No Business Class Award Seats To Asia? Why Lufthansa Miles & More Still Matters.
Mar 19, 2026
Photo Credit: Maria Fung
When you see a long boarding line, you assume you’re lining up for economy. That’s what we thought too on a recent Lufthansa flight from San Francisco to Munich. We were booked in business class using points. Everything felt routine. That quiet uncertainty, "will this actually work the way it’s supposed to?" is something I hear from families all the time. And honestly, it’s something I still feel myself sometimes too. It is not because families don’t have points, but because the seats don’t show up when they need them.
Photo Credit: Maria Fung
The Real Shift In Award Travel (What Families Are Feeling)
Before the pandemic, award travel was mostly about mileage math. Find the lowest number. Stretch points as far as possible. Today, it feels different and a little heavier. Families are sitting on 300k, 500k, sometimes more points and still running into:
- no business class or first class seats
- only one premium seat when they need two or more
- availability that appears too late to plan around school calendars
I see this most often with Asia-focused programs like ANA, EVA Air, Japan Airlines, Cathay Pacific, Singapore Airlines and more....Don’t get me wrong. These are excellent airlines with beautiful cabins. They’re just not always reliable for families who need multiple seats on fixed dates. That’s where Lufthansa Miles & More quietly becomes useful.
Why Lufthansa Miles & More Still Shows Up When Others Don’t
I don’t think one program is “better” than another. They just behave differently. Miles & More works differently because of how Lufthansa releases award inventory and who gets to see it. Here are four ways it gives families more control.
(1) You See Award Seats Other Programs Never Show You
Lufthansa keeps some award seats only for Miles & More members. So a flight might look like:
- economy class award only when searched through a partner program (for example, ANA or Air Canada)
- but business class or premium economy class when searched directly through Miles & More
This is where I see families get discouraged and conclude, “There’s no space,” When in reality, they’re just looking through the wrong window. I noticed this early on too. Availability can look completely different depending on which program you’re using to search.
Photo Credit: Maria Fung
(2) More Than One Lufthansa First Class Seat (Even Close-In)
Partner programs usually show one Lufthansa first class award seat, and only very close to departure, often 7 ~ 14 days out (Sometimes even nothing showed). Miles & More often shows more than one. For couples or families traveling together, that difference matters. It’s the difference between theoretically possible and actually usable.

Photo Credit: Maria Fung
(3) You Can Plan Earlier (Which Families Need)
Miles & More program allows Lufthansa first class award bookings nearly a year in advance. Most partner programs don’t show anything until the final two weeks if they show anything at all. Families don’t travel on “let’s see what opens next week” schedules, we plan around school calendars, work calendars, and everyone’s patience levels. Early visibility changes everything.

Photo Credit: Maria Fung
(4) Fewer Married-Segment Roadblocks
If you’ve searched Asia - Europe routes and watched business class award availability disappear depending on your origin or destination, you’ve met married segments. Miles & More often bypasses these restrictions, showing premium award availability that stay hidden elsewhere.

Photo Credit: Maria FungFurther Reading:Score First Class Seats: 4 Must-Know Lufthansa Miles & More Secrets
Where Miles & More Fits For Asia Travel (And Where It Doesn’t)
Miles & More isn’t an Asia award program, and it doesn’t replace ANA, EVA Air or Japan Airlines when those award availability are available. But when Asia flight award availability:
- doesn’t open
- only offers one seat
- or shows up too late for family planning
Miles & More becomes an alternative. It’s not about Lufthansa first class and business class meals. It’s about access. An access has another door when the main one stays closed.
How U.S. Families Can Actually Build Miles & More Miles
(1) Flying & Crediting Paid Flights
If you fly Lufthansa Group, United Airlines or other Star Alliance airlines on paid tickets, you can choose to credit those flights to Miles & More instead of the operating airline’s program. For families who already fly Star Alliance regularly, this can quietly add up over time.
(2) Buying Miles (Sometimes Strategic)
Lufthansa allows members to buy Miles & More miles, often with bonus promotions. This isn’t something I recommend casually but in real life, it can make sense:
- when award availability is available but you’re short miles
- when cash prices are high and buying miles bridges the gap
- when availability matters more than perfect cents-per-mile math
Miles & More uses a bundled purchase system rather than exact amounts, so this works best selectively, not as a default. For families trying to secure specific seats on specific dates, this is sometimes the difference between thinking about a trip and actually booking it.

Photo Credit: TripPlus
(3) Transferable Points via Rove
More recently, Rove became a 1:1 transfer partner to Miles & More. This doesn’t replace flying or buying miles, it simply adds another way to participate. The important shift, at least from how I see it, is this: Miles & More no longer relies on a single path to build miles.
A quick reality check:
- you need at least 1,500 miles in your Miles & More account to search awards
- taxes and fees can be higher than some programs
- if you’re looking purely for EVA Air availability, EVA’s own program often works better
So Miles & More is a deliberate tool, not a default one.

Photo Credit: Rove
How This Played Out For Us
Photo Credit: Lufthansa
When Lufthansa announced the return of the Airbus A380 (Superjumbo) to San Francisco in May 2025, we booked Lufthansa business class on the A380 from San Francisco to Munich by using Air Canada Aeroplan points, with a stopover as part of a longer UK trip. Air Canada Aeroplan is one of the easier programs to earn points with, thanks to multiple U.S. bank partners. A welcome bonus from cards like the Chase Sapphire Preferred or American Express Gold can easily cover more than two one-way business class tickets to Europe or Asia, depending on availability.

Photo Credit: Maria Fung
We chose Air Canada Aeroplan because it gave us solid partner access on Lufthansa metal, especially with the increased premium capacity on that route.

Photo Credit: Maria Fung
At boarding, we were unexpectedly upgraded to Lufthansa first class. That part was luck that you don’t plan for. What wasn’t luck:
- choosing a strong partner program (Air Canada Aeroplan)
- paying attention to capacity changes (aircraft swaps matter)
- holding Lufthansa Senator status through a long-term status match
(American Airlines Platinum Pro → ITA Airways Club Volare Executive in 2024 → Lufthansa Senator in 2025, valid through 2027)

Photo Credit: Lufthansa
And yes, both of us were upgraded! When you’re traveling with a kid, that’s the real win. The upgrade wasn’t the plan. The plan was positioning ourselves well long before boarding started.

Photo Credit: Maria Fung

Photo Credit: Maria Fung
Who This Strategy Is Not For
Miles & More program isn’t ideal if:
- you mainly fly EVA Air from North America or Taipei
- you prioritize the lowest fees above all else
- you only need one seat and don’t mind waiting
That doesn’t make it a bad program, just the wrong one for certain trips.
Final Thoughts
If there’s one thing I hope families take away from this, it’s that award travel today is less about finding the cheapest redemption and more about building access before you need it. Upgrades feel magical. Access is built.
Miles & More program gives families another way to:
- see award availability others can’t
- plan earlier
- stay flexible when Asia flight awards don’t line up
With multiple ways to fund it from flying, buying miles, to using transferable points, families can approach this system calmly and intentionally, without chasing miracles. And when you’re traveling as a family especially with kids, that kind of quiet control matters more than anything else.
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