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What happened with IHG Rewards pricing? Some hard facts (Part 2)

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This is Part 2 of our analysis of the changes to IHG Rewards pricing that took place over Easter. Read Part 1 of our analysis of whether IHG Rewards has devalued first by clicking here.

In order to get a realistic view of pricing, I looked at ALL London hotels for Thursday 22nd July. I compared the points rate vs the IHG Rewards member cash rate for a standard room.

I split the hotels into high-end, mid-market and budget by brand. This is because most members will have a preference for a certain sort of hotel.

IHG Rewards devaluation

I would generally only redeem for high-end hotels, for example, so I don’t care if Holiday Inn Express hotels are now great value. On the other hand, someone only looking for a clean and safe room won’t be concerned if the InterContinental hotels are now a bargain.

This is what I found. The numbers represent points for a reward room, the cash price (member rate) for a standard room and the implied value per IHG Rewards point if you redeem.

High end:

  • Hotel Indigo Leicester Square – 90,000 – £364 – 0.40p
  • InterContinental Park Lane – 89,000 – £378 – 0.42p
  • Crowne Plaza The City – 34,000 – £183 – 0.54p
  • Kimpton Fitzroy (image above) – 99,000 – £203 – 0.21p
  • Crowne Plaza Kings Cross – 48,000 – £125 – 0.26p
  • Hotel Indigo Paddington – 50,000 – £130 – 0.26p
  • Hotel Indigo Tower Hill – 26,000 – £144 – 0.55p
  • Hotel Indigo Kensington – 55,000 – £142 – 0.26p
  • InterContinental O2 – 33,000 – £137 – 0.42p
  • Crowne Plaza London Docklands – 48,000 – £146 – 0.30p

Average for high end sector – 57,200 points – £195.20 cash – 0.34p per point

Unweighted average of best value 33% – 0.49p per point

IHG Rewards devaluation

Mid-market:

  • Holiday Inn Oxford Circus – 50,000 – £122 – 0.23p
  • Staybridge Suites Vauxhall – 25,000 – £111 – 0.44p
  • Holiday Inn Bloomsbury – 46,000 – £113 – 0.25p
  • Holiday Inn Regent’s Park – 57,000 – £155 – 0.27p
  • Holiday Inn Camden Lock (image above) – 44,000 – £117 – 0.27p
  • Holiday Inn Kensington Forum – 20,000 – £99 – 0.50p
  • Holiday Inn Kensington High Street – 31,000 – £103 – 0.33p
  • Holiday Inn Whitechapel – 34,000 – £94 – 0.28p
  • Staybridge Suites Stratford City – 48,000 – £111 – 0.23p
  • Holiday Inn Stratford City – 25,000 – £99 – 0.40p
  • Holiday Inn London West – 34,000 – £83 – 0.24p
  • Holiday Inn Brent Cross – 14,000 – £91 – 0.65p

Average for mid-market sector – 35,667 points – £108.16 cash – 0.30p per point

Unweighted average of best value 33% – 0.50p per point

IHG Rewards devaluation

Budget:

  • Holiday Inn Express Southwark – 46,000 – £124 – 0.27p
  • Holiday Inn Express Victoria – 30,000 – £154 – 0.51p
  • Holiday Inn Express Nine Elms – 50,000 – £142 – 0.28p
  • Holiday Inn Express City – 31,000 – £94 – 0.30p
  • Holiday Inn Express Earls Court – 20,000 – £93 – 0.47p
  • Holiday Inn Express Limehouse – 23,000 – £86 – 0.37p
  • Holiday Inn Express Swiss Cottage – 20,000 – £90 – 0.45p
  • Holiday Inn Express Wandsworth (image above) – 21,000 – £76 – 0.36p
  • Holiday Inn Express Hammersmith – 20,000 – £100 – 0.50p
  • Holiday Inn Express Stratford – 43,000 – £182 – 0.42p
  • Holiday Inn Express Park Royal – 15,000 – £81 – 0.54p
  • Holiday Inn Express Royal Docks – 37,000 – £145 – 0.39p
  • Holiday Inn Express Greenwich – 20,000 – £128 – 0.64p
  • Holiday Inn Express Wimbledon South – 15,000 – £91 – 0.61p
  • Holiday Inn Express Golders Green – 23,000 – £63 – 0.27p
  • Holiday Inn Express Excel – 27,000 – £152 – 0.56p

