Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

A bizarre but good deal – buy 55,000 MeliaRewards points on Amazon Spain for €165

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This is possibly the oddest Black Friday deal I’ve seen today – but it could work out very nicely.

MeliaRewards has started using Amazon to sell gift cards containing pointsThis TravelWeekly article explains the arrangement – in theory they will soon be on the UK site too.

(EDIT: it is now on the UK site but only at full price, and it looks as if they are shipping it from Spain anyway given the delivery dates.)

They are on the Spanish site (amazon.es).  And, for FRIDAY ONLY there is a 55% discount:

35,000 MeliaRewards points cost €105

55,000 MeliaRewards points cost €165

Here is the link to buy.

Postage to the UK is €4.  You will be posted a plastic card which I presume contains a number which lets you upload the points to your Melia account.

Now …. MeliaRewards points can be converted to Avios at 10:3.  However, I am not 100% certain that these points will be transferable – Melia has a track record of restricting transfers to airline miles of certain promotional points.  Whilst you would be buying Avios at 0.8p each (€169 inc postage for 55,000 points which is 18,333 Avios) you can’t be certain this will be allowed.

You CAN use the points for hotel stays of course.  And this is where it starts to look interesting.

MeliaRewards pricing is based on the cash cost of a room, but is not uniform.  In London, it is usually around 0.45p per point.  In New York, it is around 0.65p.  In Rome, I found it was 0.31p.It is a VARIABLE reward chart which goes up and down with the daily rate but the value per point seems to vary by hotel.

The values above are based on paying for a non-refundable room, so you may value them more highly given that reward nights can be cancelled

With this deal, you are paying 0.27p per point

For example:

ME London on a random January date is £189 or 41,649 points.  Using this promo, you would be buying 41,649 points for €125 (£110).

INNSiDE New York NoMad on a random January date is £152 including taxes or 22,917 points.  Using this promo, you would be buying 22,917 points for €69 (£61) which is a huge saving.

Grand Melia Rome on a random February date is £173 or 54,545 points.  You make a relatively modest saving using points here – your €165 gift card is worth £146 so you save £27 – or more if you value the flexibility of a redemption.

You would have some points left over of course.  However, MeliaRewards does ‘points and money’ so you could book a room costing more than 55,000 points and empty your entire balance in one transaction, just paying cash for the remaining sum.

You can also redeem points for food, drink and spa services at participating Melia hotels EVEN WHEN YOU ARE NOT A GUEST.  I’m not sure how you do this – I imagine the plastic card which Melia sends you can be swiped, but how it works if you don’t have a plastic card I don’t know.

The rate here is 200 points per €1.  In this promo you are buying points for 60c per €1, so there is a guaranteed profit here.  You make even more money in the US where the rate is 200 points per $1.

Conclusion

There is something interesting here.  However, since I don’t know if the points could be converted to Avios (even if you only used up the spare ones this way), I am not wholeheartedly recommending it.  The card must be activated within 6 months and the points spent within a year from then.

If you’re planning a hotel stay somewhere which has a Melia, however, it may be worth a look.  They are in more places than you think, eg the INNSiDE New York NoMad which Anika reviewed here.

You can find out more here if you’re interested.


How to get MeliaRewards Gold status from American Express

How to get MeliaRewards Gold status from American Express (October 2024)

Do you know that holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE MeliaRewards Gold status for as long as they hold the card?  It also comes with Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Hilton Honors Gold and Radisson Rewards Premium status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

You can discover the benefits of MeliaRewards Gold status on the Melia website here. It includes three vouchers per year worth 20% off any booking.

The Platinum Card from American Express

50,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

Small business owners may want to consider American Express Business Platinum instead:

American Express Business Platinum

Up to 80,000 points when you sign-up and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

(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.)

Comments (66)

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

  • Jon says:

    The Innside Manchester has been excellent on multiple stays. Pricing varies a lot depending on convention traffic I guess, but sometimes same or lower price as the bog-standard (i.e basic but perfectly acceptable) Premier Inn over the road.

