Emirates Skywards is jacking up the miles required for select Classic Rewards and upgrades starting May 20, 2026. Premium cabins are taking the brunt, as usual. If you've been sitting on a stash of miles or eyeing a transfer from one of the few remaining 1:1 partners, the window to lock in old pricing slams shut in two days.[[1]](https://onemileatatime.com/news/emirates-skywards-devaluing-miles/)[[2]](https://livefromalounge.com/emirates-skywards-set-for-increase-on-redemption-and-upgrade-pricing-from-may-20-2026/)
** **The increases hit hardest on the routes that still delivered decent value against eye-watering cash fares. US to Dubai in First on the A380 was never cheap in miles, but it used to pencil out on peak dates when tickets ran $12,000–$17,000 one-way. Post-May 20, expect those award prices to climb 15-30% on long-haul segments, wiping out the last legitimate sweet spots.[[3]](https://10xtravel.com/emirates-devaluation-may-2026/)
** **Old vs. New Reality on Key Routes
** **Current saver-level estimates (pre-devaluation):
** **- JFK or EWR to DXB Business: ~95,000–110,000 miles one-way
- IAD to DXB First: ~163,500–174,000 miles
- LAX to DXB First: ~186,000–198,000 miles
- LAX-DXB-MLE First (via stopover): around 186,000 miles
These numbers are about to rise. Upgrades from paid Business to First, already a clever workaround, will cost more too — think 70k+ from the East Coast and 80k+ from the West Coast on the longest hauls. Cash equivalents on peak summer or holiday travel routinely top $10,000–$16,000 one-way in First. At current rates you could still see 6–8 cents per mile on the right date. After the hike? Closer to 4–5 cents if you're lucky.[[4]](https://onemileatatime.com/guides/redeem-miles-emirates-first-class/)[[5]](https://awardwallet.com/airlines/book-emirates-first-class-awards/)
** **That's not terrible for an A380 shower suite, but it's no longer the no-brainer it was. And those infamous high fuel surcharges? Still there, often $700–$900+ per long-haul leg. Emirates doesn't exactly hide its preference for selling seats over giving them away.
** **Transfer Partners: The Compounding Pain
** **Capital One already gutted its transfer ratio to 1:0.75 (effectively a 25–33% haircut) back in January 2026. Amex and Citi have worse ratios or limited utility. The lone bright spot is Bilt Rewards, which still transfers at a clean 1:1 with no current bonus but no devaluation either.[[6]](https://thepointsguy.com/news/capital-one-devalues-emirates-skywards/)
** **That scarcity makes every mile more precious. Burning them on a marginal redemption now feels like lighting cigars with $100 bills. The program's elite requirement for direct First Class awards (Silver or higher) already keeps the riff-raff out; the higher prices will thin the herd further.
** **A380 First Availability: Still a Mixed Bag
** **Availability hasn't magically improved with the rate hikes. The 14-seat A380 First product remains tough on popular US routes, though it often opens up 2–6 weeks out or even closer to departure on lightly loaded flights. Stopovers in Dubai are still permitted on one-way awards without extra miles — one of the few rules that hasn't been nerfed yet. Book by phone if you want to add that MLE or Maldives leg later.
** **The shower, the lounge-like bar, the quiet luxury — it's all still worth experiencing once. Just don't expect the program to make it easy or cheap anymore.
** **What Actually Still Works
** **Europe fifth-freedom routes (JFK-Milan, EWR-Athens) in First remain among the better values, often 100k–110k miles one-way with decent cash fares to benchmark against. Pairing a paid Business ticket with a miles upgrade to First can still deliver strong cents-per-point if you catch the right fare class. Short-haul or intra-Europe awards are less affected but also less exciting.
** **The rest? It's rapidly becoming a program for people who value the product enough to pay the premium — or who already have elite status and miles stockpiled.
** **Emirates clearly knows its premium cabins command serious cash. The loyalty currency is simply catching up. This isn't the end of the world, but it is the end of easy value for most travelers.
** **Action item: Log into the Emirates miles calculator today, search every route on your shortlist for travel through early 2027, and book or upgrade anything that still works before midnight on May 19. If you're holding Bilt points, transfer only what you need for confirmed awards right now — the rest can wait. The sweet spots aren't dead yet, but they're on life support. Use them or lose them.
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