Average for budget sector – 27,562 points – £112.56 cash – 0.41p per point

Unweighted average of best value 33% – 0.57p per point

Across all London properties:

Average for all of London – 37,921 points – £132.92 cash – 0.35p per point

Unweighted average of best value 33% – 0.52p per point

Should we change our 0.4p IHG Rewards valuation?

I have historically said that IHG Rewards points are worth 0.4p each.

I need to be clear about what this number means. I never meant that you will always get 0.4p. I meant that, in general, 0.4p represents the upper end of what you could expect from a redemption. If I was looking at an IHG Rewards booking and was getting 0.4p, I would probably pull the trigger on using points.

Based on the analysis above, I see no reason to change my valuation.

Yes, the AVERAGE valuation is below 0.4p – but it always was. However, of the 38 hotels listed, 17 get you 0.4p per point or more. This is fine with me.

If we look at the ‘best value’ third of hotels in each category, I would be getting around 0.5p on 22nd July. Again, I think focusing on the top 33% of hotels in each segment is fair – you can maximise value whilst still having a decent choice of places to stay.

IHG has NOT decimated the value of any particular group of hotels. There is still good value irrespective of the quality of hotel you prefer to book.

Putting the Hotel Indigo Leicester Square at 90,000 is just an unfortunate red flag. It shows why, for PR reasons if nothing else, you need category caps.

It hides bargains such as Hotel Indigo Tower Hill for an excellent 26,000 points, InterContinental O2 for 33,000 points and Crowne Plaza The City for 34,000 points.

The last two are easily amongst the five ‘best’ IHG properties in London. In fact, a lot of people would say Crowne Plaza The City and InterContinental O2 are THE best IHG hotels in London. Kimpton Fitzroy has issues with its small rooms and InterContinental Park Lane is getting tired.

It’s hard to shout ‘devaluation’ when two of the best hotels in London are under 35,000 points. I doubt many HfP readers would want to stay in Leicester Square anyway, so 90,000 points for the Hotel Indigo is not a cause for concern.

IHG Rewards devaluation

The big question is …. exactly what is IHG Rewards trying to achieve?

This is NOT revenue-based redeeming, by any means. The range above runs from 0.21p to 0.65p per IHG Rewards point.

At the same time, IHG has acted unwisely in doing two things:

  • removing brand or category caps, which gave members an element of guidance and certainty as to how many points they may need
  • announcing that points pricing would be updated daily – you can’t go to bed knowing with any certainty that the reward you were looking at will still be bookable at the same price in the morning

The ONLY value in the IHG Rewards programme comes from the ‘easy to earn, easy to burn’ methodology.

You certainly don’t stay at IHG for elite recognition, free breakfast, guaranteed upgrades, guaranteed lounge access or guaranteed late check-out, because you don’t get it, even as Spire Elite.

You would generally pick up a lot of points from your stay – but this is worthless if members do not have any certainty over what those points will get.

In the real world, there is an element of ‘I fancy at weekend at InterContinental Paris which will cost me xx,000 points so I will move my stays for the next two months to IHG’. This link is now broken because there is no longer any certainty that you can get a room for that number of points.


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 (175)

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  • Anna says:

    Despite another reader posting the other day that he’s received 40k IHG points to replace his soon to be expired Ambassador bonus certificate, the response I have got it that there are “no plans extend the certificate” – even though that wasn’t even what I asked for! I’ve requested this to be escalated but IHG customer support is becoming akin to that we’ve come to expect from some of BA’s call centres!