    • Rob says:

      We reviewed this when it opened – I liked it and I remember that the meal I had was substantially better than I expected.

    • SM says:

      Agree, stayed there last week and actually got upgraded to a suite, shame I was staying just for a night. Breakfast however wasn’t anything to speak about.

  • Rich says:

    The page now shows (which I’m sure it didn’t 1n hour ago) ‘El vendedor que has elegido para este producto no realiza envíos a Reino Unido (isla principal).’ – i.e. doesn’t ship to UK, but I selected my UK address and the order went through OK.

    • Anna says:

      They’re still not getting Gibraltar back. Though maybe if they were selling cheap avios…😂

    • meta says:

      Yes and now I got a confirmation that my order has been shipped.

    • Rob says:

      Odd, I don’t see that (in Chrome). Just bought one as an experiment, let’s see how it works out. Order accepted.

  • Simon Spanswick says:

    Well I’ve just bought one. Looking for a trip in April next year to Tenerife and this will reduce the cost of the stay quite a bit at one of the Melia properties there. Thanks for the heads up, Rob & Co.

  • Andrew says:

    Amazonish

    Have just been ordering a few bits for delivery to my hotel in Florida. I somehow managed to click thorugh on two different Amazon.com top-up giftcard special offers. One which added $7.50 to a $100 first time purchase, the other which added $10.00 to a $100 first time purchase as a Black Friday Special. I’ve been credited with $117.50 and a charge of £78.12 applied to my current account.

    Effective Exchange Rate – 1.504

  • the_real_a says:

    So, this is 500euro of food/drinks for 165euro? (10k for 50euro credit) hmmm

  • meta says:

    I now also got a text from DHL that my Melia card is on its way and will get it on Tuesday. Signature required!

  • Lady London says:

    OT but as this is a “Spain” article.

    My flight at Christmas with Iberia has been moved. later. But only by 10mins. Does anyone know by how much a flight timing has to shift by, in order for me to say I’d rather go on another day, thank you?

    • Shoestring says:

      It’ll vary airline by airline, eg I saw the other day that for Norwegian, they judge 60 mins change to be enough for you to get a refund or an alternative more convenient re-ticketing.

      I guess you know 10 mins change is laughably minor (unless you somehow miss a connection?) but no harm in asking IB, I guess.

      • Lady London says:

        Tx Harry I thought it was a bit of a stretch. as I’ve got a few of them booked (funny, that!) I’ll leave this one but will hope someone will know. I’m hoping about 20min might be enough on a future flight – as it would have been with BMI – but no idea what is the min for IB

      • Lev441 says:

        Harry – thought I’d let you know, Norwegian/fly sharp online travel agent ending up moving my friend to a different day and flight for no charge. Thanks for your help.

      • Mikee says:

        Iberia recently changed one of my flights by 10 minutes and I called them to say I was rejecting the schedule change. They refunded me (miles ticket) and didn’t charge a cancellation fee.

    • Nick says:

      So with BA it’s on a ‘reasonable’ basis. For example, 30 mins in the middle of the day is unlikely to be accepted, but 30 mins from 0645 to 0615 probably would be as you could claim it’s ‘too difficult’ to get to the airport that early. Does that help?
      Of course officially the policy is more like Norwegian’s with a 1-hour cut-off, but there’s a small amount of grace in practice. Don’t know for sure but IB is likely to be the same, given that BA and AA have tried to align theirs for the JB.

    • marcw says:

      Call and try. I think you could be lucky, but call.

      • Stu N says:

        I got a BA flight changed after a 10 minute schedule change. Basically they had been shuffling timings and equipment, I wanted to fly on 747 as originally booked instead of 777. The agent was fine with moving me to next flight about an hour later (was to jfk).

    • Chuckstar says:

      I had a 5 minute change on an ex EU first sector to LHR, therefore missed MCT.
      BA were very helpful and moved my long haul to the NEXT DAY, no problem AND no added charges.

  • Danny says:

    Don’t forget to choose to pay in Euros as if paying in pounds there is roughly £5 difference; I used my MBNA card.

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

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