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How to redeem Virgin Points for hotel rooms via Kaligo (Virgin Redemption University #9)

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Is it worth redeeming your Virgin Points to pay, in full or in part, for a hotel room via Kaligo.com?  Let’s take a look.

This article is Part 9 of our new ‘Virgin Redemption University’ series to run alongside our existing ‘Avios Redemption University’ – which itself will get a much-needed update next month.

If you want to earn more Virgin Points, our review of the Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard credit card is here (15,000 bonus points) and our review of the free Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard credit card is here.

How to redeem Virgin Points for hotels

Here are the other 12 articles in the series:

Virgin Flying Club has a partnership with hotel booking site Kaligo.com / Ascenda to offer an alternative way of redeeming Virgin Points.  You can use them to pay for rooms at hundreds of thousands of hotels globally.

You should read this article alongside the one we published yesterday on how to redeem Virgin Points for a discount on Virgin Atlantic Holidays and the earlier one on how to transfer Virgin Points to Hilton Honors or IHG One Rewards points.

Redeeming miles for hotels rooms is never a great idea, irrespective of airline

For clarity, you will almost always get the best value from airline miles by redeeming them for flights and not other products.  Any redemption which involves the airline writing a cheque to someone else to provide you with your reward is never going to end well.

British Airways allows you to redeem Avios for hotel rooms via this special ba.com page.  You get around 0.57p per Avios if you do this, which means it is (literally) pointless.  You’d be 15% better off turning your Avios into Nectar points and getting 0.66p per Avios, whilst booking your hotel direct for cash and qualifying for hotel points and status benefits.

Today I want to see what sort of value Virgin Atlantic offers if you use Virgin Points for hotel rooms.

How do you book hotel rooms with Virgin Points?

If you have ever tried to book a hotel using Avios, you will know that the booking site is very clunky and has little information on the featured hotels.

Virgin’s booking site is much more user friendly as you would expect from a Kaligo.com partnership.  British Airways uses a different hotel provider (Expedia) to Virgin Atlantic (Kaligo.com / Ascenda) so you should compare both sites if you are thinking of using your miles for a bed.

The Virgin Atlantic website has more details on this scheme here.

The Kaligo.com home page to redeem your Virgin Points is here.

How does it work?

Kaligo.com has placed its 465,000 hotels into three categories:

  • ‘Standard’ – 20,000 Virgin Points per night
  • ‘Premium’ – 30,000 Virgin Points per night
  • ‘Luxury’ – 40,000 Virgin Points per night

As we will see, the recent sharp rises in hotel cash pricing post pandemic – which impacts the number of Virgin Points needed – mean that these labels probably need to change.

Plenty of hotels in the ‘Luxury’ bracket are nothing of the sort, and because there is a price cap in place (somewhere just below £200 for ‘Luxury’) many top and indeed middle range hotels won’t show at all.

Booking is a little fiddly:

  • Step 2 is to telephone Flying Club and redeem your points for a voucher code
  • Step 3 is to repeat the booking process, this time continuing to the end by inputting the code that was emailed to you

Because Kaligo.com has grouped its hotels into just three pricing bands, it is difficult to put a firm value on what you get.  It seems to average just under 0.4p per Virgin Point based on my admittedly small sample.

0.4p is VERY poor. More importantly, it is substantially worse than I found when I wrote about this deal in previous years, implying that a quiet devaluation has taken place.

It is worse than anything you can redeem via the Virgin Red app, which tends to get you exactly 0.5p for whatever item you buy.

0.4p is also far worse than the 0.55p you get if you redeem your points for a Virgin Atlantic Holidays discount or a Virgin Atlantic cash flight discount.

Let’s look at some pricing examples

Here are some random hotels I picked in London for Saturday 9th September.

The price comparison comes from the hotel’s own website. This is more accurate than using Kaligo’s own cash price because it includes ‘member discounts’ that the big chains tend to offer for direct bookings.

  • Eurotraveller Hotel Express – 30,000 points – £99 – 0.33p per point
  • Holiday Inn Express Limehouse – 40,000 points – £154 – 0.39p per point
  • ibis Budget London Whitechapel – 30,000 points – £108 – 0.36p per point

There are NO hotels in London for 9th September which fall into the 20,000 points ‘Standard’ category. The definition of ‘Luxury’ at 40,000 points is being heavily stretched if you look at the examples above.

