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Some insights into a big hotel loyalty programme from MeliaRewards

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MeliaRewards gave an interesting presentation at the recent ‘Loyalty & Awards’ conference in Madrid about how the programme is set up and how its members are split between tiers. I thought you might find it interesting.

I wasn’t at the conference due a clash with another event. Melia agreed that their slides could be made publicly available (many speakers did not) and you can find them on the organiser’s website. We are not sharing anything here which was meant to remain confidential.

If you’re not familiar with Melia, it is a Spanish-based hotel group with nine core brands. These run from the luxurious ME by Melia brand (with a London flagship on Strand) through to Sol by Melia which is very much a ‘bucket and spade’ holiday brand.

The group claims to be:

  • the largest leisure hotel group in the world
  • the biggest hotel company in Spain
  • the third biggest hotel company in Europe
  • the 20th biggest hotel company globally

Here are a few interesting facts about how hotel room sales have changed:

  • 2009 – only 9% of rooms were booked direct, now it is 34%
  • 2009 – only 8% of rooms were booked by Online Travel Agents (Expedia etc), now it is 21%
  • 2009 – 51% of rooms were sold by tour operators, this is now down to 24% (it was down to 21% but business travel is recovering more slowly than tour operator-driven leisure travel)

The other 20% is made up of conference and events bookings and bookings made via Melia’s corporate booking tools.

Some of the shift, of course, is from Melia pushing into the business sector more. We’ve seen brands such as INNSIDE springing up in UK cities – here is our recent review of INNSiDE Newcastle, image below.

innside newcastle

How big is MeliaRewards?

Let’s take a look at MeliaRewards. The scheme has 14.4 million members worldwide, of which 11% are in the UK.

You need to be slightly suspicious these days about membership numbers when looking at hotel programmes. After all, when a website offers you a discount on a one-off room booking for signing up, you will do it. It doesn’t say much about your future loyalty.

The 14.4 million members are split as follows:

  • 13.5 million – no status
  • 740,000 – Silver status
  • 190,000 – Gold status
  • 37,000 – Platinum status

Looked at as a ratio of the three elite tiers, for every one Platinum member there are five Gold members and 20 Silver members.

Melia has seen a strong increase in elite members. Since 2019, Platinum members are up 65%, Gold members up 48% and Silver members up 30%.

Remember that Gold is offered free to American Express Platinum cardholders in many countries, including the UK, which will skew that number higher than it would otherwise be.

Here are the average number of annual bookings per tier:

  • No status – 1.2 stays per year
  • Silver status – 2.0 stays per year
  • Gold status – 4.3 stays per year
  • Platinum status – 8.2 stays per year

These numbers obviously look low. After all, in theory you need 15 stays / 30 nights to obtain Gold and 30 stays / 50 nights for Platinum. The low average is presumably down to:

  • the pandemic, with status extensions given to people who are still not doing stays
  • people who earned status last year but are not staying this year and won’t retain it (I am currently Accor Diamond but have managed just one stay this year)
  • the number of comped Gold members via American Express Platinum, which includes many HfP readers, and comped Platinum members via American Express Centurion
  • the comments below suggest that Gold and Platinum status can also be obtained via co-brand credit cards in Spain

What you can tell from the numbers here is that – whilst the ‘big six’ hotel groups usually claim that over 50% of nights stayed are from programme members (albeit most with no status) – the loyalty scheme is not such a huge driver for Melia. Whilst 84% of direct bookings are from MeliaRewards members, you would expect this given the incentives and prompting offered online to sign up.

The roughly 15 million nights done by ‘no status’ members exceed, by a factor of six, the combined nights done by Silver, Gold and Platinum members. This is before you factor in the nights done by people who are not members of the programme at all.


How to get MeliaRewards Gold status from American Express

How to get MeliaRewards Gold status from American Express (April 2024)

Do you know that holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE MeliaRewards Gold status for as long as they hold the card?  It also comes with Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Hilton Honors Gold and Radisson Rewards Premium status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

You can discover the benefits of MeliaRewards Gold status on the Melia website here. It includes three vouchers per year worth 20% off any booking.

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and a huge range of valuable benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Small business owners may want to consider American Express Business Platinum instead:

American Express Business Platinum

40,000 points sign-up bonus and an annual £200 Amex Travel credit 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 (49)

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

  • Peter says:

    Wish theirs website was working correctly. I’ve been trying to buy some points since August for next year redemption with no success! Error 404 page not found. Luckily I googled an email address and they advised me to make a bank trasfer to them(!) which I did and I got my points added manually. I’m not sure how many other members did same but how Melia can afford lost revenue for selling points I don’t know.

    • astra19 says:

      Indeed. For months I haven’t been able to do a points + cash booking on their website. Only works on the app.
      Their website makes BA’s IT look good.

  • Olly says:

    How are the remaining 20% of rooms booked?

    • Wotsit says:

      Yes, I spotted this gap as well. My only thought is that it could be walk-ins?

    • HAM76 says:

      I would think the difference is traditional travel agencies for leisure and business travel. Then there is the whole conference business. I don‘t know if that is included in the direct booking numbers.

  • James Wyatt says:

    My gold status via Amex Plat offers genuinely good value. I stay at InnSide Newcastle several times a year using 20% off vouchers. Free breakfast – pay for Mrs. Savings are about £200 a year. Worth having!

