The fare code that is used for mileage calculation for Air India is the first letter of the "Fare Basis" on the ticket. As far as I can tell (anecdotally from flying), all their Economy fares will have "Economy Y" on the boarding pass regardless of the fare basis.
It will look like this (I unfortunately don’t have the accompanying boarding pass, but I am pretty sure all my AI flights have said Y on the boarding pass):
For Turkish Miles & Smiles this would earn 25%: https://www.turkishairlines.com/en-int/miles-and-smiles/program-partners/airlines/air-india/
Note that there are two classes concepts for airlines:
Airlines are not very consistent on which code they will show where. Boarding passes will often show the service class rather than the fare class (it gives a quick indication to agents of the class of travel, and thus whether you are allowed early boarding, which jetway/door to use, etc.
Your ticket should have the fare class. Note that the fare class is the first letter of the fare code, which is a longer combination of letters and sometimes digits, usually 4 to 8 characters long, which is more likely to be shown on your ticket.
It is relatively unlikely you had tickets in fare class Y (remember, those are very expensive — a Y ticket can be more expensive than some business class tickets), so you probably actually had different fare classes (you paid a very different price).
Miles/points awarded by frequent flyer programs are usually a combination of:
It’s common nowadays to have ratios between the cheapest economy light ticket and a fully flexible ticket on the same flight of 4 or more (e.g. cheapest ticket gets 25% of the miles while full fare gives 100%). On some airlines, some fare classes will even not award any miles at all.
To answer more precisely, Air India uses one of three ways to calculate the number of miles granted for a particular flight:
From what you are writing, at least one of you have ordered the ticket through a sales channel for which the number of miles is calculated based on the ticket price.
You can find the mile reward rules from Air India here, where they also link for details to the complete set of rules used by all Star Alliance airlines.
Mileage earning rules are notoriously complicated (mostly by design). These days it has little or nothing to do with the actual distance flown but mostly its about how much you paid (and to whom).
Other factors include how you booked it (operating airline, OTA partner airline, crediting airline), status, who issued the ticket, fare class, class of service, etc.
Both were economy class tickets
That doesn’t say much since economy ticket prices for the same seat can easily vary up to a factor of 5 or more. I would compare actually money paid first.
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