Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Has American Express secretly added a benefit to the Starwood Preferred Guest American Express?

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On Friday I ran a short article on the fact that Marriott has announced that the two UK credit cards earning Marriott points (the closed Marriott Mastercard and the SPG American Express) were not rebranding despite the programme name changing to Marriott Bonvoy on 13th February.

The SPG Amex information came from this page of the Marriott website.

Looking at that page again, I spotted something interesting.

Receive automatically a Marriott Bonvoy Silver Elite status [sic] that gives you 10% more points on every eligible hotel purchase, Priority Late Checkout, a dedicated phone line for Elite members and our Ultimate Reservation Guarantee.

Yes, it seems that the SPG Amex now comes with a Marriott Bonvoy Silver Elite card.

This is not entirely surprising.  Previously the SPG Amex came with a weird level of Starwood status called ‘Preferred Guest Plus’, which wasn’t even an official status level.  I wrote about that here.

American Express never advertised the fact that you got SPG Preferred Guest Plus status.  If you take a look at the application page for the SPG Amex, you’ll see that Amex isn’t advertising the fact that you get Marriott Bonvoy Silver Elite either.

The benefits of Marriott Silver Elite are not huge

You can see the different Marriott / Starwood tier levels here.

The key benefits of Silver Elite status, which usually requires 10 nights in a calendar year, are:

  • 10% bonus on base points earned
  • ‘Priority’ for late check-out requests

…. and that’s it, at least in terms of stuff you will find genuinely useful.  It isn’t a lot but it should stop you getting the room overlooking the bins.

Here’s one important point: the Marriott site implies that you get Silver Elite status and not 10 elite status nights which automatically gets you Silver Elite status.  There is a big difference in this, because the latter puts you 15 nights closer to Gold, Platinum or Titanium Elite.  The former does not. 

The SPG Amex would have been a lot more attractive to regular Marriott guests if you were given 10 elite status night creditswhich is what happens in the US.

What other benefits do you get with the Starwood Preferred Guest American Express?

Before we go on, I am obliged to remind you that the representative APR on this card is 39.7% variable, including the annual fee, based on a notional £1,200 credit limit. The interest rate on purchases is 22.9% variable.

One other recent change to the SPG Amex is the free night voucher you get when you spend £25,000 on the card in a year.

This used to be a dreadful benefit.  It is now just ‘pretty bad’, so things are picking up.  The changes were:

  • You can now use the free night voucher on any of the week, not just weekends
  • It can now be used at any Marriott / SPG hotel which costs up to 25,000 points per night

Just looking at the UK (and the voucher can be used worldwide), these hotels are now bookable on the SPG American Express free night voucher:

  • Aberdeen Marriott
  • AC Hotel Birmingham
  • AC Hotel Manchester Salford Quays
  • Aloft Liverpool (reviewed here)
  • Aloft London Excel
  • Bexleyheath Marriott
  • Beardsall Priory Marriott
  • Bristol Marriott City Centre
  • Cheshunt Marriott
  • Courtyard Aberdeen Airport
  • Courtyard Glasgow Airport
  • Courtyard London Gatwick
  • Durham Marriott
  • Forest of Arden Marriott
  • Glasgow Marriott
  • Hanbury Manor Marriott
  • Heathrow / Windsor Marriott
  • Huntingdon Marriott
  • Leeds Marriott
  • Leicester Marriott
  • Lingfield Park Marriott
  • Liverpool Marriott City Centre
  • London Marriott Twickenham
  • Manchester Airport Marriott (photo below, reviewed here)
  • MOXY Aberdeen Airport
  • MOXY Glasgow
  • MOXY London Excel (reviewed here)
  • MOXY London Stratford
  • MOXY Heathrow Airport
  • Newcastle Gateshead Marriot Metro Centre
  • Northampton Marriott
  • Peterborough Marriott
  • Portsmouth Marriott
  • Preston Marriott
  • Renaissance London Heathrow
  • Residence Inn Aberdeen
  • Sheraton Heathrow
  • St Pierre Marriott
  • Swansea Marriott
  • Tudor Park Marriott
  • University Arms, Cambridge
  • Waltham Abbey Marriott
  • Worsley Park Marriott

This is obviously a substantial improvement – we have gone from four UK hotels where you could use your free night voucher to 43.

However, don’t get carried away.  Spending £25,000 on an Amex card is NOT easy – and your only reward is a free night at a relatively low-rent hotel.

Manchester Airport Marriott

Despite the rubbish free night voucher, should you consider getting the SPG American Express card?

Yes.

