JetBlue And United Partnership: United Airlines and JetBlue are moving their “Blue Sky” partnership into a new stage. The two airlines first let people earn and use miles or points across both networks. Now they are adding elite travel perks too. As of May 14, 2026, eligible MileagePlus and TrueBlue members can get shared benefits when they fly the other airline.
A loyal flyer from one airline should not feel like a stranger on the other one. So if a traveler adds their frequent flyer number to the booking, they can now get things like priority check-in, faster security access, preferred seat selection after booking, one free checked bag with priority handling, same-day standby, and priority boarding. JetBlue and United say this is part of making travel feel smoother across both brands.
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What Elite Members now get?
The boarding rules depend on status level.
- United Premier Platinum and Premier 1K members flying JetBlue board in Group 1.
- Premier Gold members board in Group 2.
- Premier Silver members board in Group 3.
- JetBlue Mosaic 2, 3, and 4 members flying United board in Group 1
- Mosaic 1 members board in Group 2.
The partnership also gives access to extra-legroom seats at check-in, including JetBlue’s EvenMore and United’s Economy Plus seats.
United MileagePlus members can book JetBlue flights on United’s website with cash or miles. They earn 5 MileagePlus miles per dollar spent on JetBlue flights, but those flights do not earn Premier qualifying flights or Premier qualifying points, so they do not count toward United Premier status. JetBlue also says MileagePlus members do not earn miles on some competing Newark routes, including flights to Cancun, Aruba, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, and Punta Cana.
What JetBlue members get and what is still missing
JetBlue TrueBlue members can also book United flights on JetBlue’s website with cash or TrueBlue points. They earn 5 TrueBlue points per dollar spent on United flights. That is a bit lower than JetBlue’s usual 6 points per dollar on its own flights. One important difference is that TrueBlue members can earn tiles toward Mosaic status when they credit qualifying United flights to their TrueBlue account.
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Some big perks are still off the table. There is no lounge access yet, so United Club access does not extend to JetBlue flyers and JetBlue lounges do not open for United flyers under this deal. There are also no free first-class upgrades. That matters less on JetBlue for now because the airline still does not offer first class on its current fleet, though it says first class is coming to some planes later this year.
JetBlue and United say the next step is easier booking for trips that use both airlines in one journey. In time, travelers should be able to book a single connected trip with one leg on United and another on JetBlue. That would make the partnership feel less like two separate flights stitched together and more like one smoother path across the sky.




