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Rebook your IHG and Hilton rooms now – both will refund cheaper ‘Advance Purchase’ rates

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Both IHG Rewards Club and Hilton Honors have made positive announcements about removing the restrictions on Advance Purchase bookings.

This means there are unintended consequences:

if you have a Hilton or IHG hotel booking made at the Best Flexible rate, it makes sense to cancel it and rebook a cheaper Advance Purchase rate – because the Advance Purchase rate is now fully refundable!

if you have a Hilton or IHG hotel booking made at the Advance Purchase rate, you should check it – you could save money by cancelling and rebooking it if rates have fallen

Before you do this – because I don’t want to take the blame if anything goes wrong! – please carefully read:

the IHG policy on refunding Advance Purchase bookings here

the Hilton policy on refunding Advance Purchase bookings here

What is the new IHG policy on refunding Advance Purchase rooms?

IHG has said that it will waive cancellation fees on Advance Purchase bookings for stays up to 30th April.

The rule applies to both new and existing bookings.

Positively, IHG has said that this policy will also apply if you booked via an online travel agent such as Expedia or Booking.com.  However, you will need to contact the agent to discuss your cancellation rather than choosing the online cancellation option, as this is likely to trigger the existing ‘no refund’ rules.

If you have an existing IHG booking before 30th April at a flexible rate, or where the rate has fallen sharply since you booked an Advance Purchase rate, I recommend cancelling and rebooking at an Advance Purchase rate.

Please double-check the official IHG travel advisory notice, which is here, before taking action.

IHG is also reducing the elite status criteria for 2021

IHG Rewards Club is lowering the criteria for earning or renewing your status for 2021.

Spire Elite is cut from 75,000 base points to 55,000 base points, or from 75 nights to 55 nights.

Hilton policy on refunding Advance Purchase rooms

What is the new Hilton policy on refunding Advance Purchase rooms?

Hilton has said that it will waive cancellation fees on EXISTING Advance Purchase bookings for stays up to 30th April.

For NEW bookings, the wording implies that Advance Purchase bookings made by 30th April for ANY future date will be fully refundable.

The only requirement is that you cancel 24 hours before arrival.

Hilton has NOT said if this policy applies to bookings made via other channels such as Expedia.

If you have an existing Hilton booking at a flexible rate, or where the rate has fallen sharply since you booked an Advance Purchase rate, I recommend cancelling and rebooking at an Advance Purchase rate.

Please double-check the official Hilton travel advisory notice, which is here, before taking action.

Hilton has also said that it is working on a policy to deal with status expiry although it is not yet finalised.  In the interim, all points expiry will be curtailed until 31st May.

Remember that Hilton is still offering a status match – this HFP article explains how.

Before you ask, there is no similar news yet from Marriott.  The only waiver on offer is only valid to 31st March and only covers the following countries: Mainland China, Hong Kong SAR, Macau SAR, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, French Polynesia, Maldives, India, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Nepal Bangladesh, Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, New Caledonia, Samoa, Italy.  You can find out more on marriott.com.


IHG One Rewards news

IHG One Rewards update – April 2025:

Get bonus points: IHG is not currently running a global promotion.

New to IHG One Rewards?  Read our overview of IHG One Rewards here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on ‘What are IHG One Rewards points worth?’ is here.

Buy points: If you need additional IHG One Rewards points, you can buy them here.

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

Comments (60)

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

  • Kev says:

    I had a non-refundable stay this weekend for a Melia in Italy. Yesterday they were saying no refund, just credit against a future stay in the specific hotel until the end of the year. After an email expressing my disapppointment, today they reconsidered and gave a redund.

  • Mark M says:

    Can anyone help on this one:
    I have a IHG Intercontinental O2 stay early April, using a complimentary weekend night certificate.
    This certificate is by now past its original “book by” date.
    If I do cancel, what happens to the free night voucher? Will it now be invalid for rebooking purposes?

  • Y says:

    “New Reservations. Any reservation you make – even those described as “non-cancellable” (“Advanced Purchase”) – that are booked between today and April 30, 2020 for any future arrival date, can be changed or cancelled at no charge up to 24 hours before your scheduled arrival.”

    “For any future arrival date” – does this mean, Hilton advance rates are cancellable even if I book for December 2020 up to 24hrs before arrival?

    • Rob says:

      Good spot, I agree with you and that my original wording was wrong. Now updated.

      • Y says:

        Checked other travel blogs and no one has really interpreted it in this way though…

  • Tony says:

    It’s also worth looking at Hilton bookings made using points (which are of course fully flexible anyway) as I’ve saved around 100,000 points by cancelling then immediately rebooking a 5 night stay in Dubai next week…

    • John says:

      Points bookings are not always fully flexible, particularly if there was high demand on those dates (e.g. a large conference).

    • Paul says:

      No they are not! I have 5 night stay at the The Higgins which has a 60 day cancellation policy!!! I am trying to get clarity on my options but the diamond desk simply sent the policy which does not specifically answer the question.

  • TimT says:

    But you might lose (or gain) on the exchange rate transaction if a foreign booking

    • John says:

      Only if it was already charged. And getting 85-90% back is better than nothing. Since the GBP is back down to USD 1.25 and EUR 1.13 most people here would be gaining at this time.

      Possibly relevant: I made a euro transaction on Curve which was refunded after the exchange rate had changed quite a bit. Exactly the same GBP was refunded to the underlying card. The GBP amount doesn’t even show in Curve, only the euro amount.

  • Ian says:

    The app shows still as non-refundable… I have an Israel booking under a “EU member flash sale” for next week. Obviously I can’t fly there… Do I get a full refund? I paid in full so I don’t want to cancel and mess it up

    • Ian says:

      5 mins after I wrote this the hotel emailed saying it’s cancelled and the hotel is closed

  • Simonbr says:

    Is All Accor making any concessions on advance room purchases?

    • Mr. AC says:

      I just got off a call with them. They aren’t refunding and according to them that’s the policy that has been decided on, and it won’t change. They offered free rebooking within 6 months instead.

  • zee says:

    Emailed Marriott about my Cat 4 Certificate for Italy in April and was told that I could change the reservation but no extension would be given. I still had to use it or lose it. Seems a bit unfair considering how hard it is to travel is at the moment.

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

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