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Fly One, Get One Bonus Miles Through Summer
The centerpiece is Frontier's "Fly One, Get One" offer, which sounds almost too simple. Qualifying Frontier Miles members earn 5,000 extra miles for each round trip flown through August 31, according to TravelPulse. The promotion caps at four round trips, meaning you could pocket up to 20,000 bonus miles by late summer if you're flying regularly. That's not nothing. Twenty thousand miles gets you most of the way to a free domestic flight on Frontier, assuming you're already banking miles from credit cards or past travel. For displaced Spirit passengers trying to rebuild their summer plans on a budget, it's a decent carrot; for existing Frontier loyalists, it's a nice thank-you for sticking around while the airline itself posted a $283 million operating loss in Q1 2026. The timing matters. Spirit shut down on May 1, canceling more than 500 daily flights and stranding over 100,000 passengers in the first 48 hours alone. That left gaping holes in the schedule at major hubs like Fort Lauderdale, Las Vegas, and Orlando, exactly where Frontier has been ramping up. These bonus miles sweeten the deal for travelers who might've been torn between Frontier and, say, a discounted Southwest or Allegiant rescue fare.Free Discount Den Access for New Members
Frontier's second move is even more direct: waive the enrollment fee for its Discount Den program. Normally, joining costs $59.99 a year. Through May 15, new members can sign up without paying that upfront cost, according to TravelPulse. Discount Den is Frontier's low fare club. Members get access to cheaper base fares and exclusive deals year-round. If you're rebooking multiple canceled Spirit flights or planning a busy summer, that $50 savings adds up fast. The catch, of course, is you still need to pay for flights; Discount Den just unlocks lower starting prices and the ability to earn miles on those bookings. For travelers unfamiliar with Frontier's ecosystem, Discount Den can feel like a gamble. You're committing to an airline known for ultra-low base fares but also aggressive ancillary fees. Still, if you're already budget-focused and willing to pack light, the math works. And right now, Frontier's clearly betting that former Spirit customers are exactly that kind of traveler.Limited Window, December Travel Horizon
Both promotions come with tight booking windows. The Discount Den waiver ends May 15; the bonus miles offer requires flights through August 31. But travel booked under these deals extends through December 2026, giving you some flexibility to plan around holidays or long weekends without racing to book this week. One quirk worth noting: to claim the bonus miles, you need to enroll on Frontier's website before booking and at least 24 hours before departure. Miss that step, and you're flying without the extra 5,000 miles. It's a small hoop, but it's there.The Competitive Math Behind the Offers
This isn't charity; it's strategy. Frontier's been bleeding cash. That Q1 loss was brutal, even as the carrier posted record revenues. Spirit's collapse handed Frontier a rare opening to grab market share without slashing fares to the bone or adding costly new routes from scratch. Instead, they're using loyalty tools to make themselves stickier. Southwest added dozens of new flights from Las Vegas and Orlando. Allegiant and Avelo launched rescue fares on Spirit's old routes. United and Delta offered discounted rebooking for stranded passengers. Frontier's angle is different: they're not just rescuing travelers; they're trying to convert them into repeat customers through miles and membership. The bonus miles in particular feel smart. Spirit didn't have a traditional frequent flyer program, so its passengers weren't accumulating points the way they would on other carriers. Frontier's offering them a taste of what loyalty perks look like, hoping it sticks. And for existing Frontier members, the extra miles are a nod that says, "Thanks for not bailing during a rough quarter." Will it work? Hard to say. Spirit's shutdown wiped out roughly 5 to 7 percent of U.S. domestic capacity, and analysts are already predicting fare hikes of 5 to 10 percent on budget leisure routes as the remaining ULCCs lose their fiercest price competitor. Frontier's promotions might attract customers in the short term, but if base fares creep up industry-wide, those 5,000 bonus miles won't feel quite as generous.Should You Jump on These Deals?
If you're already planning summer travel and you're flexible on routes, the free Discount Den enrollment is worth grabbing before May 15. You're not committing to anything beyond using Frontier's fare search tool, and the $50 savings pays for itself if you book even one or two trips this year. The bonus miles are trickier. If you're flying Frontier anyway, great; enroll and collect. But don't force extra trips just to chase 20,000 miles. At current pricing, a roundtrip from New York to Denver runs about $257 on competitors like Delta or JetBlue, according to current Google Flights data. Frontier might undercut that, especially with Discount Den access, but factor in baggage fees and seat selection before you assume you're saving money. For displaced Spirit passengers, these offers are a decent lifeline. You're already scrambling to rebook; Frontier's at least making it slightly easier and throwing in some future travel credit via miles. Just remember to enroll before you book, pack light to avoid fees, and keep expectations realistic. Frontier's still a ULCC, and ULCCs don't win on frills; they win on price. This whole moment underscores how fragile the budget airline model has become. Spirit lost $1.3 billion in 2025 before shutting down. Frontier's operating in the red. The survivors are fighting hard for every customer, and that creates short-term opportunities for travelers willing to play the game. Just don't expect the deals to last once the dust settles.More travel news
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