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IHG Rewards Club dynamic hotel reward pricing hits the UK – a good reason to buy points?

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A couple of weeks ago we covered how IHG Rewards Club, the loyalty scheme for Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, InterContinental etc, had launched revenue-based redemption pricing in Europe and parts of the USA.

The UK was not included at that point.  It is now – and there are some FANTASTIC bargains to be had.

Until Monday night, 15th June, you can buy IHG Rewards Club points with a 100% bonus via this link.  The price is 0.5 cents (0.39p) per point.  As you can see below, you can get FAR more than 0.39p at some hotels when you redeem.

IHG Rewards Club

If you need any hotel bookings for the next 12 months, especially in London, there may be a unique opportunity here to buy IHG points and immediately book a redemption.

If you have any existing IHG Rewards Club redemptions booked in the UK, you should check your pricing – you may make a big saving by rebooking.  Do not rebook unless you can see reward nights still available as there is no guarantee that a cancelled night will go back into reward availability.

IHG Rewards Club revenue-based redemptions in the UK in action

Let’s look at London for an October break.  I looked at 13th October as a random midweek date.

Pricing is both:

exceptionally good in some places and

erratic, when you compare hotels

For clarity, no hotels are priced higher than their previous maximum.  This won’t last, of course, but it does mean that – overall – you are genuinely better off under this new structure for now.

InterContinental London Park Lane, which is the UK flagship (albeit not really the best) is 45,000 points on 13th October.  This is a huge drop from the usual 70,000 points:

InterContinental London O2 is not available on this night, but there are many dates where it shows at under 30,000 points per night.  If you want a new hotel with a big swimming pool, this is a great choice.

Compared to InterContinental Park Lane, some poorer hotels are more expensive:

Crowne Plaza Albert Embankment – 55,000 points

Hotel Indigo Paddington – 55,000 points

Some very average hotels are the same or similar price:

Holiday Inn Bloomsbury – 45,000 points

Holiday Inn Regents Park – 45,000 points

Holiday Inn Kensington Forum – 45,000 points

Holiday Inn Express City – 40,000 points

And some hotels on the same night are exceptionally cheap:

Kimpton Fitzroy – review here (the nicest IHG hotel in London) – 40,000 points

Holiday Inn Express Victoria – 17,500 points

Holiday Inn Camden Lock – 20,000 points

IHG Rewards Club dynamic pricing London

Holiday Inn Kensington High Street – 17,500 points

Holiday Inn Express Earls Court – 17,500 points

Holiday Inn Express Stratford – 15,000 points

Holiday Inn Brent Cross – 12,500 points

Holiday Inn Wembley – review here – 15,000 points

Here is some bizarre dynamic pricing in action.  The Crowne Plaza and Holiday Inn Express at Heathrow Terminal 4 share the same building and you can cross-charge.  The Crowne Plaza has bigger and more luxurious rooms.  For 13th October:

Crowne Plaza Heathrow Terminal 4 – review here – 12,500 points

Holiday Inn Express Heathrow Terminal 4 – review here – 20,000 points!

IHG Rewards Club dynamic pricing London

Similar, the Holiday Inn and Staybridge Suites on Bath Road share a building – these are both brand new and very nice:

Holiday Inn Bath Road – review here – 25,000 points

Staybridge Suites Bath Road – review here – 15,000 points!

What value am I getting per IHG Rewards Club point?

Here is the list of hotels mentioned above with pricing for 13th October:

InterContinental Park Lane – 45,000 points (£337, 0.75p per point)

Crowne Plaza Albert Embankment – 55,000 points (£183, 0.33p per point)

Hotel Indigo Paddington – 55,000 points (£193, 0.35p per point)

Holiday Inn Bloomsbury – 45,000 points (£226, 0.50p per point)

Holiday Inn Regents Park – 45,000 points (£164, 0.36p per point)

Holiday Inn Kensington Forum – 45,000 points (£166, 0.37p per point)

Holiday Inn Express City – 40,000 points (£132, 0.33p per point)

Kimpton Fitzroy (the nicest IHG hotel in London) – 40,000 points (£285, 0.71p per point)

Holiday Inn Express Victoria – 17,500 points (£143, 0.82p per point)

Holiday Inn Camden Lock – 20,000 points (£174, 0.87p per point)

Holiday Inn Kensington High Street – 17,500 points (£137, 0.78p per point)

Holiday Inn Express Earls Court – 17,500 points (£129, 0.74p per point)

Holiday Inn Express Stratford – 15,000 points (£99, 0.66p per point)

Holiday Inn Brent Cross – 12,500 points (£89, 0.71p per point)

Holiday Inn Wembley – 15,000 points (£99, 0.66p per point)

Crowne Plaza Heathrow Terminal 4 – 12,500 points (£85, 0.68p per point)

Holiday Inn Express Heathrow Terminal 4 – 20,000 points (£77, 0.38p per point)

Holiday Inn Bath Road – 25,000 points (£91, 0.36p per point)

Staybridge Suites Bath Road – 15,000 points (£99, 0.66p per point)

There is clearly no direct correlation between the cash price and points price – at all.

For this random day in October, the best deal on a pence per point basis is Holiday Inn Camden Lock – home of two HFP parties! – where you are getting well over 0.8p of value per point.

There are plenty of hotels where you get above 0.7p per point.  Remember that my ‘base valuation’ is just 0.4p per IHG Rewards Club point.

Will this last?

No.  Obviously this situation won’t last.

As you can see above, there are lots of hotels clustering around 0.35p to 0.4p per point.  This is where I expect things to average out, long term.  At present, IHG Reward Club seems to be throwing us a few bones with some high value redemptions.

