Aeroplan Super Elite 100K: 2026 Tracker
Air Canada Aeroplan Super Elite 100K in 2026: top-tier qualification, chauffeur-drive, dedicated check-in lanes. Track free with Miles Mosa…
Read article →Air Canada Aeroplan 75K is the tier where the Aeroplan programme transitions from operationally useful to genuinely premium for committed Air Canada customers. At 75,000 Status Qualifying Credits in a calendar year, under the revenue-based SQC framework Aeroplan adopted on 1 January 2026, 75K sits between the broadly accessible 50K and the aspirational Super Elite tier, which was substantially raised from 100,000 SQM to 125,000 SQC in the same January 2026 overhaul. For many regular Aeroplan flyers, 75K is the natural cruising-altitude tier.
The reading on 75K in 2026 is that it captures the right balance for serious Air Canada customers who do not need Super Elite's substantially higher structural commitment. The 5x Aeroplan points multiplier, the 20 eUpgrade allocation, the complimentary Preferred Seats on all fares and flights, and the upgrade-priority placement ahead of 50K members all compound across a year of trips. The 75K-to-Super-Elite gap widened materially under the new framework: the legacy 25,000-SQM gap from 75K to 100K Super Elite became a 50,000-SQC gap from 75K to 125K Super Elite, meaning 75K is now substantively further from the top of the ladder than it used to be. This guide covers what 75K delivers per the Aeroplan Elite Status tiers page, the new SQC qualification mechanics, and the practical paths to the line.
Aeroplan 75K earns at a 5x Aeroplan points multiplier on Air Canada flights, one full multiplier above 50K's 4x rate and the second-highest multiplier in the programme behind Super Elite's 6x. Across a heavy year of paid Air Canada flying, that uplift compounds into a substantial additional Aeroplan points balance, useful as feedstock for partner award redemptions across the Star Alliance partner network and the wider Aeroplan transfer-partner ecosystem.
The 75K eUpgrade allocation is 20 credits per status year, unchanged from the 2025 allotment and the highest eUpgrade allocation below Super Elite's 30. The 20-credit floor matters because 75K is the tier where members can realistically deploy upgrades across a full year of long-haul flying without rationing aggressively. Priority Rewards (50% off the points price of eligible flight rewards) are available as Milestone Benefits selections at every 10,000 SQC; at 75K, members crossing the 70,000, 80,000, and higher Milestone thresholds will see Priority Rewards in their selection menus. Importantly, Priority Rewards at 75K are valid worldwide in economy and premium economy, not yet in business class, which remains a Super Elite distinction.
The upgrade-priority placement at 75K is the operationally meaningful uplift over 50K. 75Ks sit above 50Ks on the complimentary upgrade list, which materially improves the clearance rate on competitive routes. On premium business markets where 50K clearance is moderate, 75K clearance is higher, though never guaranteed because of inventory constraints on peak demand and the upgrade-priority placement of Super Elite members above 75K.
The most underrated 75K benefit is the complimentary Preferred Seats entitlement: 75K members can book Preferred Seats (including bulkhead and exit-row equivalents) at any time on all flights and all fares except Basic Economy. At 50K the same benefit is restricted to flights within North America (with check-in selection elsewhere), so the 75K uplift expands Preferred Seat eligibility to the entire Air Canada network at booking. For travellers who care about specific seat selection on long-haul flights, this is a genuine and underappreciated benefit step.
Other 75K benefits carry forward from 50K: Star Alliance Gold alliance status with comprehensive partner lounge access, unlimited Maple Leaf Lounge access at Air Canada hubs, three complimentary checked bags at 32kg each, complimentary same-day standby and changes, priority handling at all Air Canada touchpoints, and priority phone-line access via the Aeroplan member-service channels. 75K members also retain Star Alliance Gold benefits across the alliance: lounge access at participating Star Alliance Gold lounges worldwide with one guest, Gold Track security access at selected airports, priority baggage handling, priority waitlisting, and extra baggage allowance.
Aeroplan 75K requires 75,000 Status Qualifying Credits (SQC) in a calendar year. The legacy SQM/SQS/SQD framework was retired on 1 January 2026; the entire elite ladder now runs on the single SQC metric.
How SQC is earned on Air Canada. Standard fares earn 2 SQC per CAD$1; Flex, Comfort, Latitude, Premium Economy, and Signature Class earn 4 SQC per CAD$1; Basic Economy earns zero. To clear 75K from paid Air Canada flying alone requires roughly CAD$18,750 of Flex+ ticketing or CAD$37,500 of Standard ticketing.
