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The best Black Friday deal? MeliaRewards points being sold both directly and via Amazon

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It’s back for another year – the EXCEPTIONALLY good Black Friday deal for buying MeliaRewards gift cards on Amazon Spain.

Spanish hotel group Melia has been selling points on Amazon Spain for a year now.  They come in the form of gift cards you deposit into your MeliaRewards account.  Here are the standard prices:

35,000 points for €210

55,000 points for €330

80,000 points for €560

Until Monday, these prices have been slashed.  Look here:

35,000 points for €126 – €3.60 per 1,000

55,000 points for €198 – €3.60 per 1,000

80,000 points for €308 – €3.85 per 1,000

You can check the price and availability on this page of the Spanish Amazon site.

I bought this deal last year, when I paid €165 for 55,000 points (you will pay €198 this year).  This is what you get:

Melia Rewards Amazon points offer

Whilst the card itself is credit card sized, the leaflet it is stuck to is A5:

MeliaRewards Amazon points offer

The instructions were simple enough that even my rudimentary (ie non existent) Spanish could follow them:

You log into the Melia website and head to ‘My Points’

Filter the earning and spending options by ‘Shopping’

Click on Amazon.  As well as explaining how to redeem your points for amazon.co.uk gift cards, there is a box to deposit your gift card.  I typed in the number and the 55,000 points immediately appeared as you can see below.

Melia Rewards Amazon points offer

Can you get value paying €308 (£264) for 80,000 MeliaRewards points?

Oh yes.

Now …. MeliaRewards points can be converted to Avios at 10:3.  However, these points are not transferable.  The value is in hotel rooms.

Having spent a lot of time last year exploring the MeliaRewards redemption chart, it is not as random as it first seems.  It is simply that hotels have totally weird redemption values which makes them appear random.

INNSiDE New York, which we reviewed here, was 23,098 points per night when I looked last year (the Melia website was down at midnight last night and I couldn’t look up the current figure).  Where this number comes from I have no idea!  There is real value here – cash rates are around £300 per night in the Summer, whilst you would be paying under £100 if you redeemed gift card points.

In London, the Melia White House was 24,286 points per night last time I checked.  Again, on a peak date this is a bargain at under £100.

What you CAN’T do is transfer these points to Avios or to anything else.  They are ringfenced for hotel stays.   You also need to note that the hotel only offers a few rooms per night at the points prices above – once those have gone, rather like the way Hilton Honors works, redemptions are priced off a revenue based system which is much less attractive.

This is how I used my points from 2018

Last year, I bought 55,000 points for €165 (€198 this year).  I used 48,500 for two nights at the Melia White House for my brother.  This was during Wimbledon and the cash rates were over £250 per night.

Surprisingly, after this stay I was able to transfer the remaining points to Avios at 10:3.  This got me another 2,000+ Avios.

My total return on €165 was therefore £500-worth of hotel rooms plus 2,000+ Avios.  Not bad.

Ordering is easy.  Your Amazon UK log-in details work on the Spanish site, and your UK delivery details are pre-populated.  Postage to the UK is €4 and delivery is expected around 5th December.

I wouldn’t buy these points totally speculatively, but if you are fairly sure you can use them then this is a very good dealThe link to the Amazon Spain page is here.  The offer runs until Monday.


How to get MeliaRewards Gold status from American Express

How to get MeliaRewards Gold status from American Express (April 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

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

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

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus 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 (61)

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

  • AndyW says:

    Anyone know if they have any family friendly resort type hotels? Thinking Domes like (though I doubt anything as good).

  • NigelthePensioner says:

    Funny chain, Melia. When you check in to the Level they offer you a glass of prosecco!! Same at the M. Have they not heard of their own faux champagne called cava? Far far superior to prosecco imho 🥂🍾

    • Andrew (@andrewseftel) says:

      I was offered cava at my last Meliá stay (albeit in Spain).

  • Diydegsy says:

    All done thanks Rob. The Melia White House is being refurbished at the minute, staying there in 2 weeks, great rates to be had for a London hotel and never had a problem so this sale works great for me. We also stay at The Innside Manchester, again it can be a bargain sometimes at the weekend and the staff are always friendly.

  • John Caribbean says:

    Looking at resort rooms. The cash price is either “free cancellation” or prepayment “non refundable if cancelled”.
    Switching to points instead of cash, the same criteria are shown, with different prices. Do Melia have non refundable points rates?

    • Rob says:

      No.

      STANDARD redemption rooms are cancellable. Those are the cheap ones.

      If it has sold out of standard rooms, the system sells you a non-refundable cash room but converts the cash required into points. This is when the rooms are non refundable.

  • MattB says:

    Tempted for a speculative purchase as I’ve always had good experiences with the brand. Stayed at the Innside NY in May and we’re going back again over Easter next year. Both times booked with black Friday points although did have to make a small top up direct through the site for €5 per 1k points. Great value both times when cash prices were >£200 per night for a well located, fairly modern hotel in Manhatten. Just in the ~£22 per night resort fee into your calcs.

  • amar363 says:

    I’m also tempted for a speculative purchase. What’s the max amount of points that we can buy? Was thinking of 3 x 55k.

    I checked a random night in the Athena Melia Hotel and it’s 15k points when cash rates are £141, effectively redeeming at 0.89ppp (and the offer above allows us to purchase for 0.31ppp). Looks good to me!

    • Judge says:

      Bought 10 x 55,000 last year. Don’t think there is a limit. But you have to load on to account within 6 months I think.

  • Phil says:

    Folks. Note The blurb on Amazon.es indicates you have upto 6 months to ‘activate’ the points from the date of purchase and once activated, up to one year to use them.

    • MattB says:

      From my experience making a reservation pushes back the 1 yr expiry of all points. Then the actual stay resets the 1 yr clock.

  • James W says:

    Seems a bit too good to be true, looking at hypothetical dates for 5 days in New York in March, it needs 118,000 points for the basic room option which is £364, £73 a night?? Looks like it’s normally £170-200 for cash.

    • Rob says:

      Not too good to be true, that’s the deal. The hotel is only offering a couple of rooms at that points price so you’re not bankrupting it.

    • MattB says:

      Read my earlier post

    • Stephan from ZA says:

      Talking miles and points, “in the know / too good to be true deals” are not common, but it does happen. This Melia Black Friday points deal is an example.

      How do you recognise a valid “to good to be true” deal? Take a hint from Rob. “The best Black Friday deal?” is a pretty strong hint.

      Having missed out on the Iberia Avios bonanza this time last year I jumped in on Melia points – result: 4 nights in May 2019 at INNSIDE NY NOMAD for about £ 75 + resort fees (!).

      Cheers Rob, for so prominently pointing out the 2018 and 2019 deal. This time I’ve gone for 150K points on melia.com for GBP 465, eyeing the Gran Melia properties in Madrid (£84/night !) amongst others.

      Hard to lose out when buying points at this rate still implies a discount even when redemption inventory has gone…

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