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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  • Guy Incognito says:

    Has anyone ever had the test number they enter on their PLF checked?
    Has anyone ever had the negative test they present at check-in checked?
    Has anyone ever had their vaccine details checked?

    I’ve travelled relatively extensively over the past 18 months, both by air (to Europe and US) and car (Europe). At no point has any information I’ve ever presented been checked.

    You could literally make everything up, and no one would find out.

    During this time the Great and the Good have been travelling (without restrictions), breaking the laws they enshrined and having parties while banning the proles from seeing elderly relatives or meeting up.

    They are laughing at the public, and trying to turn people on each other. Save your anger for the people who make these absurd decisions.

    Would COP 26, an environmental event of all things, have seen tens of thousands of people fly in, many by private jet – with no quarantine – if there was an existential danger? Come on, this is the theatre of safety and all these rules should be treated with the utter contempt they deserve.

    • His Holyness says:

      Yes, you’re right. They’re not serious about getting the public on their side with the issue of private jet travel, an immense number of the Jets arriving for COP26 would not be under the Vienna Convention.

      Plus, if they want the public to believe in a climate emergency, start by banning private flights or at least, taxing the hell out of them. When Joe Public sees some tycoon in quarantine or complaining of arrival costs maybe, just maybe, they’ll be inclined to go along with the narrative.

      Plus, bear in mind the 35k who have arrived into the UK this year alone under the auspices of Border Farce and EU/EEA nationals can waltz through the eBorder with no proper checks of their Covid docs.

      It’s all one big con against the public. A scam.

    • Alex says:

      I had a BA checkin lady at Heathrow spend a good 25 mins deciphering my vaccine passport to fly to FRA. She exclaimed she’d ‘never heard of my vaccine’ and wasn’t sure it was accepted by Germany. Hadn’t heard of Pfizer!? Was approved by BA online in advance too.

    • Alastair says:

      I flew into Man tonight. The border agent was clearly confirming details of the person in front’s PLF info – and said he could see it from their passport number.

      When I filled mine in, I was able to show it my EU vaccine cert barcode and it was labeled as ‘verified vaccinated’. This was quite smart I thought as the only way it can be truly verified is to scan it and compare the digital signatures, which the website does (it also obviously checks your name matches the info) so the only thing UKBA has to do is cross reference your passport (and that you are the person standing in front of them) – so no need for them to scan it.

      Good to see that investment has been made in making it more streamlined. Bad news I guess is that this implies the PLF is here to stay for a long while.

      • Alastair says:

        Show ‘it’ refers to the website, you can hold the certificate up to the camera on a laptop or upload a PDF.

  • B Bjorn says:

    This idea here doesn’t work. You can only connect from a red list arrival if you stay air side. It’s why connections from SA are shipped to sleep at the T3 departure lounge airside before flying out the next morning.

    • Polly says:

      They came in to T5 amazingly. So they were able to transit landslide with no limitations.

  • Lady London says:

    The UK government may be all that you say. But other governments are genuinely trying to do their best for people. Even at the expense of their country’s economy.

  • kitten says:

    Could have coughed on the balcony I suppose, and Covid droplets blos onto someone at ground level or on an intervening balcony.

  • Richard says:

    I don’t agree with this nor trumpeting the idea to the general public. The point of quarantine – and you’d have to be rather dim to miss it – is to minimise exposure to others. Going to Cancun doesn’t minimise exposure to others: not on the flight; not for 10 days in the luxury hotel.

    • John says:

      If Mexico wanted to minimise exposure they would red-list South Africa too, but they haven’t.

  • Taza says:

    Ahh first world problems!

    The moral of the story should be “don’t fly unless It’s essential”. A four day break seems unnecessary, travelling to Mexico for a further 10 days seems idiotic.

  • Polly says:

    Good morning,

    Well, Times Money has it today, Saturday. Who told the paper? Big happy smiling picture of our Colin and his wife with lovely sea behind them. Rob gets his quote in too at the end. So we needn’t have worried about keeping mum about the avoidance trick. It’s out there now….

    • Chas says:

      The same grass who got in touch with NS&I / Curve / Creation I’d imagine…..

  • Polly says:

    Good morning.
    Well Times Money has the story of our Colin and his wife in Mexico. Who told the paper? Great pic of them on the beach.
    Needn’t have worried about keeping mum. Rob gets his quote in too re our 241 vouchers.

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