How SQC is earned on Star Alliance partners. Partner flights earn 1 SQC per 5 Aeroplan points earned, capped at 25,000 SQC annually across all partner and other ancillary activity. The cap binds for 75K candidates relying heavily on partner flying: even fully saturating the partner cap contributes only one-third of the total SQC needed to clear 75K, so paid Air Canada flying becomes essential.
How SQC is earned via card spend. Premium Aeroplan cards earn 1,000 SQC per CAD$5,000 spent, capped at 25,000 SQC annually. The 75K candidate can use the full card SQC cap plus the full partner SQC cap (combined 50,000 SQC) and still need an additional 25,000 SQC from paid Air Canada flying, roughly CAD$6,250 of Flex+ ticketing or CAD$12,500 of Standard ticketing. Pure card-fed 75K is structurally blocked.
The qualification year runs the calendar year. 75K status earned in 2026 is valid through the end of 2027.
| Metric | Aeroplan 75K requirement (2026 SQC framework) |
|---|---|
| SQC required | 75,000 |
| Earning on Standard fares | 2 SQC per CAD$1 of Air Canada-marketed ticket spend |
| Earning on Flex + higher fares | 4 SQC per CAD$1 (Flex, Comfort, Latitude, Premium Economy, Signature Class) |
| Partner earning | 1 SQC per 5 Aeroplan points earned; capped at 25,000 SQC annually |
| Premium card earning | 1,000 SQC per CAD$5,000 spent; capped at 25,000 SQC annually |
| Spend equivalent (Flex+ fares) | ~CAD$18,750 on Air Canada Flex+ tickets to clear 75K from flying alone |
| Spend equivalent (Standard fares) | ~CAD$37,500 on Standard tickets to clear 75K from flying alone |
| eUpgrade allotment | 20 credits per status year (unchanged from 2025) |
| Aeroplan points multiplier | 5x base fares and surcharges on Air Canada flights |
| Qualification period | Calendar year (Jan–Dec) |
Three changes matter for 75K candidates. First, the eUpgrade allotment at 75K held steady at 20 credits while 25K was cut from 20 to 5 and 50K was cut from 20 to 15. The relative position of 75K's eUpgrade firepower improved against the lower tiers as a result, making the 75K eUpgrade-per-SQC ratio more favourable than it was in 2025.
Second, the path to Super Elite became substantially harder. The legacy SQM framework set Super Elite at 100,000 SQM, just 25,000 above 75K. The new SQC framework set Super Elite at 125,000 SQC, a full 50,000 above 75K. Travellers who used to consider 75K a natural waypoint to Super Elite now face double the marginal commitment to reach the top tier. Aeroplan's explicit intent was to make Super Elite more exclusive; the practical effect is that 75K is now a more durable destination tier rather than a halfway house.
Third, the partner and card SQC caps create a structural earning ceiling for non-Air-Canada-anchored 75K candidates. A traveller whose flying mix tilts heavily toward Star Alliance partners can saturate the 25,000 SQC partner cap with three or four long-haul partner business-class round-trips, after which additional partner flying earns Aeroplan points but no SQC. The same constraint applies to card spend. Air Canada flying remains uncapped, so heavy AC flyers can earn SQC indefinitely on their paid AC tickets, a structural advantage Aeroplan deliberately preserved for its own metal.
Aeroplan 50K at 50,000 SQC is 25,000 SQC below 75K, and the benefit gap is meaningful but incremental rather than transformative. Both tiers carry Star Alliance Gold status (and the comprehensive partner lounge access framework), both get unlimited Maple Leaf Lounge access at Air Canada hubs, both get three complimentary checked bags at 32kg. The 75K uplift over 50K is concentrated in the higher Aeroplan earning multiplier (5x vs 4x), the larger eUpgrade allotment (20 vs 15), the broader complimentary Preferred Seats entitlement (any time on all flights and all fares except Basic Economy, versus 50K's North America-only any-time entitlement), and the better upgrade priority on Air Canada flights.
