Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Shocking Radisson Rewards devaluation – the value of your points is cut by half

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

Radisson Rewards (the programme for guests based outside North America) has unveiled an astonishing devaluation with no notice.

The value of your points has been slashed overnight, by roughly 50%.

It is the most extreme hotel devaluation we have ever seen – worse than Hilton’s jump from 50,000 points to 90,000 points a few years ago. It is made worse by the fact that no advance warning was given apart from a vague email talking of upcoming changes.

Shocking Radisson Rewards devaluation

We will get into detail of the changes in a minute – and some of them are decent, but sadly now ignored due to the devaluation – but let’s focus on the headline changes to points redemption.

As a reminder, Radisson Rewards split into two schemes earlier this year:

  • Radisson Rewards Americas
  • Radisson Rewards, covering the rest of the world including the UK

Members of Radisson Rewards cannot earn or redeem points for stays in North America, and stays in North America do not count for status. The opposite applies for members of Radisson Rewards Americas.

However, you can status match between schemes and move points in both directions to get around most of these restrictions.

What has happened to the Radisson Rewards chart?

Historically, free nights were based on the reward chart below. The most luxurious five star hotels were capped at 75,000 points per night.

Shocking Radisson Rewards devaluation

Going forward, redemptions are revenue based. 1 point gets you a 0.2p discount on your next booking.

Let’s assume that a 5-star hotel sells for £300 – which, in most big cities, is a huge underestimate at the moment. You will now need 150,000 Radisson Rewards points instead of the 75,000 you needed on Sunday. That’s brutal.

The only upside is that you can use as few as 10 points per booking. My wife, who has 1,204 orphaned Radisson Rewards points, can at least cash them out for £2.46 saving on her next booking:

Shocking Radisson Rewards devaluation

Your existing Radisson Rewards balance has been destroyed

If you were sitting on a large pile of Radisson Rewards points, I feel sorry for you. You have lost at least half of the value overnight, and potentially more.

It’s not clear if Radisson is having a laugh when it says on its website:

Our new program has been created with a completely new approach to loyalty in mind.

Obviously transferring Radisson Rewards points from American Express is no longer the best Membership Rewards redemption as we have often written.

If the transfer rate stays at 1:3 then it is now one of the worst, with 1 American Express point getting you just 0.6p of value if you transfer them.

What happens with Radisson Rewards status?

The existing status levels have been replaced with just three.

What is fascinating is that people on the lowest level earn virtually nothing in the way of points. Take a look here:

Shocking Radisson Rewards devaluation

‘Club’ members earn 8 points per $1. ‘Premium’ members earn 27 points per $1 whilst VIP members get 36 points per $.

(Why the programme uses the $ as its base currency when the scheme has no hotels in the Americas is a different question …..)

With $1 worth 88p, a base member gets (8 x 0.2p = 1.6p / 88p) 1.8% back on their ex-tax spending. This is a joke. Why would you take Radisson Rewards points worth 1.8% when Hotels.com Rewards gives you 10% of the ex-taxes cost of your booking back? It’s madness.

Obviously it gets better for Premium customers. 27 points per $1 is worth around 6% of your pre-tax spending. 36 points per $1 for a VIP member is worth around 8% of your pre-tax spending.

Note that, even for a VIP member, you are better off using Hotels.com Rewards and getting 10% of your pre-tax spending back.

What is happening to American Express Platinum cardholders?

If you have Gold status from Radisson Rewards via American Express Platinum, you have been moved to Premium status.

What are the other status benefits?

The fascinating thing about the new scheme is that you move from ‘Club’ to ‘Premium’ after just five nights or three stays. This unlocks an increase in your points earning of over 3x, albeit it still isn’t hugely generous.

Other ‘Premium’ benefits of note include:

  • a one category upgrade ‘when available’
  • early check-in and late check-out ‘subject to availability’, so not worth much
  • ‘Discount Booster’ (I will return to this)
  • ‘My Favourite Hotel’ – nominate one property to give you exclusive benefits and/or let you guarantee your favourite room number by adding it to your profile

The only major benefits of VIP status (39 nights, 20 stays) are:

  • free breakfast for two people
  • upgrade to best available room

You can see the full list of benefits on the Radisson website here.