The free night benefit may be rubbish (it IS rubbish, let’s be honest, and remains so even with another few thousand ‘cheap and cheerful’ potential places to use it) but here’s why the card makes sense for many readers:

You can get the Starwood Amex irrespective of what other American Express cards you hold

Even if you already have a Gold / Platinum charge card and a British Airways American Express card, you can still get the sign-up bonus on the Starwood Preferred Guest credit card.

It comes with a good sign-up bonus worth 10,000 Avios

The sign-up bonus is 30,000 points.  30,000 points is good for around £150 of free hotel nights or will convert into 10,000 miles with over 40 airlines, including Avios and Virgin Flying Club.

You earn 3 Marriott / SPG points per £1 spent which I value at 1.5p

A 1.5% return on your spending isn’t bad at all.  I have been using my SPG Amex heavily recently, because I have enough Avios and Virgin Atlantic miles for now and this is the best non-BA/Virgin card in my view.

There is a low spend target to trigger the bonus

You only need to spend £1,000 within 90 days to receive 30,000 ‘new scheme’ points as a sign-up bonus.   This should not be tricky for most Head for Points readers, given that the BA Premium and Gold / Platinum cards have far higher thresholds.

It is a good way of earning airline miles if your airline no longer has a credit card

Now that Emirates, Etihad, American and United no longer have UK credit cards, the Starwood Preferred Guest Amex is the best way to earn miles in these programmes.  There are also 30+ other airlines who never had a UK credit card, such as Air Canada and Qatar Airways, where this credit card is the best way to earn miles in the UK from day to day spend.

You receive double points for spending at Starwood or Marriott hotels

Until 31st December 2019, you will earn 6 ‘new scheme’ points, worth about 3p, for every £1 you spend at a Starwood or Marriott property

You get Silver status just for signing up

As I wrote above, this appears to be a new benefit.

You get ‘new scheme’ Gold status for spending £15,000 in a card year

This isn’t worth much, to be honest, because ‘new scheme’ Gold has few benefits.  More importantly, you can Marriott Bonvoy Gold status for free simply by taking out an American Express Platinum charge card, no spending required.

The £75 annual fee is refundable pro-rata if you cancel

You can cancel the card at any point and receive a pro-rata refund of the annual fee.

If you collect Marriott Rewards / SPG points, the SPG Amex is a great way to build up your balance.  Just don’t focus too much on spending £25,000 on the card to trigger the free night voucher.

My full review of the Starwood Amex credit card is here.  You can apply for the card here.


Want to earn more points from credit cards? – April 2024 update

If you are looking to apply for a new credit card, here are our top recommendations based on the current sign-up bonuses.

In February 2022, Barclaycard launched two exciting new Barclaycard Avios Mastercard cards with a bonus of up to 25,000 Avios. You can apply here.

You qualify for the bonus on these cards even if you have a British Airways American Express card:

Barclaycard Avios Plus card

Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard

Get 25,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £10,000 Read our full review

Barclaycard Avios card

Barclaycard Avios Mastercard

5,000 Avios for signing up and an upgrade voucher at £20,000 Read our full review

You can see our full directory of all UK cards which earn airline or hotel points here. Here are the best of the other deals currently available.

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the famous annual 2-4-1 voucher Read our full review

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & four airport lounge passes Read our full review

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

15,000 bonus points and 1.5 points for every £1 you spend Read our full review

Earning miles and points from small business cards

If you are a sole trader or run a small company, you may also want to check out these offers:

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit Read our full review

American Express Business Gold

20,000 points sign-up bonus and FREE for a year Read our full review

Capital on Tap Business Rewards Visa

Huge 30,000 points bonus until 12th May 2024 Read our full review

For a non-American Express option, we also recommend the Barclaycard Select Cashback card for sole traders and small businesses. It is FREE and you receive 1% cashback on your spending.

Barclaycard Select Cashback Business Credit Card

1% cashback uncapped* on all your business spending (T&C apply) Read our full review

Comments (99)

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

  • TheSkintTraveller says:

    Good to see some better choice now for the free night certificate.

  • Russ says:

    I’m still confused. The one night certificate for £25,000 spend doesn’t make sense to the point of thinking they don’t actually want you to put money through it. Just taking the Renaissance for example, it’s a category 4 hotel at 25,000 points a night. Surely that £25,000 spend values the ‘free’ certificate at £1000 a point?

    If you have Amex Platinum, refer and pick up 18,000 points, convert to Iberia avios and for the same date you can get the Renaissance for 12,400 avios a night and 5,600 avios in change. Parking is only £10 per night rather than the £15 Marriott currently charge as well. I just can’t make this card work for me anymore other than the sign up bonus on the referral card.

