Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Are you a mug to pay £3,700 for ‘Red List’ hotel quarantine if you have miles and points?

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If you are returning to the UK from one of the 10 Southern African countries on the UK Government ‘Red List’, you are facing 10 days of hotel quarantine before you are allowed to return home.

The cost of this is now £2,285 for one person and an additional £1,430 for a second guest.

This assumes you can even get a quarantine spot, since many people are being told that there are no rooms currently available and that they must remain outside the UK for longer.

Frankly, if you pay this, and you have Avios, you’re possibly a mug.

Cancun via Unsplash

Reader Colin dropped me a note to explain what happened when he found himself stuck in South Africa. Frustratingly, he and his wife had only gone there for a 4-night short break. Spending 10 days in quarantine on his return was obviously not part of his plan.

Colin’s original strategy to avoid quarantine was to travel from Cape Town to another African country for 10 days. This would allow him to fly back to the UK with no quarantine required. Unfortunately, there were no suitable options. Those which did exist were thwarted by visa issues, innoculation requirements, bans on incoming South African travellers, an inability to get a flight back to Europe or, ahem, civil war.

Then he discovered some good news.

The ‘Red List’ quarantine requirements do not apply to anyone who is in transit in the UK.

Colin realised that he and his wife had a choice:

  • pay £3,700 for 10 days of hotel quarantine at Heathrow (which wasn’t even possible due to lack of capacity unless they remained in Cape Town for a few more days), or
  • book a luxury 10 day holiday somewhere, with a flight departing within 24 hours of when they arrived in London from South Africa

Unsurprisingly, he went with Plan B.

Colin booked two flights on British Airways to Cancun, departing from Gatwick yesterday, using Avios.

The transit rules allowed him to land at Terminal 5, spend the night in transit at a Heathrow hotel (he booked into the Hilton Garden Inn at Hatton Cross) and then make his way to Gatwick the following morning.

Instead of spending £3,700 to stay at a mid-range Heathrow hotel, they are spending their time at a 5-star all-inclusive Hilton beach resort.

This would have cost $600 per night for cash – roughly the same price for a couple as UK hotel quarantine – but Colin booked five nights via Hilton Honors for 80,000 points per night, with the ‘five for four’ discount on top. They will follow this by paying cash for additional nights in a mid-range downtown hotel to see a bit more of Cancun before heading home.

His total cost, including the flights, is £600 plus 120,000 Avios plus 320,000 Hilton Honors points.

This compares to £3,700 for the UK hotel quarantine package for two people.

He will arrive back in the UK on the same day that he would otherwise have left his hotel quarantine at Heathrow. The only risk is if Mexico is placed on the UK ‘Red List’ whilst they are away.

Colin and his wife will still be away for a lot longer than their originally planned four day break. They are, however, enjoying themselves in Cancun rather than spending 10 days in a 25 sq m hotel room at Heathrow.

The moral of the story is that if you have any friends or family who are currently in Southern Africa and are planning to pay for UK hotel quarantine, try to talk them out of it. For potentially less money, they can enjoy a foreign holiday somewhere for 10 days instead.

Comments (266)

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  • Tariq says:

    Queue the bedwetters moaning about the risks of spreading Covid 🙄

    • Freddy says:

      I hope he doesn’t bring back the cancun variant. I’m hiding under the bed to keep safe

    • Geoff 1977 says:

      Tariq’s getting angry on the internet again 🤣

  • Polly says:

    Brilliant! Very inventive. Am sure others will now find themselves in similar situations, and simply use that strategy….the sting being if it turns red, of course. Guess you then move onto another country. Thus the advantage of booking hotels as 1 nighters, if possible.

    • Polly says:

      As long as their conscious is clear, and tested negative before leaving SA, it should be fine.

    • BJ says:

      It requires a connection on a new ONR so there is risk there also.

      OT: Hope you managed to salvage sufficient value from your Singapore trip, and thanks for the NYC Airbnb tip.

      • BJ says:

        *PNR

      • Polly says:

        BJ
        We are really enjoying the last few days tnx, almost forgotten the unwanted adventure 🗝 not really that bad, but a shock all the same, that it can actually happen.
        Loving the W out here on Sentosa, just relishing SIN for now, as it may be a while before we hit Asia again! Our local eatery is a tiny Thai restaurant which we frequent. Working our way through their menu atm.
        BA have now cancelled one of our Feb HKG legs, so will extend the 241, and squash that trip on the head…sadly, of course. Had great CX J flights to HKT added. Such an optimist!
        Had plans to go to EDI so may use it then. Shame to waste it.

        • BJ says:

          That’s good. Hope it meansbyou are now more relaxed about keeping your cruise on the card now too 🙂 Anything involving HKG seems so much potential hassle. In the circumstances it would be better I think if BA reinstated BKK year round with onward connections to HKG and ditched direct flights to HKG for the moment.

      • Richie says:

        BTW Airbnb in the five boroughs that make up NYC is illegal. It’s legal in New Jersey though.

        • BJ says:

          Didn’t know that, how come? Security concerns or just issues related to impact of investment on availability of local housing stock?

          • Richie says:

            or Hotel owners having political influence? Local government liking hotel taxes?

    • Optimus Prime says:

      “Guess you then move onto another country.”

      Assuming your employer won’t ask you to come to the office….

  • BJ says:

    Reinforces my decision that it remains best to stay at home and avoid all the actual and potential hassle. If that ain’t the real moral then surely it must be that it is best to have a Plan B and Plan C in mind before departure regardless of where one is going. Unless Colin is already in Cancun he clearly has more to worry about than Mexico turning red once he’s there. Even though his points and miles strategy works, just paying cash or buying points and miles in a hurry if that makes more sense would work too. Even if this means economy flights and budget hotels it would still be preferable to paying for prison in the UK.