It is very unlikely that you will see a lot of hotels at around 0.7p given that IHG Rewards Club sells points for 0.4p much of the time.  If IHG WAS to keep offering lots of hotels at 0.7p, transferring Virgin Flying Club miles into IHG Rewards Club at 1:1 would become an outstanding opportunity.

Should you buy IHG hotel points this weekend with a 100% bonus?

IHG Rewards Club has been running a 100% ‘buy points’ bonus for the last few weeks, which is as generous as you ever see.  It ends on Monday.

IHG has increased the maximum number of points you can buy to a whopping 500,000 points (ie 250,000 plus the 250,000 bonus).

The page to buy points is here.

The price, with bonus, is $5 per 1,000, so 0.39p per point. With a 100% bonus, you would be able to buy up to 500,000 IHG points for (at current exchange rates for $2,500) £1,951.

If you look at the points prices above, there is some real value here.  For example, Holiday Inn Victoria at 17,500 points (for 13th October) would work out at £68.25 (17,500 x 0.39p per point) instead of £143 cash.

Have a look at potential pricing for dates you might want to travel – not just in the UK, but globally – and look at the cost of buying points instead.  You can buy here and the 100% bonus ends on Monday night.


IHG One Rewards update – April 2024:

Get bonus points: IHG One Rewards is offering 2,000 bonus points for every two cash nights you stay (not necessarily consecutive) between 1st April and 31st May 2024. You can read our full article here and you can register here.

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 (161)

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

  • Will says:

    None of this makes any sense but I’m in! I can’t see how they are working out these numbers unless they are doing it on an easyjet basis – i.e. first couple are 10k points, then 15k points etc per night.
    The hotels in Glasgow I regularly use are back to what they were in 2008 until you get towards the end of the year. Some of them – the Crowne Plaza for example I’ve just bagged for 12500 points in July\August and it’s never been that low.

    • Matthew says:

      I think you’re prob right. As soon as I booked a 27500 point room at Intercontinental Strings Tokyo, the price moved up to 30,000 for the same room despite cash price remaining the same.

      • Joe N says:

        This is speculation on my part, but my understanding is the reimbursement to hotels from IHG for points bookings is very low, unless the hotel is at 95%+ occupancy and then they get their average rate reimbursed. Presumably then IHG can afford to offer low points rates as long as they’re fairly confident the hotel won’t be more than 95% full? Their prediction of how full the hotel might be could be driving the points rate.

        • Rob says:

          That’s basically it, yes.

          IHG’s logic might go like this – if we can get people to redeem more widely (because for many hotels it NEVER made sense to use points unless a special event was in town, but now it does) then there are likely to be fewer redemptions at 95% full luxury hotels and those are the ones where we get crucified on the payment.

  • Deepu Thomas says:

    Hi can I check whether the following would work: purchase 400k points for $2000 using Amex UK Platinum. Pay 3% surcharge for foreign spend. Obtain double MR points. Pay the Amex bill in pounds using MR points at .9p per point. Thinking this could be a good way to convert my wife’s MR points into IHG points within my account at the rate of 2.2 IHG points per MR Point.

  • ChrisC says:

    Some strange pricing where the £ of a Kimpton and a HI are within a couple of quid of each other yet the Kimpton is for fewer points.

  • QRFan says:

    Thanks for this Rob. Just made a decent saving on a couple of UK hotels with a few minutes effort.

  • Boi says:

    Any recommendations for Mexico? I have been towing on going to Mexico for Xmas (or somewhere warm and close to Canada). Thoughts?

  • Rusty says:

    Morning all. Looking to do some city breaks on redemption in September/October, thinking London and perhaps Porto. Two of us plus our first little one who was born last week!
    I was wondering about people’s experiences booking IHG rooms with points for two people plus an infant, is it possible to just request a cot for a basic room for two or is a larger room required?

    Many thanks!

    • Boi says:

      Congrats!
      Sorry don’t know answer to your question

    • Anna says:

      Congrats! Most decent hotels will provide a travel cot for a baby (though some do charge outrageously) in a standard room. At least with a points booking you can book, then enquire and cancel if they can’t fulfill your request.

    • Genghis says:

      Porto put one in for free. We’re going in Aug.

    • John says:

      Buy your own travel cot, don’t trust hotel ones for a 3 month old. Don’t worry about adding a baby to the booking.

    • Alex W says:

      Congrats. Have requested a cot loads of times, never been charged or needed a non-basic room. Sometimes it has not been prepositioned in the room, however. Imagine waiting hours for a cot with a screaming baby at 10pm… taking your own is not a bad idea especially if not travelling far.

    • Rusty says:

      Cheers everyone, lots to mull over. If you do remember that stroller/cot combo Lady London do let me know!

      Thanks again

  • Pauline says:

    Is it possible to book a club room with points?

    • Rob says:

      No. IHG is rubbish for this – only standard rooms in most cases.

    • The Urbanite says:

      There is the roundabout option of buying the IHG prepaid cards with points then using those to pay for premium rooms, but you may lose some value.

  • Binks says:

    Hi Rob, if I was to book using the dynamic pricing for a date in April next year and than in a few months time need want to move it for example to October 2021 what is the likelihood I could rebook using the same points I used for the original booking? Could I simply transfer the bookings or would I likely have to use more points (assuming availability).

    • Andrew says:

      You would get a refund of the points you used and then be subject to the new rate of points at that time. This has always been the case for example when the annual award chart changes and you might have a booking which was charged at the old rate.

    • Rob says:

      You can’t move bookings – it requires a cancel and rebook at whatever the price is.

      Pricing is now different for every single day of the week in some case.

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

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