Formal properties
The tensor product of two faithfully flat modules is faithfully flat.
If $M$ is a faithfully flat module over the faithfully flat $A$-algebra $B$, then $M$ is faithfully flat over $A$ too.
An arbitrary direct sum of flat modules is faithfully flat as soon as at least one summand is.
(But the converse is false: see caveat below )
Algebras
An $A$-algebra $B$ is faithfully flat if and only if it is flat and every prime ideal of $A $ is contracted from $B$, i.e. $Spec (B) \to Spec(A)$ is surjective.
If $A\to B$ is a local morphism between local rings, then $B$ is flat over $A$ iff it is faithfully flat over $A$.
Caveat fidelis flatificator
a) Projective modules are flat, but needn't be faithfully flat. For example $A=\mathbb Z/6=(2)\oplus (3)$ shows that the ideal $(2)\subset A$ is projective, but is not faithfully flat because $(2)\otimes_A \mathbb Z/2=0$
b) A ring of fractions $S^{-1}A$ is always flat over $A$ and never faithfully flat [unless you only invert invertible elements, in which case $S^{-1}A=A$].
c) The $\mathbb Z$-module $\oplus_{{{\frak p}}\in Spec \mathbb Z} \mathbb Z_{{\frak p}}$ is faithfully flat over $\mathbb Z$ . All summands are flat, however none is faithfully flat.