Above 75K, Aeroplan Super Elite at 125,000 SQC is the largest single-tier qualification jump in the Aeroplan ladder, and substantially larger under the new SQC framework than the legacy 100K SQM threshold. Super Elite adds the highest Aeroplan earning bonus (6x base fares and surcharges), the maximum eUpgrade allotment (30 credits annually, up from 20 under the legacy programme), the eUpgrade Nominee programme (one designated friend or family member who can use the Super Elite's eUpgrades without the account holder being on the booking), Air Canada Concierge service, complimentary Preferred Seats on all fares including Basic Economy, complimentary changes and cancellations on most fares, complimentary beverage and snack service in Air Canada Economy, the Maple Leaf Lounge Arrivals Lounge access at London Heathrow, and the top of the upgrade-priority queue. The 50,000-SQC gap from 75K to Super Elite is substantial, Super Elite is reached by a small percentage of Air Canada customers and represents structural commitment well beyond what 75K requires. Approximate spend equivalents for Super Elite: roughly CAD$31,250 of Flex+ Air Canada flying or CAD$62,500 of Standard fare flying.
For travellers averaging 75,000-110,000 SQC a year naturally, 75K is the rational cruising-altitude tier. The benefits over 50K are real, the qualification gap is achievable for committed Air Canada flyers, and the 20 eUpgrade allotment plus 5x earning multiplier deliver meaningful annual value. For travellers consistently clearing 125,000+ SQC naturally, the Super Elite path becomes the structural goal.
Take a Toronto-based investment banker whose 2026 work travel includes weekly Air Canada Signature Class round-trips between Toronto and U.S. East Coast cities averaging CAD$1,400 per round-trip (forty-eight trips × CAD$1,400 × 4 SQC = 268,800 SQC from paid Air Canada flying alone). The total is roughly 269,000 SQC, far past Super Elite's 125,000-SQC threshold and into the Milestone selection territory above the published ladder.
For a less-intensive flying pattern: a Vancouver-based corporate executive who flies bi-weekly Air Canada Signature Class round-trips between Vancouver and U.S. West Coast cities at CAD$1,200 average (26 trips × CAD$1,200 × 4 SQC = 124,800 SQC), plus two long-haul Signature Class round-trips to Europe at CAD$5,500 each (CAD$11,000 × 4 SQC = 44,000 SQC). The combined paid Air Canada total reaches roughly 168,800 SQC, past 75K, past 125K Super Elite, with margin. Drop the bi-weekly cadence to monthly (12 × CAD$1,200 × 4 = 57,600 SQC) plus the long-haul trips (44,000 SQC), and the same itinerary lands at 101,600 SQC, clearing 75K with substantial margin but short of Super Elite. The structural insight: high-paid-fare Air Canada flyers reach 75K easily; the question for those flyers is whether to push the additional 50,000-SQC distance to Super Elite or settle comfortably at 75K.
The closest Star Alliance comparators are United MileagePlus Premier Platinum and Lufthansa Miles & More Senator, both of which confer Star Alliance Gold. United Premier Platinum requires 12 Premier Qualifying Flights and 18,000 PQP (roughly $2,250 of paid United flying at standard PQP rates, or up to $36,000 of PQP-earning Chase card spend). Lufthansa Senator requires roughly 100,000 status miles within a calendar year and typically includes a substantial premium-cabin flying component.
United Premier Platinum is materially cheaper to qualify for than Aeroplan 75K and includes Marriott Bonvoy Platinum Elite status automatically. Lufthansa Senator delivers a richer Senator-tier lounge network (the Senator Lounges at Frankfurt are unmatched in the alliance) but at higher qualification cost. Aeroplan 75K sits in the middle: more expensive to earn than United Premier Platinum, more accessible than Lufthansa Senator, and structurally better-aligned with Canadian-anchored travel patterns.
The Aeroplan 75K case rests on two factors competing programmes don't fully match: the 5x Aeroplan points multiplier on a programme whose award chart still publishes some of the best Star Alliance partner redemption pricing in the industry (Aeroplan partner long-haul economy is now 70,000 points one-way after the June 2026 chart refresh; partner business class to Europe is 60,000-70,000 points one-way), and the unlimited Maple Leaf Lounge access network at Canadian hubs. For U.S.-anchored travellers, United Premier Platinum remains more efficient; for European Lufthansa Group regulars, Senator's deeper Lufthansa-specific perks justify the higher cost; for Canadian-anchored travellers with substantial annual Air Canada flying, 75K is the structurally correct choice.
The 2026 framework's Milestone Benefits structure unlocks selectable rewards at every 10,000 SQC. For 75K members, that means seven distinct Milestone selection events between qualification and 70,000 SQC, plus additional Milestones at 80,000 and higher SQC if flying exceeds the tier threshold.