    • meta says:

      Have you written to Ambassador email rather than general IHG CS?

      • Anna says:

        Yes!

        • Anna says:

          Persistence delivers … now got the 40k points, probably just in the hope that I’ll go away now 😂. Now to find somewhere other than a HI where you can still get a night for 40k!

          • Ryan Gill says:

            I am going to persist too now. It is irritating to have to beg for something, particularly having parted with cold, hard cash for the privilege of being an IC ambassador.

  • Dean says:

    Anyone having issues redeeming their IHG credit card free night? I looked a lots of dates in the UK, US and Asia and not not getting a single free night available.

    • Anna says:

      I’ve noticed a couple of ICs and Kimptons don’t seem to be accepting them but not a general problem. When/where are you looking, exactly? Are you selecting the free night voucher before doing the search (not sure if this is your first free night cert?)

      • OpaWoody says:

        Just booked Kimpton in London in late June with a free night voucher. Cash price £292 or 100k points!!
        Also noticed the email confirmation includes this “Rate Description: UK CREDIT CARD FREE NIGHT CERTIFICATES ARE AWARDED TO IHG REWARDS CLUB CREDIT CARD HOLDERS WHO HAVE SPENT GBP 1000 ANNUALLY. THE CERTIFICATE IS VALID FOR 1 FREE NIGHT AT ANY IHG PROPERTY WORLDWIDE.” If only that was true or, wishful thinking, has something changed?

    • Ruth says:

      I’m looking an overnighter near Southampton before a cruise in October. I’m only being offered one or two hotels for a free night of the 20 plus which have cask rooms available.

    • Scottydogg says:

      Well at least you got your free reward night for hitting the spend limit, im on the 2nd month of back and forth with Creation trying to get my free night creddited to my account . Every time you call them and speak to someone new, you get a new excuse and bollocks story and nothing comes of it. Its now at the complaints stage. Will never use Creation again , they are awful

      • Colin JE says:

        I feel your pain. Like you, I had to cycle between IHG and Creation last year, both blaming the other. I had to lodge a formal complaint in the end. Got the voucher finally, four months late, but this year it went through without a hitch. Can’t say it’s my favourite card, still not got Apple Pay, but at least they still have a website (unlike Virgin).

      • Lady London says:

        Some had been waiting for a year recently. Not sure if anyone’s taken the IHG card to the FOS yet for this but there were rumblings.

        • David says:

          I have been waiting more than a year and have taken this to the ombudsman, it was assigned to an investigator but Creation then cited Covid as their reason for the delay so it was unassigned and placed in the slow lane in December and I am still waiting..

  • Harry T says:

    Can’t say that I’m interested in a rewards scheme where I can’t rely on being able to book a certain hotel for a particular number of points, or where I will struggle to get outsized value for my points. Especially as IHG status is useless compared to Marriott, Hyatt or even Hilton with its weak late checkout benefits. For me, a big part of using points is being able to do better than a baseline value or what you can purchase them for. Despite recent devaluations, this is still very possible with Marriott, who haven’t trashed their redemption categories this year.

    • Andrew says:

      Totally agree, I need a reward scheme that has some guarantee of baseline value. It’s a sad day that my points stash has been seriously devalued overnight and unfortunately time to say goodbye to IHG once I’ve managed to redeem some value from them.

    • Sean says:

      But Marriott have trashed their prices in recent years so don’t think all is rosy in their garden all the time. Devaluation and changing prices happen in all schemes.

      • Harry T says:

        Oh yea, Marriott have made some unfavourable changes in the last few years. However, I can still rely on a property being in a certain category and having fixed potential prices – any category change is telegraphed in advance. There are also plenty of properties where I can get well over Rob’s baseline of 0.5p per point. And Marriott give me free breakfast, 4pm checkout, suite upgrades, etc. They aren’t perfect but at least they aren’t IHG in 2021.