Some of these benefits may not actually be terrible but the devil is in the detail.

When a VIP gets an ‘upgrade to best available room’ does that includes suites or not? It isn’t clear.

‘Free breakfast’ has value, but I doubt Radisson has many members who do enough stays to reach VIP level.

What is ‘Discount Booster’?

This is, at least, novel.

Members of Radisson Rewards get a discount when they book, in the same way as member of most other hotel programmes.

If you are Premium or VIP, you can switch on ‘Discount Booster’ in your profile and save more BUT you receive far fewer points. For a Premium member, your earnings drop from 27 points per $1 to 9 points per $1.

If the extra discount is more than 4% of the pre-tax amount, it makes sense to use ‘Discount Booster’. In any event, since there is no real value in sitting on points now, it is worth keeping it on permanently in my view. After all, what is the value in earning points to get a discount on a future stay when you can get a discount on your current stay?

Here’s an example. Radisson Blu Hamburg Airport for Sunday 30th October with full points earning:

Shocking Radisson Rewards devaluation

…. and with ‘Discount Booster’ enabled, earning fewer points:

Shocking Radisson Rewards devaluation

I save €15 in return for giving up around €5 of points. This is a good deal. It is also a genuine discount – I booked this very hotel for my wife over the weekend, albeit at a flexible rate, and I recognise the original price.

But does it really matter?

What I don’t understand is what Radisson Rewards is playing at by cutting the value of your points balance by 50%.

Those people who woke up yesterday morning to find they are now VIP – do you think they are most concerned by the upside of free breakfast (not even relevant on work-paid stays) or concerned about losing potentially hundreds of pounds from the value of their points?

It is jaw-droppingly stupid. How is Radisson Rewards meant to build customer loyalty when they gut the value of their points overnight? At the very least, giving people a few weeks notice to book stays at the old rates would have been the decent thing – and would still have gone down like a lead balloon.

Alternatively, it could have doubled your existing points balance. This would at least have preserved most of the value of existing balances.

Conclusion

The changes to the status scheme are not necessarily terrible. ‘Discount Booster’ seems to offer genuine savings for Premium members if you agree to receive minimal points for your stay, and you now easily use up any small balance you have as a discount on your next stay.

The ‘best available room at check-in’ benefit for VIP guests is also attractive, as is free breakfast. I’d question how many people stay enough at a Radisson to earn this status though.

The ‘one category upgrade if available’ upgrade for Premium members is a surprisingly good benefit for someone who does just three stays per year.

I don’t even have a problem with Radisson moving to dynamic redemptions. I personally think it stinks as a model, and I think removing ‘gamification’ from the scheme is stupid but it is a model that others use.

What I don’t understand is why Radisson is happy to see all this forgotten in the furore over cutting the value of your existing points balance by 50%. Our UK readers may see parallels here in recent political activity …. and I don’t see this ending any better.

PS. This change is definitely a kick in the teeth for American Express Platinum cardholders. Not only is Membership Rewards devalued – because Radisson transfers were the most valuable redemption option – but swapping Gold for ‘Premium’, which only requires three stays, is clearly a devaluation.

PPS. As I mentioned above, you can transfer Radisson Rewards points to a Radisson Rewards Americas account. There has been no change to the Radisson Rewards Americas scheme. If you are planning a trip to North America soon, it makes more sense to use your points for a free night over there (using the standard reward chart) instead of redeeming in Europe for a pathetic amount.


How to earn Radisson Rewards points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Radisson Rewards points and status from UK credit cards (December 2024)

Radisson Rewards does not have a dedicated UK credit card. However, you can earn Radisson Rewards points by converting Membership Rewards points earned from selected UK American Express cards.

These cards earn Membership Rewards points:

Membership Rewards points convert at 1:3 into Radisson Rewards points which is a very attractive rate.  The cards above all earn 1 Membership Rewards point per £1 spent on your card, which converts to 3 Radisson Rewards points.

