Add to Your Airline Mileage Balances with This Wall Street Journal Subscription Deal
|A few times each year subscriptions to The Wall Street Journal earn significant amounts of airline miles when purchased through an airline’s shopping portal.
Now is one of those times.
Each major airline’s shopping portal is offering a nice chunk of miles for WSJ subscriptions.
The United MileagePlus shopping portal offer runs through October 1, 2019. I would think the other airlines’ shopping portals would have that end date, too.
The Mileage Deals
American Airlines – Earn 2,200 AAdvantage miles when you order your Wall Street Journal subscription.
United Airlines – Earn 1,800 MileagePlus miles when you order your Wall Street Journal subscription.
Alaska Airlines – Earn 1,600 Mileage Plan miles when you order your Wall Street Journal subscription.
Southwest Airlines – Earn 1,600 Rapid Reward points when you order your Wall Street Journal subscription.
Delta Air Lines – Earn 1,400 Delta SkyMiles when you order your Wall Street Journal subscription.
The links above will take you to the corresponding airline’s shopping portal.
If you’re not already logged in, you’ll need to do so then.
From there you will click the Shop Now button which will direct you to the subscription page for The Wall Street Journal.
If you want to purchase a regular subscription, that’s definitely an option. However, it’s a tad expensive to say the least.
A better option is to take advantage of the Introductory Offer of $12 for 12 weeks.
With the intro offer, you’re effectively buying a certain amount of airlines miles for $12.
You get to read The Wall Street Journal for 12 weeks as a bonus.
Your subscription must remain active (not canceled) for at least 45 days to earn the airline miles.
Be sure to set a reminder to call the WSJ customer service number 1-800-JOURNAL (568-7625) to cancel prior to your intro period ending…roughly week 11.
If you don’t cancel, your subscription will convert to a monthly subscription with the monthly amount ($19-$22 depending on the subscription type chosen) being charged to your payment method.
When you call, you’ll likely have to listen to a sales pitch, but ultimately they’ll relent and cancel your subscription.
Supposedly, subscribers in California can cancel subscriptions online…a nice feature when subscribing just for the miles.
And once you’re canceled, you’re freed up to take advantage of the next increased airline shopping portal bonus on a Wall Street Journal subscription.