How can I find the maximum permitted mileage (MPM) between two cities?

How can I find the maximum permitted mileage (MPM) between two cities?

7/21/2015 3:02:52 PM

Let me explain
TPM is ticketed point mileage which are the actual miles flown an a non-stop sector route from airport to airport in great circle distance.

MPM is the maximum mileage permitted in fare calculation.MPMs are published in the IATA mileage once a year. This means that the TPMs must not exceed the MPM for a fare to apply with no surcharge.

CUM is cumulative and it is the sum of all TPMs.

EMS is the excess mileage surcharge . This is the extra miles allowed in the MPM which can range from 5% to 25%. This means that if the TPMs are higher than the MPM you will have to increase 5 % to 25 depending on the range of the miles flwon.

DED is deduction published in the EMA excess mileage allowance in some routes some carriers need to compete with others but they don´t have direct flights so they IATA agrees to apply mileage deductions via certain points.

Example you want to fly from BUE to CCS but you need to have a stopover in SAO. If you check TPMS BUE SAO CCS this will excede the MPM,so granting 500 miles will let you apply a non increased through fare from BUE CCS.

LAST would appear when the TPMs exceed the MPM .

NEXT are the remainins TPMS you have deducting tpms from MPM.

25 is last amount of the last increase by 25% of the MPM. So this means that if you exceed that amount you would have to look for other options for fare construction.

3/29/2013 6:50:03 PM

The IATA MPM guide is proprietary; I highly doubt they would license a free version for the public.

Fortunately, it looks like a subscription to ExpertFlyer will cover you:

ExpertFlyer

If you’re looking to check if a certain routing will be permitted for frequent flyer mile award ticket redemptions, know that the program’s/carrier’s/alliance’s rules will trump what would seem to be permitted by MPM. At this writing, American lets you exceed MPM on an award by 25% and United by 15%, but that may not even matter:

Say you want to fly from San Francisco to Delhi. Using OneWorld carriers, the most direct routing would be to fly from San Francisco to Delhi via Hong Kong…. The problem is that Hong Kong is in “Asia 2″ region while India is in “Indian Sub Continent/Middle East” region, and you can’t transit another region on a partner award.… The MPM between San Francisco and Delhi is 11,922 miles, and American will let you exceed that by 25%, meaning you could fly 14,902 miles. Despite the fact that the routing via Hong Kong is over 5,000 miles under the MPM, it’s still not allowed. (One Mile at a Time blog)

If it’s not a miles thing and you’re actually constructing complex full fare itineraries for somebody, maybe you should invest in direct GDS (global distribution system) access.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

About me

Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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