actively and strategically from day one.

Family Pooling: Combining Points Together

Most programs allow some form of points pooling or transfer between household members. Here's how the major ones work:

ProgramPooling RulesLimits
AeroplanFree pooling within a householdNo limit
Amex MR (Canada)Transfer to another person's frequent flyer program if they're an authorized userNo limit
Marriott BonvoyPoint transfers allowed100,000 pts/year
Hilton HonorsPoint transfers allowed500,000 pts/year
World of HyattPoint transfers allowedOnce every 30 days
British Airways AviosHousehold account pooling availableUp to 7 members
Air France Flying BlueFamily account pooling — members earn into a shared poolUp to 8 members

The Two-Player Advantage

The most powerful acceleration in the points game happens when two people in a household are both earning. When one partner meets a welcome bonus minimum spend, the points land in the household pool. Two people each getting a 60,000-point welcome bonus is 120,000 points — enough for two business class tickets to Europe in some programs.

💡 Strategy: Stagger card applications so you're not both hitting minimum spend requirements at the same time. Partner A gets a new card in January, Partner B applies in July. This way your household is always working toward a welcome bonus without overspending to meet two minimums simultaneously.

Which Player Accumulates Which Points?

This matters more than most families realize. Key rules:

Children on Points

Kids under 2 typically fly free on your lap (lap infant) on most airlines, or at a fraction of the adult points cost if you want a seat. Children over 2 require their own seat — which means their own award booking at the standard points rate. Factor this into your planning early. A family of four (2 adults + 2 kids over 2) needs 4x the points of a solo traveller.

Real Example: Christmas Family Trip

A family trip during peak holiday season (Christmas/NYE) is one of the hardest to book on points — availability is tight and prices are high, which paradoxically makes points more valuable. Key tactics:

🍁 From Experience: Our family has done Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao on points over the past two Christmas seasons, and Bali is booked for this December. The key is booking early and having the right mix of Aeroplan and Amex MR points ready to deploy. At 3 years old, our daughter already has 45 flight segments — a mix of first class, business class, premium economy, and economy depending on the route and duration.