You are currently viewing Major life event? Delta’s ‘Reclaim My Status’ program will help you keep your elite status

Major life event? Delta’s ‘Reclaim My Status’ program will help you keep your elite status


Earning airline elite status is a bit like an obsession. You take deliberate actions to maintain it, and when you lose it, you have serious withdrawals when you don’t get that first-class upgrade or see a comparatively low number of miles in your account after a flight.

However, there are times when a major life event causes you to travel less and end up short of your elite status qualification requirements. Luckily, Delta Air Lines is implementing a safeguard to help elite status members “reclaim” their status. Delta is bringing back a program for its loyal members that will allow them to maintain — and easily earn back — Medallion elite status after a life event takes them off the road.

In January, the airline is bringing back its “Reclaim My Status” benefit that all elite members are eligible to apply for if they have a qualifying life event which forces them to lose status or drop to a lower Medallion tier.

Related: Delta Medallion status: What it is and how to earn it

What is Delta’s Reclaim My Status?

Here’s how the program works. If a Delta Medallion — be it Silver, Gold, Platinum or Diamond — either loses their status or drops to a lower level because of a major life event like becoming a parent, switching a job or having a medical issue, they can submit a request to reclaim their old status at this link once they’re ready to start traveling again. Note that Delta specifies COVID-19 will not be accepted as a qualifying life event to reclaim status.

If approved (which should happen within five business days but could take up to two weeks), Delta will give the customer their old status back, complimentary, for three months with the opportunity to earn it back through Jan. 31, 2026.

Complimentary first-class upgrades are one of the many benefits Delta elite members enjoy when flying on the carrier. DELTA AIR LINES

Status is re-earned by meeting the minimum Medallion Qualification Dollar requirements on qualifying Delta flights for your status tier during the complimentary three-month period. The three-month period begins immediately after a request is approved via email. You have to enroll between Jan. 1 and Dec. 31, 2024, and meet the minimum MQD threshold on your status to be eligible to extend it.

For example, if you were a Delta Gold and are trying to reclaim that status through Jan. 31, 2026, you’d have three months to earn 2,500 MQDs. You can earn MQDs toward your status on Delta-marketed flights operated by Delta or a partner airline (with the exception of basic economy tickets), on purchases with an eligible Delta SkyMiles American Express Card, or by booking a Delta Vacations package, per the airline.

Delta’s minimum MQD thresholds for its Reclaim My Status program. DELTA AIR LINES

Delta specifies that you cannot earn a Medallion status higher than what you earned in the previous Medallion year through Reclaim My Status. For example, if you previously had Delta Platinum status and, during the complimentary three months, earned enough MQDs to qualify for Diamond, you can still only extend your Platinum status for that year and the following year. As another example, if you previously had Delta Platinum and at the end of your three months of complimentary Platinum status have only met the tier qualifications for Gold, you will be given Gold status for that year and the following year.

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Related: Delta status match challenge: How you can earn elite status until 2026

Who qualifies for Delta’s Reclaim My Status?

The airline listed the following reasons that can make one eligible for the program. However, Delta told TPG when the program was first introduced in 2019 that it would review situations on a case-by-case basis and that you shouldn’t be afraid of applying if your exact situation isn’t listed below:

  • Becoming a parent
  • Changing jobs
  • Going back to school
  • Experiencing a medical issue (excluding COVID-19)
  • Needing to take care of a friend or family member

Delta includes that you’ll need to provide documentation to prove that a life event affected your ability to travel when your status was lost or downgraded. In an example the airline provides, if you left your job to go back to school and expect to travel more in a post-graduation job, documents verifying that you were recently in school and are now employed could be submitted as documentation. Delta clarifies that you shouldn’t send protected health information as documentation.

The airline says you can participate in Reclaim My Status once every three years, although it notes that it’s willing to make exceptions for certain situations. So every time you have a child, or if you’ve switched jobs a few times, you may be able to reclaim your status. (As long as Delta approves your case, that is.) While it’s designed for members who lost status in the previous year, the FAQ section of the Reclaim My Status page indicates that the carrier “will make exceptions on a case-by-case basis” for longer absences due to specific life events; you should include your specific circumstances in the free response section of the request form.

Delta also said to apply only once you’re ready to travel at your old pace again, as the clock will start ticking once it approves your case.

“It’s very generous, it’s very flexible in covering the kind of life events it covers, and to me, it’s nothing but clearly industry-leading,” Sandeep Dube, senior vice president of customer engagement and loyalty for Delta, told TPG in 2019 when the benefit was first announced. “We wanted to ensure that the life events we cover, cover the needs of all Medallion members and not just some.”

The program was implemented after significant customer requests, Dube noted. He acknowledged the stress of traveling, and those stressors can become exacerbated after a serious life event.

In a video for the program’s 2019 introduction, Delta highlighted two stories of Medallion members who requested status extensions after having to pause travel: one after becoming hospitalized and another after having a child.

Bottom line

In 2024, Delta enacted major changes to its SkyMiles loyalty program. On Jan. 1, Delta retired Medallion Qualification Miles and Medallion Qualification Segments in favor of a redefined version of Medallion Qualification Dollars, as it consolidated all of its Medallion status earnings into MQDs.

However, there are multiple ways to earn MQDs — including on flights with Delta and its partners, spending on eligible Delta cobranded credit cards and booking a Delta Vacations package — though the thresholds needed to achieve Medallion status with MQDs have also been raised.

Still, bringing back the Reclaim My Status program for 2024 could give Delta SkyMiles loyalists a chance to regain their status after certain life events with a lower threshold to reach than having to re-earn status from scratch.



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Francisco Chavez

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