        • Rob says:

          To be fair, Marriott hotels now change once a month, with each night potentially changing its peak, standard or off-peak designation.

    • Neil says:

      Hit the nail of the head here Harry! The reality is that I have no confidence in this loyalty scheme now. Why should I take a risk achieving 0.2 or 0.5p per point when I can earn hard cash as an alternative? If I decide to book a hotel down the road, I will now source the cheapest rate via a travel agent as I don’t require loyalty points or stays to achieve spire status!! The entire concept was built on brand loyalty, so you see that IHG logo in your wallet every day. This model has been gutted!

      • Harry T says:

        Neil, I agree. From a business stand point, it seems very silly to implement this model now, when they should be trying to get their most loyal customers to stay at their properties. As Rob says, even in the US occupancy is not back to normal. This just seems like poor marketing and loyalty retention strategy.

        • Lady London says:

          IHG will have a job running every Monday (if they are smart) checking % occupancy for each date going forward (% booked plus a predictive algorithm) and flipping the points cost up on any date, say, 80% is breached according to predicted occupancy % that day.

          Not sure how often they allow the points rate to move downwards. But possibly not on that same frequency.

          The trick will be working out the predictive factors and catching any gaps when the model might not have kept up with reality or working out times reductions may have been processed.

      • Anna says:

        I posted this yesterday but booking via Emyr is often the best way to get value out of an IHG stay. You get your points and night credits but also breakfast, upgrade if available and $100 credit which status alone can’t get you (unlike say, being HH gold for the breakfast and upgrade). Unless IHG do something pretty radical in the other direction from where they seem to be going at the moment, I’ll be booking all my high-end stays through him rather than direct.

        • Andrew says:

          Agree. I’ll not be bothering with IHG anymore, I’m Spire which was not from MS but from staying 2 nights a week on average around the UK for work – Covid has hugely changed that, and for good, and moving forward it will be a few nights a year, so once I’ve burned through the points I have (at these new ripoff rates) I’ll probably stick to Hilton which I have the Platinum card gold status anyway and just get free breakfast or book like a normal person based on price and desire rather than on points earning or brand loyalty.

          • MKB says:

            +1

          • C says:

            This also undermines any benefit of the IHG black credit card. I’ve been using that quite happily for the past 21 months, even though I rarely stay at IHG properties. With some well-timed home move expenses plus normal spending, and diverting a few marginal hotel stays (ie, where I need somewhere reliable and clean, but not necessarily exciting) I was well on my way to a nice long weekend redemption; this is now much harder to predict and achieve. I was also trying to moderate earnings on my VS MC, as I don’t expect to have that many opportunities to redeem for VS flights. Time to reevaluate non-Amex points earning – I would really appreciate a UK Hhonors or, even better, Hyatt Visa/MC product!

        • TGLoyalty says:

          Agree Emyr can get you value.

          But these are all city hotels where you can get breakfast for next to nothing with a few yards.

          • Rob says:

            You’re falling into ‘price of eveything, value of nothing’ territory there.

          • TGLoyalty says:

            I’m firmly in “Horses for courses” territory

            I know your wife prefers hotel breakfast but I find nothing more dull than the same spread every day. I’ve skipped many included breakfasts because I’m staying on leisure and being dressed at breakfast for 10am isn’t appealing.

            There’s perhaps value in beach resorts where there are few other options but I’d still rather sleep until 10 or so and pay for brunch than rush for a breakfast that closes at 10:30-11.

          • Anna says:

            I like a good hotel breakfast. Quite often I like to have a leisurely breakfast before I finish getting ready to go out for the day – or even go back to bed for a bit if it’s been a late night

  • Freddy says:

    Does anyone REALLY want to stay in a IHG hotel. Holiday inns are generally grotty, the only good thing about HIX was the “free” breakfast and the ‘high end’ hotels are generic, faceless and forgettable…maybe this points lottery will spur people to look elsewhere

    • Stu N says:

      I was thinking the same, what a depressing lacklustre portfolio of hotels.

