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)

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

  • AndyGWP says:

    A decent insurance policy will also give you protection from quarantine costs on your return (if somewhere turns red whilst you’re away). Not that staying in a quarantine hotel appeals in the slightest!!

  • Andrew says:

    Unfortunate for those sat near them on the flight to Mexico though.

    • Qrfan says:

      Unless your flight is to a destination that requires pre departure pcr then I think you’re accepting this risk anyway.

    • Blenz101 says:

      Why? No evidence it is more severe than any other form of covid.

      Same thing happened when the UK had a much longer red list. Anybody with time from a red list county who wanted to come back to the UK would just spend 10 days in a resort elsewhere (mixing freely with British nationals) and travel back when they no longer had to declare they had been anywhere red.

      The only people such draconian, knee jerk, politically motivated, non-evidenced based decisions affect are non UK nationals / those with IDLTR trying to get back where time is of the essence. Usually sick or dying relatives in my experience.

    • John says:

      They’re going to Mexico – if they are worried about sitting next to contaminated people they should only go to countries which have similar restrictions to the UK

    • GeorgeJ says:

      Other way round surely Andrew, the incidence in the UK is massively higher in the UK than SA, (one in 65 according to ONS) so far more likely for the SA travellers to come into contact with the virus from UK travellers.

  • BuildBackBetter says:

    Very few people with British or European passports spent time in hotel quarantine.
    The unfortunate ones are those with other passports but have a visa to enter UK and cannot enter these tourist places without applying for another visa.
    Not surprising that most people in hotel quarantine were from the subcontinent or Africa.

    • Catalan says:

      Is that fact or opinion?

      • Matt says:

        Definitely opinion – I spent 10 days in quarantine in March when I came back from UAE. Every one of the 15 or so people on my bus to the hotels were British.

        • Catalan says:

          Exactly!

        • BuildBackBetter says:

          That must be the one time British travellers were caught with sudden red list change. Remember the red list has been in force for more than a year.

          • Blenz101 says:

            Or how about the 5 million British nationals who live abroad? Nobody was going on holiday to a red list country but those who live in a country which suddenly became one were forced to use the hotel quarantine if they had to come back to the UK a for a family emergency.

          • Rui N. says:

            No it hasn’t. Hotel quarantine started this year.

          • John says:

            If they live abroad then even less need to forcibly subject yourself to UK quarantine – go somewhere else first. Only if you live in the UK and have little resources would you not have other options

          • RogerMellie says:

            I did 2 stints in hotel quarantine in 2021

          • BuildBackBetter says:

            @Blenz, you are right, but how many such people?

          • Alex Sm says:

            They were also bona fide business travellers like my British colleagues who had to go to Qatar and returned to London. The employer wouldn’t pay for their 10-day holiday in the Maldives or wherever

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Complete utter nonsense. Especially because you have to be a U.K. citizen / resident to travel to U.K. if you’ve been in a red list country in past 10 days

      • BuildBackBetter says:

        Lol, did you even read the post? It talks about UK residents with passports other than British.
        Some people cannot get their head around difference between passports and residency.

  • Doc says:

    Thats it everyone, take the Southern African strain to Mexico or any other resort centre you can think of, to spread the disease. It wouldnt be so bad if you had to have a negative test before flying!

    • Rob says:

      Er, you do before leaving a Red List country.

    • Andy says:

      It’s not “southern African strain”. We don’t know yet where it developed. One thing is for certain though, it will spread everywhere eventuallt

  • Track says:

    Think about it $600 cash per night and stale bun in the morning in a brown bag.

  • Michael says:

    While I admire his inventiveness, surely the other risk is that Mexico (or wherever one decides to sit out the 10 days) introduces quarantine or closes its borders for arrivals from South Africa. This is probably best done at very short notice where the rules have suddenly changed rather than as a planned holiday! The risk with leaving it to the last minute is that you run out of viable options and are then also unable to source a quarantine hotel in the UK if they fill up!

    • GeorgeJ says:

      That is low risk, Mexico have never closed their air borders throughout this pandemic. They do have the right to test on arrival where they see fit.

  • LeMain says:

    irresponsible ‘journalism’ ….

    • Track says:

      But obviously people prefer to be at mercy of drug lords in Cancun/Tulum (the recent shooting on a hotel beach), than at mercy of G4S private prison guards.

      Should signal something.

      • Anna says:

        People don’t care about the horrific levels of violence in Mexico (or don’t do their research properly), and to be fair, the drug lords do tend generally to stick to targeting each other and not tourists.

        • Roger W says:

          In my experience of dangers of Cancun being vomited on by a drunken teen from Minnesota or getting terrific diarrhoea from a highly recommended taco stall!

      • Blenz101 says:

        Fair point …. Covid quarantine hotels: Women say they were sexually harassed by guards https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/stories-57609164

    • Qrfan says:

      Nonsense. Transit is explicitly descoped and Heathrow airport explains this on their website. As far as I can tell, ba can actively market connecting flights from red list countries to non uk destinations if they want. The people on your flight can come from anywhere before boarding. If you don’t like that, don’t fly.

      • LeMain says:

        Don’t worry – I’m not and I certainly wouldn’t be if I was coming from a ‘red zone’ country. That’s just plain irresponsible and it’s irresponsible of HFP to be suggesting loopholes to these requirements. The other risk, of course, is that Mexico or wherever institutes quarantine for arrivals who have been in SA or similar in previous 14 days.

        • Andy says:

          Why is this a loophole? If I travel from SA to the UK tomorrow I may” be carrying the Omicron variant although the pre flight PCR test should pick that up. If I then fly onto Mexico for ten days then I’ll either be clear of it or get ill. Not in the UK so the UK rules haven’t been broken. Then I’ll need an arrival test anyway so again it would be picked up.

          Wonder if people are just a bit bitter that some are still going on holidays to places

          • LeMain says:

            I’m not the slightest bit bitter and I have been halfway across the world during the pandemic … I just believe that it is irresponsible to arbitrage one country’s covid rules at the expense of the population of a much poorer one.

  • Michael_s says:

    I don’t think this is a miles and points issue. Even if you’re paying cash, if you’re following hfp chances are you would simply pay up to go to a third country to “cleanse” yourself for 10 days. Anyone I know who travelled to a red list country has done the same so far, regardless of cost.

    Other than the risk of the other country turning red, the other situation when this doesn’t work is when you are moving to UK. It’s unlikely to take a ten days trip to Cancun with your entire winter wardrobe, your bike and your tv

    • Qrfan says:

      Agree. The play is to spend £3500 on something better then hotel incarceration. Whether that’s points or £3500 spent elsewhere is mostly irrelevant. If you have the cash for hotel quarantine, you have the cash to spend on the other option.

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