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IHG One Rewards is here – what do we think? (Part 1 – earning points and status)

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IHG, the hotel chain behind InterContinental, Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, Hotel Indigo etc, has launched IHG One Rewards.

This is the long awaited relaunch of IHG Rewards (nee IHG Rewards Club, nee Priority Club etc).

Quick summary – it’s hugely impressive compared to what I was expecting. In one swoop, IHG has gone from bottom of the pile, by a long way, to level pegging with Hilton Honors, Marriott Bonvoy and World of Hyatt. In some ways, IHG One Rewards is better than those programmes.

IHG has also been very clever. The benefits you get from simply having status (which is free from a credit card in some countries, or from buying Ambassador status) are modest. You need to do the equivalent number of ‘heads in beds’ nights to get real value.

If you do enough nights, the benefits include:

  • guaranteed lounge access
  • free breakfast at all brands which currently charge for it
  • suite upgrades which are confirmed 14 days before arrival and are guaranteed if a standard suite is being sold for cash (valid on ‘pay on departure’ cash stays)

The lounge and suite upgrade benefits are ONLY available if you earn your status via stays, not via getting comped status.

One piece of good news is that you CAN continue to earn status points via the UK IHG credit cards, albeit these are now closed to new applicants. This benefit has been ended for US credit card holders, so if you see any online comments to the contrary then this is why.

If you want top tier Diamond status, you are going to need to fully commit to IHG, whether that be through $12,000 of annual pre-tax spend or 70 nights.

IHG Rewards planning a major relaunch in March

How do you earn status in IHG One Rewards?

The programme has gained an additional tier – Silver.

The confusing Spire name for the top tier has been retired, in favour of Diamond.

The new status levels, from 17th April, are:

  • Silver – requires 10 nights
  • Gold – requires 20 nights or 40,000 base points
  • Platinum – requires 40 nights or 60,000 base points
  • Diamond – requires 70 nights or 120,000 base points

At most IHG brands, you earn 10 base points per $1 of pre-tax spending.

For comparison, here are the old levels, albeit these numbers were lower in 2021 due to covid mitigation measures:

  • Gold – requires 10 nights or 10,000 base points
  • Platinum – requires 40 nights or 40,000 base points
  • Spire – requires 75 nights or 75,000 base points

Reward nights will continue to count towards status and also count towards the new Milestone Rewards (see Part 3).

How many bonus points will I earn per stay?

These are the new base point bonuses earned on paid stays, which kick in from 17th April:

  • Silver – 20%
  • Gold – 40%
  • Platinum – 60%
  • Diamond – 100%

Here are the old rates:

  • Gold – 10%
  • Platinum – 50%
  • Spire – 100%

Here is a graphic provided by IHG summarising the new structure – note that the top tier is now designated by black imagery and not red:

New IHG One Rewards chart

In general, bonus levels at the bottom end are increasing. The biggest difference comes for people who do 20 nights per year, who will now be getting a 40% Gold bonus rather than a 10% bonus under the old programme.

A few thoughts about qualifying for status ….

The base point requirement increases sharply

As you can see, qualifying via base points has become substantially more difficult.

This is reflected in the new benefits, however, as Part 2 of this article will show.

IHG Rewards is planning a major relaunch in March

Credit card points will no longer count towards status

Historically IHG Rewards was very liberal in the type of points which counted towards status.

I used to earn Spire Elite status by transferring points from Virgin Flying Club to IHG Rewards. It was a good deal, especially as one of the benefits of earning Spire Elite status was 25,000 bonus points.

At one time, credit card sign-up bonuses also counted towards status. This was removed a few years ago.

From early June, points from credit card spend will no longer count towards status.

Earning top tier status via spend is going to be difficult

Take Diamond. Based on 10 base points per $1, you’d need to spend $12,000 to earn status via spend. The alternative is completing 70 nights. You’d need to average more than $171 per night excluding taxes before you’d earn Diamond based on spend rather than nights.

You don’t want to be earning status via spend

As we will show in Part 3, the real benefits in IHG One Rewards come from the number of nights you do each year and not your elite status.

Someone who earns Diamond status via $12,000 of spending over a couple of weeks at InterContinental Maldives will be a lot worse off than someone who earns it via 70 nights at a Holiday Inn Express.

Intriguingly, the nights requirement has come down

The new top-tier Diamond status will ‘only’ require 70 nights per year. This is a drop of five nights on the old threshold for Spire, albeit that for 2020 and 2021 this was reduced to 55 nights as a covid measure.

This may be reflection of the fact that, post the pandemic, the number of people doing 70 nights per year in hotels – in total, let alone at IHG – is going to be smaller than it was.

IHG Rewards is planning a major relaunch in March

The top tier 25,000 points achievement bonus is going

Under IHG Rewards, you received a 25,000 point bonus when you achieved or renewed Spire Elite status.

(You had to request this online, it was not automatic. There was a Plan B alternative of giving Platinum status to a friend.)

This benefit has now been dropped. However, as you will see in Part 3, it has been replaced by Milestone Rewards – click here.

Click here for Part 2, which looks at the new status benefits of IHG One Rewards.

Learn more

The IHG website for IHG One Rewards is here.

The terms and conditions for the various member benefits are here. You need to scroll down to the IHG One Rewards section.


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 (150)

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

  • AV says:

    Hello

    Excuse my ignorance but what does ‘points will not expire for status members’ (stated in part 2 of the 3 articles) mean? Does this imply that you have to have some kind of status as a minimum to avoid point expiry? I thought the general rule was that as long as there was account activity every 12 months (regardless of status), the points wont expire. Do the changes mean that going forward you need to have status and account activity every 12 months to prevent points from expiring? thanks

    • Rob says:

      Nothing changes. If you have activity, they don’t expire. For elite members, they don’t expire full stop.

      This only really impacts ‘credit card elites’ of course, since ‘real’ elites will have activity.

  • DevonDiamond says:

    From my perspective I’ll be drinking fewer pints of Cidre at Holiday Inn Expresses now they’re no longer being given away free to Golds. Theoretically earning a few more points but in practice won’t bother using them

  • Rob H says:

    When does the new free breakfast amenity option kick in with Diamond?

    I have stays booked in mid May – would they qualify or is that part of the wait till June thing?

  • Concerto says:

    As platinum, do we still get free welcome drinks?

  • Concerto says:

    I read the second article and found the answer

  • Paul says:

    Anyone know if the old ‘renew Ambassador membership to keep status’ trick will still work?

  • Dermot says:

    Do you only get room upgrades on Platinum if you book through IHG?

    I once stayed in a Holiday Inn on a BA Holidays trip to Vienna and got nothing at all for my status.

    • Rob says:

      Correct. BA Holidays bought your room for peanuts so there’s no money to fund any benefits.

  • ItsPhil says:

    I have been Spire for a number of years working on the road visiting customers who are in edge of town industrial sites. With around 60 nights a year in HI &. HIX and all expenses and fuel on a pay and reclaim basis on a premium IHG credit card. I can expense breakfast and a drink or two with a meal. Points are spent on weekend breaks with the Mrs so free breakfast would be nice but as we don’t eat or drink at the hotel and the suit upgrades are not for reward nights I don’t see any benefit to the revised program. I can’t justify the additional expense of hotels with lounges for work and on a city break we are out and about not in the hotel so lounge access is not for us. With credit card spend no longer elite qualifying it’s going to be unlikely I will retain Diamond next year. It’s hard to see how this benefits anyone.with my stay profile (lower budget business traveler) who from what I see make up a good proportion of HI & HIX users.

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