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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)

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

  • James says:

    I’d be interested to see the same done for Hilton.
    I don’t know about London in particular but the properties I have enjoyed on points in the past have been wildly inflated now.

  • Sandgrounder says:

    What would be useful is a comparison between the current prices for points and before they were slashed last spring. A LOT of hotels were cheaper if you bought points than paying cash before this bump, I’m sure that wasn’t always the case?

  • Lev441 says:

    Basically IHG rewards has turned into the hotel version of delta sky miles!

    I’m hoping things may stabilise as right now my usual redemptions have gone up by 40-50% overnight…

  • Chrism20 says:

    Obviously the last six months has been an anomaly due to the introduction of the variable pricing and the highly reduced points cost for some properties on some dates.

    Is it worth comparing against the points rates that were in place before variable rates came into force?

    Back in January 2020 the points rates were – I might be out with some as its purely from memory.

    ICPL 70k
    Fitzroy 70k
    O2 45k
    HI/SBS Stratford 40k
    HIX Stratford 35k
    HI Ken Forum 40k
    Indigo Lei Sq 60k
    CP City 60k (I think)
    HI Bloomsbury 40k
    HIX Victoria 40k
    HI Regents 40k
    HI Camden 40k
    CP Docklands 45k

    I think the nearest property to Z1 that was at 30k or below was probably HIX Limehouse. Newbury Park was 20k and I think HI London West was 25k

    Had they went straight to this method of pricing six months ago rather than dramatically reducing everything would it have been as noticeable?

    • Rob says:

      Sounds about right – I can confirm around half of those from memory.

      So, looking at that list, the average price is roughly the same.

      • memesweeper says:

        Trouble is, average might not reflect what we see when we want to redeem.

        My own analysis of *six* future bookings:

        first is down 2.5K/night (yay! I can rebook)
        second is up 11K/night
        third up 11K/night
        fourth up 10.5K/night
        fifth up 29K/night
        sixth up 0.5k/night

        so, given my preferences and travel plans, a devaluation. About a third overall.

        • Rob says:

          To be fair, you need to check the pricing every day between today and the day you stay before you can claim a devaluation 🙂

          • memesweeper says:

            True — someone needs to create ‘seat spy’ for IHG redemptions, so you get a warning when they’ve got cheaper 🙂

            Similarly, the rooms I’ve previously booked might, if the current algorithm had applied, have been cheaper when I actually booked them.

            Overall, though, my conclusion has to be this makes my valuation for IHG points drop by a third, and makes the scheme hard to parse for value. The points gained from cash stays might be so low now I’d be better off with a OTA booking — if others reach the that conclusion it’s a really bad outcome for IHG long term.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          You probably booked when UK travel was banned and there were far fewer bookings.

          As op said you need to compare pre dynamic to now not a few months ago when travel was all intents and purposes banned.

    • Lady London says:

      @Chrism20 those are the prices I recall too. But at that time many of the London IHG’s had only recently been doubled in price. Misrange HIX’s had been whacked up from 20,000 or even 15,000 to 35,000 or 40,000 which those hotels absolutely were not worth.

  • Andrew (@andrewseftel) says:

    Is there an easy way of seeing the nightly rates of a given property over time? I.e. not checking each day one by one.

    • Anna says:

      There’s a limited way to do this. If you do a dummy booking, e.g. for 3 nights, when you get to the payment page there is a breakdown of which night costs however many points (or if they are all the same rate it just shows the total amount). I haven’t checked how many consecutive nights this works for!

  • J says:

    Apologies, as I’m sure this question has been asked a thousand times on here: Can you use the IHG credit card free night voucher to book for another person? Looking to use mine for my parents (same surname).

    • memesweeper says:

      I used to book for myself and add my Mum as guest, she’d check in. Never asked for ID. That was in the UK, abroad it’s pretty common to ask for passports at check in and I’d not chance it without confirming with the hotel in writing first.

    • Craig says:

      IIRC correctly points can be used for other people and the voucher cannot. Give IHG a ring and ask.

    • Ian M says:

      Yes I used mine for someone else. Just book in your name and add them as the 2nd guest

  • will says:

    I often found IHG redemptions at 1p/point in places I wanted to travel at peak times.

    Will be interesting to see if these opportunities remain for long.

  • Jason says:

    This is massive for me…I have used IHG guarantee 5% of room on fixed points to secure rooms for big sporting/concerts events for the last 10 years with considerable value. That now looks to be dead, as I have no idea of the points required!

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

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