Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Two new Maldives resorts for points – JW Marriott and Waldorf Astoria Ithaafushi

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

The secret of maximising the value of hotel loyalty points is to redeem them in ludicrously expensive places, where even the maximum possible price that the loyalty scheme can charge looks like a bargain.

I doubt there is a better place to find examples of this than The Maldives.

For many years, the Conrad Rangali resort, part of Hilton Honors, has been the de facto ‘best bang for your buck’.  95,000 points per night for a beach villa – which is the highest points price that Hilton Honors has for a standard reward – is a great deal given the cash rates there.

One of our readers wrote a long review on Conrad Rangali for us which you can find here.

The days of Conrad Rangali holding the crown for ‘best redemption’ may be up, however.  There are two new resorts riding into town.

Waldorf Astoria Ithaafushi

The first up will be a sister hotel to Conrad Rangali, to be called Waldorf Astoria Ithaafushi.  Those of you with long memories will remember that there used to a Waldorf Astoria resort in The Maldives but it was rebranded.

This is due to open early in 2019.  A picture of one of the very modern overwater bungalows is above.

As well as being brand new, this property will have one crucial price advantage over Conrad Rangali – it is accessible by boat from the airport.  If you stay at the Conrad there is a non-avoidable $500 per person charge for a seaplane transfer.

Rewards will presumably be 95,000 points per night, the current cap.  Hilton Honors lets status members book five nights for the points of four, however, which would take a five night stay down to an average of 76,000 points per night.

JW Marriott Resort and Spa

The second newcomer is a JW Marriott resort, on an atoll called Vagaru.  There is a holding page on the Marriott website but, again, you cannot book yet. The opening date is meant to be November.

The most expensive Marriott hotel redemption is 45,000 points per night.  Like Hilton, you can book ‘five for four’ which would take it down to an average of 36,000 points per night.  That would mean, laughably, that anyone with a Starwood Preferred Guest points balance would only need 12,000 SPG points per night!  (SPG points transfer to Marriott Rewards at 1:3).

Alternatively, you could book it with a Marriott Travel Package which I outlined here.

There is very little information available.  Apparently the resort is a 55 minute flight by seaplane from Male. The property will feature 61 beach and overwater villas, ranging from 192 sqm to 638 sqm, all with private pools.

The only image I can find is the one above.

Get in early and rooms should be available

New hotels are generally very open with redemption availability.  It takes time to build up occupancy at a new hotel, and this is especially true for somewhere like The Maldives where you need to educate travel agents and where people tend to book well in advance.   Offering up rooms for redemption is a good way of getting people in during the early days.


Hotel offers update – April 2024:

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

Want to buy hotel points?

  • Hilton Honors is offering a 100% bonus when you buy points by 14th May 2024. Click here.

Comments (39)

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

  • AlanC says:

    And a Holiday Inn Resort showing at 40,000 points or 115 USD a night on a random night next week.

  • Chris says:

    OT

    I’ve just signed up to Amex Platinum and put my wife as supplementary card holder. Can she visit Amex lounges and Priority Pass lounges with her own supplementary card, or is it only the main card holder that can do this?

  • Jarvis Marcos says:

    I’m writing this from the deck of my superior water villa at the Conrad right now. Booked 5 nights on points and was offered the upgrade for 80usd per night.

    I reviewed a couple of different villas here, after our 2016 stay and absolutely loved it. This visit however has been rife with service errors and there appears to be a clear trend to devalue the product ahead of the launch of of the WA.

    The staff here are all telling me how much better the WA will be and how anybody with seniority is clamouring to apply there as they’ll be able to live with their families and commute each day by boat, rather than living at the Conrad.

    I’m not overly excited about the prospect of redeeming points at the WA though, one look at availability of points stays at the WA in Amsterdam will tell you why. The HH program doesn’t require hotels to classify any of their rooms as standard.

    • Matt says:

      My partner and I got the Hilton credit card last year with the sole intention to redeem at the WA Amsterdam, and we were fully flexible to travel on any weekend but alas there was 0 availability of any standard room for the entire 6 month availability of the voucher! We more than happily resorted to redeeming at the WA Edinburgh and at the end of the day it’s a free night for spending £750 on a cc but still a little frustrating.

      • Rob says:

        Amsterdam plays silly games. Under pressure from HQ they did open up all of January 2018!

    • TripRep says:

      Interesting insights Javier, shame about your experience there, hope the weather is kind. How’s the reef looking for snorkeling?

  • Anna says:

    I read somewhere that the Maldives are sinking due to global warming and that the government are trying to make as much money as possible before the islands are engulfed by rising sea levels. Apparently they have been scoping out land in Australia to relocate the entire population eventually.

  • jtz says:

    Really excited about the WA opening up, been keen on a redemption in Rangali, but WA rooms look way better and not having to pay ludicrous amounts for seaplane makes it more worthwhile. Hoping to have enough points saved up for a couple of nights, and also hoping the free night comes back on the credit card!

  • Mr(s) Entitled says:

    A quick word in support of the sea plane.

    The Conrad lounge is very good and the views of the sea planes coming and going cannot be beaten. The flight itself is stunning.

    For me, it’s the start of the holiday not the end of the travel.

    • TripRep says:

      Totally agree, the Conrad seaplane lounge is v good and as my review states, as an AV geek I loved chatting with the pilots and looking through the cockpit seeing them fly us in. And the scenery is outstanding.

  • Mohammed Khan says:

    I went to Maldives but in an all inclusive package. How would it work when redeeming points to stay? IMO staying with an AI or FB package works out way more expensive. Or am I missing something?

  • Will Avery says:

    That’s just ridiculous!! Grrr….I can’t deny it is a great place for diving still but, after seeing the docs on those rubbish dumps, conscience says all these ridiculously swanky hotels and developments a bad idea. Can’t they keep it to the UAE?

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.