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How I obtained the new IHG Rewards Club Spire Elite status without doing any stays

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In my article on Friday I showed how difficult it will be to earn the new top tier status in IHG Rewards Club.

Unless you spend £37,500 in a calendar year on the IHG Rewards Club Premium Visa or book a lot of stays which come with a bonus points package, you will need to spend $7,500 before VAT at InterContinental, Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza etc hotels in a year to earn the 75,000 base points required.

Unless you’re me, of course.  I have found the one roundabout route left to earn those key 75,000 base points.  By making transfers to IHG from Virgin Atlantic Flying Club.

This page on the Virgin Atlantic website explains how to do it.

Before you say ‘that is a terrible idea’ and close the page, let me explain why.

First, here is the proof from my own account that 1:1 transfers of Virgin Flying Club miles to IHG Rewards Club count as base points:

Spire statement

I will now be Spire Elite until December 2016.  (My actual title is Spire Ambassador as I also have InterContinental Ambassador status.)

I have, in the past, said that transferring Virgin miles to IHG was a bad idea.  Why have I changed my mind?

The trigger is this:  you receive 25,000 bonus IHG Rewards Club points when you reach or renew the new IHG Spire Elite top tier.  These points post instantly to your account – I have already claimed mine as you can see from the screenshot.  There is an alternative of gifting Platinum status to a friend but I have discounted that in this analysis.

Analysing the value of a Virgin Flying Club transfer to IHG

I value IHG Rewards Club points at 0.5p, based on redeeming 50,000 for a five-star InterContinental night valued at £250 in a major city.

Let’s look at three scenarios for getting to the magical 75,000 qualifying points figure, based on different starting levels of elite qualifying points and assuming you take the 25,000 bonus points as your Spire Elite welcome gift:

Current elite pts: 15,000 / Transferred miles:  60,000 / IHG points earned:  85,000 / Value:  £425

Current elite pts:  35,000 / Transferred miles:  40,000 / IHG points earned:  65,000 / Value: £325

Current elite pts:  55,000 / Transferred miles:  20,000 / IHG points earned:  45,000 / Value £225

This values your Virgin miles at:

0.71p (£425 / 60,000) in example one

0.81p (£325 / 40,000) in example two

1.12p (£225 / 20,000) in example three

These are ALL acceptable valuations for a Virgin Flying Club redemption, in my opinion, and the last one is almost generous.

(It obviously depends if you have any specific Virgin redemption plans, of course. In my case, I had 170,000 miles and no plans beyond a solo US Upper Class flight.)

However, you ALSO need to factor in the 100% points bonus that you will receive on your IHG stays whilst you have top tier status AND whatever upgrades and benefits the new tier will bring.  That will add extra value on top.

Another example using American Express points

Imagine that you have no Virgin miles at the moment but obtain them by transferring in from American Express Membership Rewards points at 1:1.

You would get the same valuations – 0.71p per Amex point if you transferred 60,000 up to a whopping 1.12p per Amex point for transferring 20,000.

Again, this assumes ZERO value for the 100% base points bonus you will get as a top tier member or the value of upgrades etc.

If we ever see another American Express Membership Rewards to Virgin Flying Club transfer bonus of 20%-25%, these numbers look even better.

A final example using Tesco Clubcard points

Here is another example.  Imagine that you convert Tesco Clubcard points to Virgin Flying Club to IHG Rewards Club. 

Tesco regularly runs 20% conversion bonuses to Virgin Flying Club.  These bonuses are so frequent that my numbers assume that such a bonus is running and you receive 300 Virgin miles instead of the usual 250 per £1:

Current elite pts: 15,000 / Transferred Tesco to Virgin:  £200 = 60,000 miles / IHG points earned:  85,000 / Value:  £425

Current elite pts:  35,000 / Transferred Tesco to Virgin:  £133 = 40,000 miles / IHG points earned:  65,000 / Value: £325

Current elite pts:  55,000 / Transferred Tesco to Virgin:  £66 = 20,000 miles / IHG points earned:  45,000 / Value £225

This gives you a multiple on your Tesco vouchers of:

2.1x (£425 / £200) in example one

2.4x (£325 / £133) in example two

3.4x (£225 / £66) in example three

Again, not bad.  And, again, it ignore any benefits you get from Spire Elite.

Timing is an issue ….

If you are thinking of doing this, there is a timing issue to consider.

If you need to do a big conversion, perhaps you are better forgetting about your current small number of elite points and waiting until January 2016?  You would then get status until December 2017.