It’s actually worse than 0.4p per Virgin Point

For a branded hotel, booking via Kaligo.com means that you won’t earn any hotel loyalty points from your stay, and you won’t receive any elite status benefits you would otherwise be due.

Even if you are booking an independent hotel, you could have booked via Hotels.com for cash and get 10% of your ex-VAT cost back in Hotels.com Rewards credit – at least until the scheme is restructured later in the year.

This means that the real value you are getting is even lower than our average of 0.4p per Virgin Point.

You can convert Virgin Points directly into IHG One Rewards and Hilton Honors points

In general, you would get similar or better value by converting your Virgin Points to IHG One Rewards points (at a 1:1 ratio) or to Hilton Honors (at a 2:3 ratio).  Click through to see the details of those deals.

You should get 0.4p – 0.5p per Virgin Point via that route.  I value an IHG One Rewards point at 0.4p and a Hilton Honors point at 0.33p (so 0.5p per point at 2:3).  You are restricted by what availability is offered for reward nights but both chains are generally good.   Note that these points transfers do NOT count towards elite status with IHG or Hilton.

Conclusion

The Kaligo.com / Virgin Points partnership seems to have substantially devalued over the last couple of years.

There is no easy way to justify using it if you are getting 0.4p per Virgin Point or less. Even if you don’t have enough Virgin Points for a premium flight redemption – which is where the real value is – you’ll get 0.5p per point via a Virgin Red redemption. One easy spend option is Virgin Trains Ticketing which gives you 0.5p per point off any booking.

It is certainly not worth converting Tesco Clubcard vouchers to Virgin Points purely to redeem them this way.  1p of Tesco Clubcard points gets you 2 Virgin Points which would only get you around 0.8p of hotel room.  It is far better to use your Clubcard points for Hotels.com credit at a 1:2 ratio, so every 1p of Clubcard points gets you 2p of Hotels.com voucher.

Similarly, you should not transfer American Express Membership Rewards points to Virgin Points to use them for a hotel.  You get better converting converting directly into hotel programmes, eg 2:3 into Marriott Bonvoy, 1:3 into Radisson Rewards and 1:2 into Hilton Honors. Even using your Amex points for statement credit (0.45p per point) would be a better deal than Kaligo.com hotel bookings.


How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards

How to earn Virgin Points from UK credit cards (April 2024)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Virgin Points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

You can choose from two official Virgin Atlantic credit cards (apply here, the Reward+ card has a bonus of 15,000 Virgin Points):

Virgin Atlantic Reward+ Mastercard

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

Virgin Atlantic Reward Mastercard

A generous earning rate for a free card at 0.75 points per £1 Read our full review

You can also earn Virgin Points from various American Express cards – and these have sign-up bonuses too.

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold is FREE for a year and comes with 20,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 20,000 Virgin Points.

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 comes with 40,000 Membership Rewards points, which convert into 40,000 Virgin Points.

The Platinum Card from American Express

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

Small business owners should consider the two American Express Business cards. Points convert at 1:1 into Virgin Points.

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

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Virgin Points

(Want to earn more Virgin Points?  Click here to see our recent articles on Virgin Atlantic and Flying Club and click here for our home page with the latest news on earning and spending other airline and hotel points.)

Comments (4)

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

  • ADS says:

    will you be covering Virgin’s “Train Ticketing” ?

    if so, can you find out how to deal with Delay / Repay situations ?

    I could only find an option to request a refund … I can’t find any option to claim a partial refund based on delayed train – which most train companies offer

    • Rob says:

      Delay / Repay claims are made directly via the TOC website, it doesn’t matter where you buy the ticket. I’ve done multiple claims with other TOCs where tickets were bought via LNER.

  • Julia says:

    Bit disappointing to see you can’t make up the difference with cash if you’re short. Thanks anyway Rob.

  • Richard Grant says:

    Although the Virgin-Kaligo website appears more user friendly, do not try and use it to book two rooms. If you search on the site for 2 rooms, it only offers Luxury 40000 point rooms. These are the Standard 20000 point rooms with the cost doubled. However, if you then try and book these two rooms, the website then requires two 40000 points vouchers. Consequently, you have to book 2 rooms separately and just hope that the second room will also be available.

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

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