Even better, holders of The Platinum Card receive free Radisson Rewards Premium status for as long as they hold the card.  It also comes with Hilton Honors Gold, Marriott Bonvoy Gold and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here. You can apply here.

Got a small business?

You can get free top-tier Radisson Rewards VIP status with the new Capital on Tap Pro Visa credit card for small business. Clck here to apply.

Capital on Tap Pro Visa

10,500 points (=10,500 Avios) plus good benefits Read our full review

(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.)

Comments (154)

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

  • BJ says:

    Price to pay for ignoring first rule of the loyalty game… 1. Earn, burn, avoid hoarding.

    • Benilyn says:

      Good reminder actually!

    • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

      Obviously I am wearing my hindsight glasses here but rule 2 should be: if you do have a balance and you get an email about scheme ‘enhancements’ coming soon then make some (refundable) opportunistic future bookings ASAP … at least that way if it is a devaluation you’ll have some old-rate value locked in and if it’s not then you can cancel and you’re back to your starting point.

      • meta says:

        But you’ll not always get an email. Marriott devalued AA&Delta transfers without a warning. So earn and burn as fast as you can.

  • Hooch says:

    Is it possible to transfer RR balance to RRA and then arbitrage to a better redemption (eg to AMEX MR ?)

    • Rob says:

      No, not if you want to move out of Radisson. The only arbitrage is booking a North American hotel for fewer points than a similar European one requires.

  • Blair Waldorf Salad says:

    This is frustrating but the dog whistle to signal it happened a few weeks back. We all know what upcoming enhancements means. I liquidated my balance for a stay where Radisson Blu is genuinely the best and most convenient option.

  • Meyers says:

    Thank God I used up my total balance on a (BIG) booking for next year before this happened!
    I only hope they honour it.
    On top of all of this, they won’t even let you check the points required for a room if you don’t have the points to cover it!!!
    How churlish is that?!?!
    Way to go Radisson! My balance will firmly remain at 8 points thank you.

    • Rob says:

      10 points is the minimum for a discount!

      Not sure what you mean about ‘not showing points needed’. You pick any cash room and then, on the payment page, you can redeem as many points as you want to mix and match cash and points.

  • Niall says:

    Have hotel chains decided that loyalty isn’t worth it?

    I know some hotels get annoyed about the benefits they have to provide to loyalty scheme members. And the rates the actual hotels receive from points bookings can be super low.

    Even forgetting how much they’ve annoyed current rewards members, surely this poor dynamic pricing rate isn’t something that would encourage serious hotel users to stay with them(?)

    I thought the same about Meliá after their big devaluation and seemingly reduced levels of standard rate redemptions. It’s as if they’ve worked out that they are wiser to target more irregular guests than to build properly loyalty.

    • memesweeper says:

      IHG have improved their offering this year, so at least one chain is trying to be competitive in the loyalty space.

      • Rob says:

        IHG is following Marriott. The loyalty scheme IS the brand, the thing that hangs it all together. If that isn’t strong, people won’t use you beyond their usual core brands / hotels.

        If you have IHG Diamond from a pile of luxury stays but you need an airport hotel one night and the options are a HIX or a Hampton, the Diamond takes the HIX. This is what the scheme drives.

  • vol says:

    Just wondering, would Amex have known about this change, do you think? Or did Radisson blindside them with this?

  • AnotherUser says:

    That is shocking, especially as the Radisson app was playing up at least part of last week and not letting points bookings go through. I managed to get one booking through on the phone but it took 20mins.

    This big a devaluation without proper notice seems shoddy

    • Kev says:

      The app is still not working. Whenever I try to book a room I get an error message!

      EVERYONE needs to post/tweet, exactly how you feel about these new changes. #RadissonRewards

  • Vit says:

    Thanks Rob. I noticed this last night.

    I only have a mere 15k point but have upcoming 10 nights stay in Norway next month and was looking forward to a good use of point in Bangkok later this year / early next year topping of with MRs (I am “earn and burn” as BJ suggested 🙂 ) but looking at this I may need to change the strategy now. Wonder if I should stick with this programme for a bit and burn it with a trip to Canada later next year or just go with a local Nordic scheme now.

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

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.