      I’ve never really bothered with IHG and the more I see, the more I feel I have made the correct choice.

    • Anna says:

      HI/X are pretty good if you want to break up a journey and want accommodation near the major road network. The fact that there are often reward rooms available which sleep 3 or 4 is a big deal for families.

    • The real John says:

      +1 the only reason I get excited about IHG stays is because they are so cheap.

      Before covid I was more or less on a streak of BOGOF with IHG – by which I mean for every night I paid , I earned enough points for another night in a comparable room.

    • Fraser says:

      Actually, yes. Kimpton was a very interesting addition to the range, which I’ve used numerous times in the US. And Intercontinental in places like Bordeaux or Vienna are fantastic locations so worth a bit more of a splurge, especially if getting outsized value per point (good luck now though!)

      There was a question over the weekend in comments about New York and I would definitely recommend the HIX in the garment district if all you need is a safe bed near Madison Square Garden and free breakfast after an event. The Holiday Inn in Tbilisi is also fantastic with a great pool deck, just to illustrate that they’re not all grotty.

      • Anna says:

        +1 for Kimpton. You just reminded me to check how many points the IC Bordeaux wants now for my October stay which I got for 55k pn – now 74k!

    • marcw says:

      PointBreaks were excellent for US roadtrips.

      • meta says:

        I stayed at a brand new HiX in Hong Kong 3-4 years ago for 5k points a night when it was on pointbreaks sale. As Platinum at the time, I got top floor corner room with stunning views! Indigo Krakow too…

    • Rob says:

      Freddy, this is why you will never be a multi-millionaire. Look at the pricing in my list. The HIX hotels charge MORE than the mid-market list on average, because the public love them. They even book them without comparing prices elsewhere, which is why InterContinental O2 or Crowne Plaza The City are actually cheaper than some of the HIX properties.

      If you want to make money out of hotels, you don’t spend £200m building a five star palace. You spend £5m building a prefabricated Holiday Inn Express on the fringes of a big city.

    • Joints&Piles says:

      On my last big trip I stayed at:

      Intercontinental Shanghai Wonderland 0.79p/pt
      Intercontinental Moorea 0.94p/pt
      Intercontinental Thalasso Bora Bora 2.03p/pt
      Intercontinental Le Moana 0.89p/pt
      Intercontinental Tahiti 0.65p/pt
      Holiday Inn Vanuatu 1.16p/pt
      Holiday Inn Rotorua 1.0p/pt
      Holiday Inn Queenstown 1.75p/pt
      Intercontinental Regency Bahrain 1.04p/pt
      Intercontinental Phoenicia Beirut 1.34p/pt

      The club lounge at Wonderland had sensational food. Any redemption at the Thalasso gets an overwater villa – was 70k points when I stayed – and the other 2 Bora Bora ICs upgraded me to overwater villas. The Holiday Inns were convenient one night stays on a road trip and saved me a fortune in cash during peak season.

      None of those ICs are generic and certainly not forgettable. I’ve stayed in a lot of ICs, always get great upgrades, usually get free access to the club lounge (one benefit of travelling solo) where I’ve had great food and service (not to mention time and cost saving which is perfect for me when travelling solo).

      A large portion of the points came from spend on the credit card, which also gave a free night, and the added bonus of 0.75 Virgin Miles alongside the 2 IHG points per £. It’s always been very easy to get IHG points at lower than the redemption value.

      There was also a 10% rebate on those bookings which made them even cheaper.

      I’ve had some great stays with IHG.

      However, that’s why I USED to REALLY want to stay in IHG hotels. It looks like those sort of outsize values will be much rarer.

