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The Best Strategies to Reaching Lufthansa Frequent Traveller

by Max

There are many guides outlining strategies for reaching Lufthansa Frequent Traveller (FTL) status. Unfortunately, I have repeatedly come across websites that recommend approaches which are barely feasible in practice. For example, who realistically flies 33 segments back and forth within Poland on LOT?

Since a lot has also changed recently within Miles & More regarding Points for Frequent Traveller (or Miles & More Silver) status, I would like to summarize the new options.

In this article, I deliberately focus on practical and realistic ways to reaching FTL status as efficiently as possible. The emphasis is not on theoretical edge cases, but on strategies that can be integrated into everyday life and, ideally, combined with one another.

Naturally, many of the approaches in this article also apply to Senator status. A separate article on this topic will follow in the future.

Lufthansa Status Konto Übersicht
Fictional FTL Points Account

The Frequent Traveller status is the entry level into the Miles & More status world. Currently, the following requirements apply:

  • 650 Status Points
  • 325 Qualifying Points
  • within a qualification period of one calendar year

Status Points are generally earned through flights with airlines of the Lufthansa Group as well as selected Star Alliance partner airlines. Qualifying Points, however, are only awarded for flights with Lufthansa Group airlines and fully integrated Miles & More partners (such as LOT Polish Airlines).

The classic way to achieve Lufthansa Frequent Traveller status is therefore through a sufficient number of (paid) flights. The following applies:

Flight class / Region Status Points Qualifying Points
Economy Class – continental 20 20
Business Class – continental 40 40
Economy Class – intercontinental 60 60
Premium Economy Class – intercontinental 80 80
Business Class – intercontinental 200 200
First Class – intercontinental 400 400

Anyone aiming for FTL status and already realizing that it might be tight should start with a realistic annual plan. This helps clarify early on whether achieving the status this year is feasible and how much may still be missing.

You should ask yourself the following questions:

  • Which flights are already planned anyway? (business or private)
  • In which class will these flights be booked?
  • When will these flights take place?
  • Will these flights occur before or after the desired time of achieving status?

Especially with planned vacation trips or regular business travel, small optimizations can often be made that add up to a significant effect overall. Without planning any additional trips.

Before planning extra flights, it is worth taking a look at ways to reduce the required number of points in advance:

  • 🏨
    Hotel partner Marriott Bonvoy: Three times per year, you can earn 40 Points per stay (120 Points in total). Registration is required. Note: Formerly, 2 nights per stay were necessary. This constraint has been removed.
  • 💳
    Lufthansa credit card: Both applying for the card and converting miles into Points can earn Points.
  • 🎟️
    eVouchers: If you already have eVouchers, up to four can be converted into 50 Points & QPs each. Also interesting: eVouchers can alternatively be used to roll over 100 Points and QPs per voucher into the following year.
  • 🎯
    Promotions and special programs: From time to time, the Lufthansa Group offers promotions where you can earn extra Status Points and Qualifying Points. The Uptrip app also regularly releases collections that award status points (100–200 QPs per year). Subscribing to Lufthansa and Uptrip newsletters is worthwhile.

Possibly, you can directly combine a Marriott stay (including more affordable Bonvoy brands such as Moxy) with already planned trip.

A common mistake is to only look at the status gap at the end of the year. It makes much more sense to calculate early in order to remain flexible throughout the year:

  • Aktueller Stand: Status- und Qualifying Points prüfen
  • Geplante Flüge: Alle Flüge bis zum gewünschten Statuserhalt berücksichtigen
  • Factor in promotions: Points from promotions, hotel programs, or Uptrip

Especially if the status is needed before major vacation trips (e.g. for lounge access or extra baggage allowance), this advance planning is worthwhile. I personally use a small Excel spreadsheet, but even a rough mental calculation is often sufficient.

Depending on the remaining gap, different strategies may be suitable forreaching Lufthansa Frequent Traveller status:

Planned flights can often be optimized without much additional effort:

  • Connections with a stopover instead of a direct flight (e.g. via Frankfurt or Munich). Sometimes this even results in more convenient flight times or lower fares.
  • Checking rail feeder connections (Lufthansa Express Rail), which count toward status up to a certain limit (maximum 160 QPs).

Sometimes, connections departing from Cologne or Düsseldorf with a rail feeder to Frankfurt are cheaper (or at least not more expensive) than departing directly from Frankfurt. This can be worthwhile even if you still fly directly from Frankfurt. In practice, there is currently no systematic check as to whether the booked train was actually used.