Secondly, you will obviously earn more elite points from your future stays in 2016.  If you are only 20,000 points short and know you will earn those 20,000 before New Year, you need to decide whether the value of Spire on your remaining 2015 stays makes it worthwhile blowing miles.  You CANNOT factor in the 25,000 point bonus in this calculation, because if you will hit Spire anyway then you are getting that regardless.

PS.  Because the new top tier IHG status will be hard to earn, it should have more value at a status match.  You may have an easier time getting matched to the top tier in other hotel chains.  There is additional value in that.

PPS.  Remember that there is no reason why IHG will keep these transfers as status earning in the long term.  For now, though, it works.


IHG One Rewards news

IHG One Rewards update – April 2025:

Get bonus points: IHG is not currently running a global promotion.

New to IHG One Rewards?  Read our overview of IHG One Rewards here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on ‘What are IHG One Rewards points worth?’ is here.

Buy points: If you need additional IHG One Rewards points, you can buy them here.

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from IHG and the other major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Comments (105)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Oscarthegrouch says:

    Can points be transferred from Virgin to IHG online? If not, how is it done?

  • James67 says:

    Great post Rob, but it is obviously an uninte ded looohole. Wondering if I may even hace enough time to exploit it now that the cat is out of the bag.

    • Raffles says:

      Plenty of other things also still count – erewards, Travelling Connect, car rentals etc.

  • USATB says:

    Any reason couldn’t go Amex to Virgin 1:1 (open new account as don’t have one), then in a couple of days go Virgin to IHG ? is there any restriction on new accounts transfer from Virgin to IHG or similar making this not viable ?

    • Rob says:

      No, no restriction at all. Minimum Virgin transfer out is 10,000 then in 5,000 chunks.

      • Stuart McIntyre says:

        Just did this, and the Amex transfer to VA completed in about 20 minutes. I was then able to call VA and kick off the transfer to IHG. They suggested that it would take 30 days as usual, but as we know, this is usually completed in a week.

  • CV3V says:

    OT (but card related!): Apple Pay launched this morning in UK, having set it up it looks a useful way of managing multiple credit cards (if needed). Wonder if/when Amex will do a card offer to promote it.

    • Nick says:

      I’m hoping that there is some way of converting iTunes vouchers in to credit that can be used for iPay.

    • Jason says:

      How do you pay with apple pay?
      Do they need a scanner, like costa coffee have, for the app?

      • CV3V says:

        Use it the same way as a contactless card, however hold phone to the terminal and use touch ID (fingerpint), that’s it – so you could say it’s more secure than existing contactless card yechnology. Need to first set up on iphone (6 and 6 plus only).

    • blenz101 says:

      My first use of Apple Pay was at my local post office this morning sending £14 worth of packages.

      Having already used both my MBNA and BA Amex cards to achieve the spend £10 get £5 cash back deal at the post office a month ago on all my cards I was surprised to get an email almost immediately from Amex Network for my MBNA card advising I had made an eligible purchase this morning.

      Possibly some kind of one off glitch or perhaps something to do with the way random card numbers/tokens are generated and shared between the phone and retailer? Either way if you do have a purchase to make with a value between £10 and £20 at the post office before the end of July and were registered for the original cash back offer it may well be worth setting up and using Apple Pay and trying to see if will trigger a second time.

  • Tony says:

    If I achieve Elite today, how long does it last?

  • Paul Irving says:

    Do the points from the last CC offer in January count as this was achieved before the rule change?

    • Rob says:

      If you log in and it says ‘6x,xxx points of 75,000 towards Spire Elite status’, then yes.

  • Peter says:

    I logged into IHG, and I have 68,425 points.

    It says, however, ‘you can earn Spire Elite with 73,002 more points’

    How does that work?

    • Rob says:

      Only 1,998 of those points were elite qualifying points earned in 2015.

      • Peter says:

        Ah, gutted.

        Possible to cancel an amex transfer to Virgin?! 🙁

        • Nick says:

          Unfortunately they’re probably already in your Virgin account, as it’s normally an immediate transfer to them from Amex.

  • Colin JE says:

    IHG account showing 60,728 of 75,000 points for Spire Elite, with only one paid stay in last year. Rest came from cc sign up. Just transferred 15,000 points from Virgin to IHG. They warned me that it could and “would” take 30 days, so it’ll be interesting to see what it does actually take.
    IHG are also promoting a US Chase card on my account summary, giving 60,000 points and a free night every year. No fee in first year, then $49pa. Grrrr.

    • mark2 says:

      Quite.
      Neither IHG or Hilton bother to look at where you live before offering promotions.

    • Colin JE says:

      Got my ‘Welcome to Aspire’ email today, just three days after initiating transfer of points from Virgin!

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