      These changes make me much more inclined to use up my stash and IHG will certainly get less interest from me, but….. There remains (for those of us who have it) a Mastercard that gives easy points (and double-dip potential) and a free night for spending £10k and there’s still the Ambassador weekend BOGOF, so even with this chaotic pricing system there remain opportunities for good value, and you shouldn’t confuse the limited appeal of a HIX with the strong appeal of some of the better properties in holiday destinations.

      • AnnaZ says:

        Hi Joints&Piles, that’s exactly what I’ll be doing in Oct – staying @IC Papeete and IC Le Moana but unfortunately my redemptions won’t be as good as yours! I have been collecting points for 2 years now but due to the fact that you can only book a redemption night 4 months in advance, I have now lost on value! Before April the room was at 70K and now they have gone up to 100k, who knows, maybe in December, they will be 120K, really not happy as it means I will have to pay cash for one of the nights…

      • Lady London says:

        @Joints&Piles what status were you for that with IHG?

        Also wondering what ticket structure did you use… was it points or Star Alliance RTW perhaps?

        Very envious here, sounds like you had a great time, how long overall was your trip?

        • Joints&Piles says:

          I was spire ambassador.

          Lots of different flights, 3/4 with miles, and almost all in F or J, starting with Lufthansa 747 F to Shanghai, via the Swiss and Lufty F lounges at ZRH and FRA. Hops around the Pacific with Virgin, Fiji, Air NZ, Qantas, Air Vanuatu, Air Tahiti, from NZ to Tahiti with Air Tahiti Nui, and LATAM from Tahiti to Santiago with a few days in Easter Island along the way.

          1.8 million points and miles, 15 countries, 64 days, 30 flights with 18 airlines through 23 airports and not a single cancellation or re-routing, never mind no quarantine – the good old days!

          Be hard pressed to find 30 flights to book these days, let alone 30 that won’t get cancelled. Back then, the worst that happened was an aircraft change leaving Easter Island.

          Took some work to piece it all together with points and miles, but that’s much easier for me as a solo traveller.

          The big loss these days is the Avios option on LATAM to hop from Tahiti to Easter Island to Santiago.

  • Andrew says:

    Reposting my comment from yesterday:
    I’m struggling to understand the logic applied to the calculations for the value of points. LHR T4 in Sept, when I need an overnight – HIX £92 cash, 33K points; CP (adjoining property/same property) £110 cash, 21K points. I booked the HIX for the date I need a few weeks ago for 12k – nearly tripling the points price also seems hard to understand.

    • Colin JE says:

      That is bizarre. Even if you book the CP I suggest to keep looking and rebook if it drops in points or cash. In November I booked the T4 CP for September 2021. It was 25k points (I think) then or £89. When I looked a couple of weeks ago it had dropped to 15k points so I cancelled and rebooked on points.

  • Magic Mike says:

    Ah, the view of the HIX Wandsworth that doesn’t show the BP petrol station attached 🙂

    Thanks Rob for the analysis. The IHG program never seemed to make much sense, even before they totally lost their mind…

    • Harrier25 says:

      When I’m faced with a Hilton and IHG property in the same area I always opt to stay at the Hilton just for the free breakfast. I’m sure I’m not the only one who thinks like this. The amount of custom IHG have lost because of this must be eye watering!

      • The real John says:

        Hampton breakfasts are much better than HIX and usually priced the same.

        But for mid to higher range my experience has been that the Hilton rate is fairly often £25+ more than the IHG, so I grudgingly book the IHG and eat somewhere else (once I ate in the Hilton as it was cheap!)

        • Harrier25 says:

          What’s it matter how expensive a Hilton breakfast is when it’s free of charge from Gold tier or above??

        • Russ says:

          They’re sliding perilously close to the Premier Inn chain where one can get a room for £32 a night. So they’re aren’t any points to be had but you’re now saving hard cash at a time when UK finance is treading unknown waters. The Premier Inn Heathrow is perfectly adequate for a stop over IMHO.

    • Rob says:

      I agree, that is a particularly impressive bit of deception. Also doesn’t show the massive building site behind it where a new housing estate is going up, so indeed the waste disposal site opposite.