    • Genghis says:

      Not too sure of your £1k a point argument but yes, the “prize” for £25k spend is poor. However, the card is still great for high spenders: 1.5% return on points that are pluripotent so add a bit on for optionality vs say BAPP at 1.5% of lowest common denominator avios.

      • Russ says:

        Thanks Genghis and Mr Dee. Alas math wasn’t my strong point at school! As I see it it still feels like I’d be dishing out £25,000 spend for one night at a category 4 hotel.

        I don’t personally value the flexible feature of Marriott points highly but looks like it works well for some. I’ve a few full service cat 2 hotels I frequent in asia which are great for just shutting the door and working interrupted for a week for 60,000 points.

    • Mr Dee says:

      It’s not a £1000 a point and I think you meant £1 a point return. Which is actually pretty good.

      If you were spending 25k you’d also get the 1.5 points per £1 making 75k.

      So if you can make use of the 25k voucher your effectively getting 4 points per £ for the first 25k spend

  • Simon says:

    O/T though still Marriott (and sorry for a semi-duplication, but didn’t get a reply last week, which is fine btw 🙂, but thought I’d try again):—

    I’m still having issue sending MR points from Gold card to Marriott a/c (even though my SPG Amex Card points are swept across to my Marriott a/c without problem each month; and same Marriott a/c number in both Gold and SPG Amex account areas).

    Amex has repeatedly told me it’s a problem at Marriott’s end; and Marriott, surprise surprise, keep fobbing me off with “we’re looking into and we have your case number”. IT HAS BEEN NOTE THAN FOUR MONTHS OF THIS NOW AND NO RESOLUTION! And, for what it’s worth, I’m Platinum Premier Elite With Marriott,

    Can any HFPers suggest a way to get around the impasse? I’m losing my mind/hair/weight* (* delete as applicable) over this.

    Thank you 🙏

    • Mark2 says:

      I’m sure that you have checked, but my points from Platinum vanished into thin air because I had my old SPG number on the Amex points transfer page. They were returned eventually.

  • SG says:

    I have recently repeatedly tried to sent some MR points to my Radisson account,no success.Sorry,an error had occurred!Anyone else in the same situation?

  • Roger says:

    OT- Any way to book a highly flexible ticket (to anywhere) with a view to change date or destination by paying the fare difference in future in order to use current Amex Platinum 200 off 600 offer?

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Isn’t it until 28th Feb?

      I imagine a fully flex ticket will wipe out that £200 saving and more

      • Stu N says:

        Bad idea. You’ve got a month to decide what to do with it. I wouldn’t leave it too long as charges from Tuesday are still pending for me.

        We’ve booked business returns to Tallinn via Helsinki – offer was on main and supp so 2×200 discounts. Was a trip we wanted to do anyway but it was a bit pricy (or maybe the memory of the £232 tier point run has distorted expectations!) Separate PNRs but we shall cope!

        • TGLoyalty says:

          As long as it goes to pending before 28th Feb it’s completely irrelevant when it posts.

  • Natalie says:

    We took out our SPG Amex cards in May 2018 and we got Marriott Silver Elite …so this must have been going on for a while by the sounds of it.

  • rams1981 says:

    OT hotel booked with cancelled Amex plat which was non-refundable. There’s been a death in the family so my dad can’t make this booking I made using a cancelled card. Any room for manoeuvre given card is cancelled/non-refundable booking?

    • tom1 says:

      maybe the Plat insurance will cover you?
      My grandmother died while my parents were away (on holiday booked with Plat). The insurance covered the return flights, and also the unused hotel bookings that were cancelled due to returning home.

      • tom1 says:

        Hmm, didn’t read the comment about the card being cancelled. not sure, sorry.

    • Leo says:

      I once made a booking in error via booking.com which was non-refundable. I called them and explained and they telephoned the hotel concerned and actually refunded me. This was outside the T&C but nevertheless it happened. I see other people on TA have had the same happen to them. I think it largely comes down to the hotel. So if you booked through an OTA I guess the first thing to do is speak to them directly. Otherwise you’d have to deal with the hotel directly. I’m not aware that they are under any obligation to assist you but depends how good the customer service etc. is. No idea what you do about the card side of it.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        Same happened to me.

        Some hotels can be very flexible even on non refundable rates.

        Even if it’s letting you change the hotel to another date in the future

        • Michael Jennings says:

          Sometimes they won’t refund you but will switch you to a different date for free, too. It’s all up to the hotel.

    • Mr Dee says:

      Phone hotel and ask for a refund, if no ask them to rearrange for another date (better than nothing)

  • Frank says:

    OT – If I order a gold supplementary card for my Platinum which is complimentary, will this person be covered by Travel insurance worldwide (same as me main Platinum cardholder)? Thanks!

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