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A devaluation or a bargain? IHG drops purchase price of points to 0.6c

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In general, when I write about IHG Rewards Club (the Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, InterContinental scheme), I say that I value their points at 0.5p.

This is based on my tendency to redeem 50,000 points for five-star hotels which would otherwise cost £250 per night.  The maths also often works at lower price levels if you tend to redeem at mid-market properties.

There was always a problem with this 0.5p valuation.  It has always been possible to buy IHG Rewards Club points via a special method for 0.7 cents.  This is 0.47p.  It is obviously wrong to value a reward point at more than it would cost you to buy them but, given the small difference, I didn’t lose any sleep over it.

I am now forced to reduce my valuation of IHG Rewards Club points to 0.4p.  This is because IHG is now selling them in unlimited quantities for 0.6 cents.

Let’s take a step back

IHG isn’t ‘officially’ selling them this cheaply.  If you go to the ‘buy points’ page on the website, you will see that points still cost $13.50 for 1,000.  This is a long way from $6.

However, IHG has a rewards option called ‘points and cash’.  If you try to book a 35,000 points per night property, you will be offered the following:

35,000 points, or

30,000 points + $40, or

25,000 points + $70

If you book a room using the second or third options above and then cancel it, you do not receive any money back.  Instead, you only receive points back.

This means that you are effectively buying points for 0.8 cents in the first example and 0.7 cents in the second example.

What is new?

Over the last couple of days, a new option has started to appear.  Using the example above, it would be:

20,000 points + $90

If you booked and cancelled a redemption using this option, you would gain 15,000 points for a cost of $90.  This is just 0.6 cents per point, or 0.40p.

Only a few hotels have loaded this option so far.  The InterContinental Hong Kong is one of them if you try a dummy booking for that.

What does this change mean for me?

If you are booking an IHG hotel for cash, you should now work out the cost of buying the points via this ‘points and cash and cancel’ method.  The Indigo Earls Court in London, for example, is 30,000 points per night.  If it is selling for more than £120 – which it normally does – this route would be cheaper.

Similarly, the break-even point for a 50,000 points per night InterContinental is now £200 per night.  If a room is selling for more than that, buying the points may be the answer.

You may also want to re-evaluate your Accelerate promotion targets.  Your bonus is now worth less than it was.  If you were planning a mattress run to achieve your bonus, make sure it still makes sense at a valuation of 0.4p per point.

Whether this move is a precursor to a wider IHG devaluation in 2016 remains to be seen.  I doubt we will see many changes at the 3-4 star level but the 50,000 point per night ‘cap’ on InterContinental redemptions is looking a little soft in my view.


IHG One Rewards news

IHG One Rewards update – October 2024:

Get bonus points:

Nights to do not need to be consecutive. Read more in our article here and click here to register.

IHG is running a second promotion for stays at five of its smaller brands. You will receive triple base points between 1st October and 31st December 2024 on stays at voco, avid hotels, EVEN Hotels, Atwell Suites and Garner Hotels. Read more in our article here and click here to register.

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 (67)

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

  • Manuel says:

    Any news on the longly awaited and announced Spire benefits?

    • Rob says:

      Nope!

    • Jon Dear says:

      not sure if this has always been the case but I noticed these “offers” when logging in to my IHG account: 1) Save 10-30% When you book early. Plus enjoy a delicious breakfast.
      2)Start with Breakfast
      Book your next stay with the Best Flex with Breakfast Rate.

      (i’m Spire level)

  • AndyS says:

    Thanks for the info.

    Another longish comment from me but not a question this time. Instead a statement showing the wide variation in cash and points prices. For my accelerate I have to make a booking with cash and points, and i have to have a stay in january, so i thought I could combine these. i started off looking at the hix at slough, 15000 pts plus $70 (which i worked out about 48 quid) was about the same price as the cash advance price. However, nearby was the hix in windsor, 10000 pts plus $70 or a cash price of about 70 quid. A much better deal. It certainly pays to look around and be flexible in your destination.

    I also understand how the “cash and cancel” trick works now, because when you book with cash and points it actually makes you buy the points up to the points-only price; that is why you just get points back again when cancelling!

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

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