    • Polly says:

      BJ
      Good point. Anywhere is better than locked up in place not of your choice. We are lucky in this hfp community to have this info and ability at our fingertips. Just imagine the 1000s of travellers who will be caught out now.
      Are you re thinking your USA trip yet? When are you due to leave the U.K.? Hope it works out. You have put a lot of time and effort into it, noted from your ongoing comments.

      • BJ says:

        No, defo all on the cards. Japan/Thailand in March/April. Japan a concern but reluctant to tamper with the reservation as it is our 50% avios booking. USA in July, Amsterdam for Pride weekend in August, and visit with Family in Thailand again in November. Should have been off to Thailand tomorrow but BA cancelled; helped in the end as my partner got Citizenship and is currently waiting for his passport so we would have had to cancel anyway. Have our sights on Cuba and/or Colombia. Really dislike the hassle and uncertainty, but will travel in 2022 regardless. Hope you have a good year lined up too.

        • John says:

          I travelled on my Australian passport after I was granted British citizenship, and after it was returned from my British passport application, but before my British passport was dispatched.

          • BJ says:

            Thanks John. For the moment he has none. The spring trip was just a Plan B to cover this eventuality and either it or the Xmas trip was always going to be cancelled. Keeping Plan B is the better result given 50% avios booking but ultimately dependent on BA, UK, Thailand, Japan and so on, and on it goes…

          • Matarredonda says:

            My cousin who went to NT in Australia 40 years ago still uses his British passport alongside his Australian one

        • PB says:

          BJ, how did you manage to retain your 50% Avios booking? I was told that I had to give it up for a FTV after my ticket became a year old.

          • BJ says:

            I was one of the lucky ones that was able to change the reservation on the app after cancellation by BA. I suspect my only hope of doing anything useful with it will depend on BA cancelling again, and even then I expect they will be difficult. So for the moment I’m just hoping planets line up and I can use it as is, I might not even get the benefit of a FTV if they don’t. However, hopefully the ongoing disruption now means FTV will remain an option for a bit longer than we were starting to expect.

          • Alex Sm says:

            Yes, and after that it was just down to a combination of luck, your eloquence and their individual agent’s willingness to help. A friend of mine recently got his infamous 2020 booking extended and rebooked again for January

          • London Phil says:

            We have 50% Avios First Class bookings for Chicago next May
            We got them in the short time BA was allowing 1 year from Cancellation

  • Phil G says:

    Unless Mexico suddenly appears on the red list

    • John says:

      Then I suppose it’s off to the US for another 10 days

      The US is not going on the red list, there’s nowhere near enough hotel capacity

  • david robson says:

    pretty high risk, as things are changing very dynamically at this time. by the time the 10 days are up, he might have to quantined from mexico. So it’ll be the cost of the mexico trip, the cost of quantine and now 24 days instead of 4 days. Then who’ll be the mug.

    Also only worked as there was short notice avios availability.

    • Rob says:

      No shortage of short notice Avios availability now. St Lucia was available in Club for this weekend when I checked yesterday, for example.

  • plunet says:

    The other risk beyond Mexico.going on the red list could have been dealing with illness and maybe hospitalisation in Mexico from COVID that developed as a consequence of their stay in SA. Hopefully not, but….

    I am sure there are some bargains to be had our there at the moment, and the opportunity to visit places without the bustle from the usual throng of visitors, and for those that are happy to take that risk along with the unpredictability and flexibility there are rewards…

  • HH says:

    Does this work if you come back with checked baggage? As you’d be on separate tickets, so would have to exit through Arrivals to collect bags and presumably whisked off to a quarantine hotel before you can check in at Departures for the next flight?

    • Polly says:

      Maybe they have hand luggage only, a 4 day trip, but yes a very valid point.

      • Rob says:

        There are no direct flights from SA remember. You are rerouted via Europe.

        • Alex Sm says:

          Where in Europe? Many key transit countries like DE, NL, FR banned direct flights while others never had them

    • Anna says:

      I think if you stay in the airport you’re just classed as a transit passenger – in fact I seem to recall that any stay of less than 24 hours was classed as transit, or something similar?

    • Tariq says:

      The article makes reference to a quarantine hotel at Heathrow – so I infer that he arrived into Heathrow, and then left from Gatwick. Or are there no quarantine hotels at Gatwick?

      • Tracey says:

        All at Heathrow at the moment.

      • Rob says:

        Landed at Heathrow, yes.

        • gzo450580 says:

          Is the following OK and does not require quarantine in the UK?
          – arriving into LHR in the morning from South Africa on one booking, passing through arrivals and picking up bags
          – changing LHR terminals to depart on a different booking that same afternoon to Denmark

          • Polly says:

            Fine, as long as SA is not on a red list for Denmark! Have you checked?

  • Henry Young says:

    I did exactly the same returning from Philippines in July 2020 when it was red listed (now approaching literally zero Covid rather astonishingly due to late/poor vaccination (mainly non-mRNA thankfully) and natural immunity being allowed to do the heavy lifting, precisely as evolution says it should – rant over). I ended up investing £300 in a Belgrade Airbnb rather than a lot more in G4S, one of the UK’s private prison operators. Colin should be careful to ensure he is in Cancun for a full 10 days which in practice means his travels into and out of Mexico should overlap 12 days, otherwise he’ll find himself being marched right back to the Gulags …

    • Henry Young says:

      I mean 2021 of course – we’re all living in a time warp !!!

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