At each Milestone, the typical menu includes additional eUpgrade credits, Priority Rewards (50% off the points price of an eligible flight reward), Maple Leaf Lounge passes for guests, bonus Aeroplan points, hotel and car rental discounts on Aeroplan redemptions, status passes for sharing benefits, bonus SQC (accelerating progression toward Super Elite), and Air Canada gift cards.
For 75K members, the strategic Milestone selection priorities differ from 50K members because 75K eUpgrades are already at the 20-credit base allotment. The marginal eUpgrade selection delivers less utility per Milestone for 75K members than it does for 50K members starting from a 15-credit base. Instead, the typical 75K optimisation pattern emphasises Priority Rewards (whose 50% point discount on long-haul partner redemptions can save 35,000-50,000 Aeroplan points per ticket), bonus SQC selections for 75K candidates eyeing Super Elite (bonus SQC accelerates the runway to the higher tier), and Maple Leaf Lounge passes for members whose families fly through Canadian hubs without their own elite status.
The published Aeroplan guidance on Milestone Benefits details the selection menu, timing, and which selections are eligible at which thresholds.
Three 75K surprises catch returning Aeroplan members. The first is the Super Elite threshold change. The legacy Super Elite at 100,000 SQM was reasonably reachable for any 75K member willing to push the additional 25,000-SQM distance, often one or two more Signature Class round-trips. The new Super Elite at 125,000 SQC requires roughly twice the marginal SQC commitment to bridge the 75K-to-Super-Elite gap. Members who used to consider Super Elite a stretch goal now face a substantially harder push, and the rational 75K stopping point is much more clearly the right answer for most flyers.
The second is the partner and card SQC cap structure. Under the legacy SQM framework, partner flying and card spend contributed in different ways to a combination of SQM, SQS, and SQD requirements; under SQC, both partner activity and card spend hit a hard 25,000 SQC annual cap each. A 75K candidate who saturates both caps (50,000 combined) still needs another 25,000 SQC from paid Air Canada flying. Travellers whose Aeroplan flying skews heavily toward partner activity rather than Air Canada metal will find 75K materially harder to reach under SQC than they did under SQM.
The third is the upgrade-priority placement question on competitive routes. 75K sits above 50K but below Super Elite in the upgrade queue. On peak Air Canada routes during peak windows the upgrade competition from Super Elite members can be substantial, with 75K complimentary upgrade clearance rates remaining moderate. The structural benefit is the queue position rather than the upgrade itself; the reliable upgrade currency at 75K is the 20 eUpgrade credits plus Priority Rewards selections, deployed strategically on routes where the cash differential between Premium Economy and Signature Class is largest.
Aeroplan 75K is the Air Canada tier where committed Aeroplan customers receive premium recognition without the materially higher structural commitment that Super Elite's 125,000-SQC threshold now demands. The 5x Aeroplan points multiplier, the 20 eUpgrade allotment, the complimentary Preferred Seats across all flights and fares, and the upgrade-priority placement ahead of 50K members compound across a year of trips into a noticeably better travel experience. The 75,000-SQC threshold under the 2026 revenue-based framework is achievable for serious Air Canada flyers with roughly CAD$18,750 of Flex+ flying or equivalent mixed Air Canada, partner, and premium-card combinations. The benefits over 50K are real if incremental; the real story is that Super Elite became substantially harder to reach in 2026, which makes 75K a more durable destination tier rather than the natural waypoint it used to be. For travellers whose Air Canada flying naturally clears 75K, the cruising-altitude case is strong; for travellers consistently clearing 125,000+ SQC, Super Elite captures the maximum recognition. Track your SQC toward 75K and Super Elite free with Miles Mosaic.
Programme rules verified against the official sources below. External sites open in a new tab.
Miles Mosaic gives you a clean dashboard for all your loyalty programmes: flights, hotels, and status progress.
Get started freeShare
Last reviewed: · How we research and update
Air Canada Aeroplan Super Elite 100K in 2026: top-tier qualification, chauffeur-drive, dedicated check-in lanes. Track free with Miles Mosa…
Read article →Air Canada Aeroplan 50K in 2026: 50,000 SQM qualification, Star Alliance Gold, and Maple Leaf Lounge access at AC hubs. Track free with Mil…
Read article →Star Alliance in 2026: the live 25-airline roster, Silver and Gold benefits, the best programmes to hold, and how to use the alliance witho…
Read article →