The Alaska Atmos Rewards Summit Visa Infinite card is dangling a genuine triple threat: 100,000 bonus points, a 25,000-point Global Companion Award, and a 50% flight discount code — all before you’ve even cleared the first statement.[[1]](https://www.bankofamerica.com/credit-cards/products/alaska-airlines-infinite-credit-card/)[[2]](https://frequentmiler.com/atmossummit/)

This limited-time offer expires tomorrow, June 30, 2026. Hit $6,500 in spend within 90 days of opening and you’ll walk away with enough ammunition to slash the cost of lie-flat international redemptions on Alaska’s partners. Previous welcome bonuses topped out around 80,000 points with the same companion certificate but without the 50% discount. This version is noticeably richer.[[3]](https://www.nerdwallet.com/credit-cards/news/atmos-credit-card-welcome-offers-april-2026)

The 25K Global Companion Award subtracts up to 25,000 points from a companion’s award ticket when you book two awards together on the same itinerary. It works on partner awards—including JAL, Cathay Pacific, and Finnair—with no hard cabin restrictions, though you still pay taxes and fees. The 50% discount code arrives upon approval and applies to a qualifying future flight (details are deliberately vague, which in credit-card speak usually means “use it before they tighten the rules”).[[4]](https://thepointsguy.com/credit-cards/atmos-global-companion-award-certificate-guide/)

Here’s where it gets interesting for anyone who actually flies business class. Alaska’s fixed award chart still prices many long-haul lie-flat seats at 50,000–70,000 points one-way. JAL business from the West Coast routinely shows 50,000–70,000 points with strong availability on the 777 and 787. Cathay Pacific to Hong Kong clocks in around 60,000–70,000. Finnair to Europe lands in the 55,000 range.[[5]](https://flightpoints.com/award-charts/alaska-airlines-award-chart-2026)

Apply the 25K certificate to the companion ticket and the 50% code to one leg (or the cash equivalent if you mix paid and award), and a round-trip business redemption for two can drop below the cost of a single domestic first-class ticket on a bad day. That’s not theoretical — it’s math that works today.

The card itself carries a $395 annual fee and earns a boring-but-respectable 3x on Alaska/Hawaiian, dining, and foreign spend. You also get eight Alaska Lounge passes per year, free checked bags, and a path to status that actually moves the needle if you put real spend on it. The annual 25K companion award repeats every year, with a 100K version unlocked at $60,000 annual spend.

This isn’t a card for people chasing sign-up bonuses like Pokémon cards. It’s for travelers who already burn six figures of Alaska miles on partner JAL or Cathay business and want to bring a plus-one without doubling the mileage cost. The window is closing. Applications through the limited-time link should still work through the end of the month.

If you’re sitting on a decent credit profile, have $6,500 of easily manufactured spend that won’t flag Bank of America, and plan to fly a partner business award in the next 12–18 months, pull the trigger today. Tomorrow the offer is gone, and these triple-stacks don’t come around often.

Action item: Check your inbox or head to the Bank of America or Alaska Airlines card page before midnight tomorrow. Apply, meet the spend on legitimate (or creatively legitimate) purchases, and immediately start searching partner award space for two. The lie-flat seats on JAL and Cathay won’t book themselves, but at these effective rates they might as well.