Frequent Flyer
Delta Increases Elite Qualification Requirements

- Silver increases from $2,500 to $3,000
- Gold increases from $5,000 to $6,000
- Platinum increases from $7,500 to $9,000
- Diamond increases from $12,500 to $15,000
In short, to earn elite status for 2016, SkyMiles members will have to spend 20 percent more during 2015. (The spend requirement is waived for those charging $25,000 or more on a Delta SkyMiles credit card.)
The elite spending increase is the third customer-unfriendly change to SkyMiles announced just this month. Other program devaluations include the
discontinuation of round-the-world awards
, and the
elimination of elite upgrades
on the airline's cheapest fares.
And of course, this is all taking place against the backdrop of
SkyMiles' conversion
, on January 1, from a mileage-based program to a spend-based program.
Bottom line: Next year's SkyMiles program will be very different from today's.
Reader Reality Check
Will you remain engaged with the new SkyMiles program?
This article originally appeared on FrequentFlier.com.
With minimum spend levels in place,
elite status in Delta's SkyMiles program
will already cost you. Next year, it will cost you even more.
Currently, elite status is awarded on the basis of elite-qualifying miles or segments, plus elite-qualifying spend (Medallion-qualifying dollars, or MQDs, in Delta-speak).
To earn elite status in 2016, the mileage and segment thresholds will remain the same. But the minimum-spend levels will rise, as follows:

