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How I saved 71% on my Oslo hotel with Choice Privileges points

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I was in Norway last week, seeing how Norse Atlantic’s Premium cabin performed as a short-haul seat on the Gatwick to Oslo route. (‘Very well’ is the answer as my Norse Atlantic review here shows.)

I needed somewhere to stay of course. Oslo is not exactly a bargain when it comes to hotel pricing, or indeed anything at all – even a coffee and piece of cake in Starbucks takes you over £10. It also has few branded hotels apart from Radisson – nothing from Hilton, IHG, Marriott or Hyatt.

There is one secret for getting great deals on hotels in Scandinavia – the US hotel scheme Choice Privileges.

How I saved 71% on my Oslo hotel with Choice Privileges points

Choice Privileges is virtually unknown in the UK. We have literally never devoted a single article to it out of the 14,000+ on the site.

This is because it comprises of, primarily, low- to mid-market US-centric brands. These include Econo Lodge, Rodeway Inn, Woodspring Suites, Choice, Clarion, Cambria, Sleep Inn and Mainstay Suites.

The only reason you might come across it is due to Ascend Hotel Collection, a handful of higher end indpendent hotels. It includes, in the UK, Cedar Court in Harrogate.

And then there is Nordic Choice ….

You’ve probably never heard of Nordic Choice either.

However, Nordic Choice has over 200 hotels in Scandinavia, Finland and the Baltics and over 16,500 employees. It is privately owned and operates as a franchise of Choice International.

This means that you will see a bunch of Clarion, Quality and Comfort branded hotels across Scandinavia. More interesting, however, are the luxury boutique hotels it runs.

According to a Wikipedia list, it includes many of the top hotels in the region:

  • Sweden: Hotel At Six, Hobo, Nordic Light Hotel, Hotel C Stockholm, Aronsborg Konferenshotellet, Selma Spa+, Copperhill Mountain Lodge, Strömstad Spa, Stenungsbaden Yacht Club, Avalon Hotel, Vox Hotel, Ice Hotel Jukkasjärvi and Frösö Park
  • Norway: The Thief, Hotel Christiania Teater, Farris Bad, Hotel Oleana, Hotel No13, Hotel Brosundet, Norefjell Ski & Spa, Son Spa, Funken Lodge and Amerikalinjen
  • Denmark: Hotel Skt. Petri and Villa Copenhagen
  • Finland: Hotel Kämp, Hotel St. George, Klaus K Hotel, Hotel Haven, Hotel Fabian, Hotel Lilla Roberts, GLO Hotel Kluuvi, GLO Hotel Art, GLO Hotel Airport, GLO Hotel Sello and Hotel F6

There are some exceptionally high quality hotels on this list. The photo below is Hotel Kämp in Helsinki, which used to be part of Marriott’s The Luxury Collection.

Hotel Kamp Helsinki Choice Privileges points

Booking Nordic Choice hotels with Choice Privileges points

Here are the key things you need to know about using Choice Privileges points to book hotels in Scandinavia:

  • Whilst you cannot earn Choice Privileges points at Nordic Choice hotels (it has its own programme), you can redeem them
  • you cannot book more than 100 days before your stay (an odd rule – no other hotel loyalty scheme has such a restriction)
  • you can often buy Choice Privileges points very cheaply
  • Nordic Choice hotels have a fixed year-round redemption cost irrespective of the cash rate that night

The combination of #3 and #4 above means that there are some exceptional deals to be had. The reason these deals continue to exist is that, let’s be honest, there are very few regular guests at your average US Rodeway Inn who are interested in redeeming their points at 5-star Scandinavian boutique hotels.

My redemption at ‘The Thief’ in Oslo

Until a few weeks ago I knew literally nothing about Choice Privileges points apart from the fact that they were meant to be great for Scandinavian redemptions.

One good thing about Choice Privileges is that the website is easy to navigate. You can search for points availability even if you have a zero balance.

It is unlikely that you will ever earn any Choice Privileges points from a hotel stay if you are UK based. You can buy them, however.

A few weeks ago, in a special annual promotion, I picked up 42,000 points for $220 (£184).

This allowed me to book two nights at ‘The Thief’, a modern boutique hotel that is generally regarded as the best hotel in Oslo, for 40,000 Choice Privileges points in total.

The Thief Oslo Choice Privileges points

The cash cost for my dates was NOK 3,690 per night (£320).

This means that I got £640-worth of hotel rooms for £184.

This is probably the highest percentage discount (71%) that I have ever got by buying points, although 60%-65% discounts are common if you are on the ball. This article looks at how I saved 62% at Hilton’s Waldorf Astoria Dubai The Palm by buying points, for example.

There is currently a 25% discount running

I bought my points during a very aggressive promotion.

The standard page for buying Choice Privileges points is here. The current offer, which runs to 28th August, is a 25% discount.

To buy 40,000 points, which was enough for two nights at ‘The Thief’, would cost $309 (£260). This is more than the £184 I paid but is still a great deal at the right property.

You’d be paying £260 for two nights at ‘The Thief’, for example, compared to the cash rate of £640 last week. That’s a 60% saving.

Conclusion

I am not claiming to be an expert on the Choice Privileges programme. I signed up under a month ago, bought some points and redeemed them. That’s the extent of my involvement!

If you are planning a Scandinavian trip, however, it is worth investigating.

Don’t forget that you can’t book reward nights more than 100 days before arrival. To avoid any devaluation risk, do not buy Choice Privileges points until you have a trip lined up and are inside the 100 day booking window.

The Choice Privileges website is here and the ‘buy points’ page is here.

A brief review of ‘The Thief’ will follow tomorrow.

PS. Before I arrived at ‘The Thief’, I got an email showing my room rate as NOK 675 (£58) which was presumably what Choice Privileges paid the hotel. This means that – even though Choice sold me my points at a massive discount – it made a tidy profit from me. I paid £184 for 42,000 points and Choice paid out £116 to the hotel when I redeemed them, pocketing £68 for itself.


Hotel offers update – April 2024:

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from the major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Want to buy hotel points?

  • Hilton Honors is offering a 100% bonus when you buy points by 14th May 2024. Click here.

Comments (58)

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

  • Jeremy I says:

    I absolutely love this sort of content and story on the blog, Rob. Thank you so much! Jeremy

  • toptipflyer says:

    Just got back from a few days staying at the St George in Helsinki with Marriott points. Are they really on both schemes?

    Had a quick look on the Choice website, nothing on the there!

    • Rob says:

      Potentially not – may be owned by Nordic Choice but run under a Marriott brand. Millennium Hotels runs some Hilton hotels for example.

    • GUWonder says:

      They are in the Nordic Choice Club scheme and the Marriott scheme. Points from both programs can be used for redemptions at St George.

      US/UK Choice points, however, aren’t useful for booking this property as far as I know.

  • Felim meade says:

    I saw this article and joined. I then sent my Marriott Ambassador proof to them and within 2 hours was offered top tier status match with Choice hotel. Looking forward to trying out a few of the hotels next week. Thanks for the heads up… PS stayed in Thief in oslo last month and it’s a fabulous hotel

    • GUWonder says:

      You sought a status match from Nordic Choice Club?

      If you sought a status march from a non-Nordic Choice program, the status doesn’t amount to anything at Nordic Choice/Hotels hotels.

  • Nick says:

    Got an upcoming trip to Oslo, sadly I can’t find the thief as an option to redeem for points under the choice hotels/priviledges website?

    • Nick says:

      My bad, it’s just sold out on points on the dates I’m there

      • Rob says:

        Yes, sold out hotels get pushed to the bottom of the search results page.

        • Nick says:

          Thanks for the great article btw, so I’m either looking at the Clarion Hotel Oslo vs the Hub, for the same 16000 points at the Hub you can get the deluxe room here or standard room, if only IHG would do the same at their properties!

          • DanielD says:

            I stayed at the Clarion Hotel Oslo in early July – if I remember rightly, when booking and considering options, I think I preferred the Hub, but it was unavailable. Clarion Hotel Oslo was still pretty good though.

  • Jcric says:

    I’m struggling to find the Ice hotel on the choice privileges website, anyone else managed to? Also, any particular recommendations for hotels that will sleep 4 in a room (2 adults 2 kids) under this offer?

    • Rob says:

      This is Scandinavia …. you’re lucky to find base level rooms which can take 2 adults easily.

      I was once give a 12 sq m room at the best hotel in Stockholm ….

      It is possible the Ice Hotel is not there – I’m not sure if all Nordic Choice hotels go through Choice Privileges.

  • Michael Jennings says:

    I will just repeat that this is one of the more useful articles on this site in a while. Travelling to Scandinavia is a little difficult because cash prices are expensive, and hotel wise the usual options aren’t there and you are mostly restricted to Radisson, Scandic, and Choice. None of these chains are bad, but they are different.

  • GUWonder says:

    I’m a massive user of US Choice Privilege points to book Nordic Choice/Hotels properties.

    And the hotels in Scandinavia honor my Nordic Choice Platinum status benefits on these Choice Privilege stays too.

  • Concerto says:

    It’s good to have a couple of options in Copenhagen too. The problem with Scandinavia is that the usual chains like IHG are largely absent although Best Western has a certain presence.
    Years ago, when I was there a lot, I found the Scandic hotel chain really good.

    • GUWonder says:

      Best Western is very prevalent in Sweden. I would say in Sweden, BW is in the league of Nordic Choice, Scandic and Radisson/Park Inn in having lots of properties.

      Too bad the BW program is so much worse for point values in the area than it used to be. And so my go to in Sweden and for Copenhagen is Choice/Nordic Choice, Hyatt and even Marriott.

      Sort of miss the times when Scandic and Hilton were still tied together.

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