  • Anna says:

    Another thing IHG seems to have sneaked in under the radar is to massively increase the price of twin rooms in a lot of hotels (as in rooms with 2 single beds, sleeping 2 people, not 2 doubles sleeping 4). I’m not sure if these rooms are in much greater demand than standard doubles, but it’s hard to see how they can justify charging more for 2 people to sleep in single beds rather than in 1 double or king.

    • Anna says:

      e.g. The George, Edinburgh – on a night where a double room is £368, a twin sleeping the same number of people is £400. I’ve seen price differences nearer £100 in some properties though.

      • Chrism20 says:

        IIRC The George doesn’t have any urban 2 bed rooms which is the lowest category and may explain the difference at this property.

        When I was trying to use my BOGOF before Christmas I asked them about this as there were no 2 bed rooms available at all. I’m sure one of the Indigos (Princes St I think) has no 2 bed rooms at all for sale.

        Can’t say I’ve noticed a difference in the pricing but admittedly I haven’t paid much attention.

  • Graeme says:

    I agree with comments on here. 38 London hotels out of a 6,000 total on 1 night doesn’t mean you can claim there hasn’t been a devaluation. As an example, 24th of July sees the following at some London hotels compared to 22nd in your analysis.

    HIX Victoria – 55,000-£139-0.27p (22nd = 30,000-£154-0.51p)
    HIX Earl’s Court – 42,000-£103-0.245p (22nd = 42,000-£93-0.47p)

    There is huge variance in the prices so a much larger sample base across the UK and rest of the world before anyone can claim it is or is not a devaluation.

    It would be interesting, although impossible to see what the points prices were before this happened and compare. From bookings I have, a dramatic increase in a lot of HIX for only some dates. I feel this is in general the same although I was getting more than 0.4p per point in the last 6+ months so may have been getting more value than IHG would have liked.

    HIX ABZ changes from 12,500 points pre April to 13k or 26k on some days in October in same week.
    HIX Edinburgh Leith changes from 12,500 to 18k to 19k in June.

    • Anna says:

      You can look at current bookings and compare with the price now. I’ve got a stay at the Kimpton Charlotte Square (hopefully) coming up – 2 of the nights were booked on points, at 32,500 points pn. Now it’s 65k pn, so double. Hard to argue that’s not a devaluation!

      • Anna says:

        Cash price hasn’t changed.

        • Andrew says:

          +1. All my current point bookings are now about double for the same dates. Devaluation is the only word than can be used there.

          • Neil says:

            +1 – I understand Rob’s point of view and appreciate the detailed analysis but from where I’m sitting, it’s a personal devaluation to my points! IHG have simply forgotten about the rest of the world who don’t have the opportunity to earn 300,000 point sign up bonuses every 2 years….Rob, can you honestly recommend anyone to take out the free IHG card now and spend £100k to earn one night at a Kimpton??

          • TGLoyalty says:

            Yes why wouldn’t he as it’s still worth a night in a £200 hotel!

      • Graeme says:

        Yes Anna, I can easily compare points for bookings already made, I would be curious to know the points required in Rob’s analysis above if the bookings were made pre 1st of April which we could only get from bookings made by someone unfortunately

      • Graeme says:

        Anna – Meant to add in I agree, most the hotels I have booked, some in the US have all increased. Some by 500 points, some by double as you say so hard to argue it isn’t a devaluation overall. Yes, some nights may be cheaper but it seems to me that it could be related to the number of rewards nights already booked. For example, first reward , night = 20k, then after a threshold (2 or 10 bookings, reward night = 40k). Just a theory.

      • Doug M says:

        Is it possible that HfP readers have always sort outsize value. So individuals posting one or two examples, and using this as data to reflect the entire scheme is misleading. I agree entirely that the overnight recalculations are silly, and removing any consistency devalues the program, but whether the points have devalued is a different matter.

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