If only a few points are missing, upgrades can help. A distinction must be made between upgrades purchased at a fixed price and bid-based upgrades.

On long-haul flights, an upgrade can provide a noticeable boost in Points. However, cheap upgrades at the gate or onboard do not earn points. Nor do upgrades via miles or upgrade vouchers.


Miles & More has recently started awarding QPs for CO₂ compensation of flights (link directly to the offer). Depending on the package booked, up to 80%(!) extra points are possible. However, the Euro-to-Points ratio should be carefully considered. Compensation can be worthwhile especially for short economy flights, whereas compensating long-haul business class flights is often expensive.

Tip: According to Miles & More, Award Flights can also be compensated.


There are regularly attractive offers for:

  • ✈️
    Blind booking flights: via Eurowings, Austrian, or the Lufthansa website.
  • 🛒
    ALDI Reisen (Travels): Eurowings blind booking flights, e.g. €80 round trip.
  • 🌍
    Regional airports: Poland or Italy are often interesting. Deal portals such as Travel-Dealz.de are worth checking.

These trips can often be added spontaneously.


Unfortunately, Lufthansa Group flights are often cheaper when the journey starts in another European country. In particular, it is frequently worth checking the following cities using flight search engines:

Budapest  |  Stockholm  |  Copenhagen  |  Oslo

While the additional flight to the starting point may negate the price advantage, it also provides extra Points and an additional travel experience.


  • Business Class long-haul: A quick way to earn many Points. Consider Star Alliance partners if only Points are missing.
  • First Class: More of an experience, less price-efficient for status purposes. Details on long-haul Business and First Class will follow in the Senator article.

A comparatively short route with a high Qualifying Points yield is Beirut (200 QPs per segment). This is a destination I personally fly to often and which is served by several Lufthansa Group airlines (e.g. from Düsseldorf, Berlin, Frankfurt, and Zurich). However, caution is advised: Anyone looking for the comfort experience of a true Business Class seat should choose a different destination. Beirut is served by the A320 fleet, thus standard short-haul seating.


If only a few Qualifying Points are missing at the end of the qualification period, miles can be converted into Status Points via the Lufthansa credit card. A maximum of 100 Points and QPs can be obtained for 25,000 miles. The exchange rate is painful, but it can help secure an otherwise lost status.

Example: Annual planning for LH FTL status (click to expand)

Planned flights & Status Points

Planned Flights Calculation Status Points Qualifying Points
3× Europe Economy for job (Round trip) 3 × 2 × 20 120 120
1× long-haul Premium Eco vacation
(inkl. Eco-Zubringer)
2 × (80 + 20) 200 200
1× Europa Eco (inlc. connection) for job 4 × 20 80 80
Subtotal of planned flights 400 400

Status Gap to FTL

Category Required Planned Missing
Status Points 650 400 250
Qualifying Points 325 400 0

Options to close gap

Action Description Status Points Qualifying Points
Marriott Bonvoy Hotels 3× 2 nights in participating hotels 120
Upgrade by Bidding Long-haul round trip 120 120
CO2 Compensation (Pakacge „M“) Europe Round trip (+30 %) 12 12
Uptrip Collection Exemplary Status Collection 40
Additional Status Points 292 132

Result: 692 Status Points & 532 Qualifying Points → FTL Status reached (incl. Buffer)

In addition to all these strategies, there is a completely different way to achieve Frequent Traveller status. Without any Status Points or Qualifying Points.

Through the Miles & More Uptrip app, FTL status can currently be unlocked via a special collection. Instead of points, collected cards from flown segments and promotions count. The flights also do not need to have been completed within a single year.

This approach is particularly interesting for:

  • Frequent flyer beginners without an existing status
  • Travelers who cannot meet the status point requirements
  • Travelers with limited flight frequency or mainly short-haul flights

👉 Here you can find the detailed step-by-step guide to FTL status with Uptrip, including calculation examples, pitfalls, and current updates.

There is no single perfect path to Lufthansa Frequent Traveller status. The most efficient approach strongly depends on:

  • which flights are already planned anyway
  • how flexible you are in terms of time and geography
  • and when the status is actually needed

Those who plan in a structured way and combine different approaches can significantly reduce both the required effort and costs. For beginners without any status, the Uptrip approach in particular currently represents an exceptionally simple alternative.

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