  • bungalow says:

    I have been a Gold member with Meliá courtesy of Amex Plat for about 8 years, and have found that recognition of my status at hotels varies from minimal to absolute zero. The only perk worthy of mention is the 3×20% off vouchers if paying cash!
    In my 2 most recent stays at Meliá Pa!ma Marina this year my status wasn’t mentioned at all, check in (which I had already done in the app), had to be done in its entirety once again at the front desk, despite the promise of priority check in at their (poor) “Level” lounge, which after trailing all my luggage upstairs to was unattended and you need a room key to get in! I only gave the hotel a second chance because my first visit was at the tail end of the pandemic and I assumed (wrongly) that service and recognition would have improved.
    With Gold being their second highest tier one would expect someone would at least mention it, or at the very least lift their head to say hello, but no, you actually feel as though you are troubling them when you ask a simple question, it all appears a chore – at Meliá Palma Marina it seems if you are not Spanish they don’t want to know. I actually felt quite unwelcome, on both occasions!
    To be fair the Meliá scheme promises little, even for Gold, but in reality delivers much less as an experience. I feel I have given it a fair chance, and whilst I will say that their hotels in mainland Spain do fare a little better, I won’t be back, and if I could find a reasonable alternate use for the circa 150,000 points I have left I would gladly cash in.

    • lumma says:

      Why do they need to mention your status when checking in? Personally I hate the scripted IHG “thank you for being a platinum member of IHG rewards” unless it’s followed by “we’ve upgraded you to _________” or similar.

  • Gtellez says:

    Last year (or maybe in 2020?) Amex Platinum in Spain offered Melia Platinum and 30K points for free (including supplementary cards, so we got 60k). It was supposed to last 1 year, but at least my wife account and mine are still platinum (having only stayed 1 night in the entire year and not having the platinum card in Spain anymore). Probably many accounts are like that… I don’t think that many people do more than 50 nights a year in Melia Hotels.

  • ADR says:

    Agreeing with James here. Last month we booked a “Level” junior suite at the Melia Berlin. After checking in and on opening our room door, another couple were inside. To my considerable relief they were simply unpacking. Between us we worked out that we had checked in seconds apart. Within minutes, we were given a new suite. All I can say was that it was on the top floor and only surpassed by the Presidential Suite (which I had a walk around as there was a connecting door and no one had locked it. That was subsequently resolved when a German family walked through said connecting door around midnight a few days later when thankfully we were just enjoying a small nightcap. As far as I could see, he was not the President of Germany but nonetheless a very charming fellow and a lovely family. Once again, in a few minutes the matter was resolved by an incredibly apologetic Duty Manager) So I like Melia. Two other points as a Gold Member (“courtesy” of Amex) 1. You get an upgrade option for your birthday which to date, has always worked 2. They left a bottle of fizz in the room on my actual birthday. I appreciate this may simply be down to ruthless German efficiency but it made my weekend. Bungalow, you can share your Melia points, move them to BA/Avios and many other (albeit not great value) options. That said, if you are really not going back to Melia, I am still happy to receive any belated birthday presents. 🙂

    • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

      So Melia’s IT and staff proved to be unable to even perform the most basic of hotel functions successfully! I am not sure that I would have been as happy as you were, particularly considering the security implications in both cases…

      • Peter K says:

        I’m with Guernsey GT here. I’ve been walked in on before in a hotel and it ruined the stay. I couldn’t settle, convinced that it would happen again in the middle of the night/some awkward moment. The fact it happened twice to the same person (you) at the Melia Berlin shows a stunning lack of attention to basic tasks!

      • ADR says:

        IT wise, it felt no more different and far less stressful than having to tap the BA App telling me on my phone that they couldn’t access my flight bookings or that I had no bookings at all and then lo and behold… I do though take your point about security and recognise that the other guests were pleasant normal people and, as far as I could see, without firearms, particularly as we shared breakfast with them in the very nice Melia “Level” lounge. I am probably a bit easy going and don’t expect rose petals thrown at my feet as I enture the priority check-in area but I was genuinely impressed how these issues were dealt with so quickly. Nowhere is perfect. That was the basic point, they sorted problems out and did so instantly, with apologies and recognition.

        • Bagoly says:

          And that’s quite surprising for Germany, although Berlin is much better than the rest of the country.
          Mistakes/delays do happen; it’s how a hotel (or airline or other service provider) then acts which is how I judge them.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      So you knew the connecting door wasn’t locked for two days and didn’t tell anyone or worry someone might walk in like you did LOL

      • ADR says:

        We did. No big deal as we knew no one was in there. Slightly bigger things on the planet to worry about. LOL indeed.

  • MT says:

    Amex Centurion gives Melia Platinum

  • Claire says:

    The 20% discount with gold via amex is a great perk. We have a booking for melia bali for next August. 2 swim up interconnecting rooms all inclusive for $4601 dollars for 10 nights. Price has shot up since I booked not sure if it was a glitch. Only downside is its dollars so have to hope for a bit more stability of the pound as can’t seem to pay up front. I’m also considering melia hotel near cancun for the following year.

    • Mark says:

      Which Mexico one? We did Paradisus in play del carmen and hated it.

      • Claire says:

        We have looked at that one and cozumel. Can I ask what the problems you had with it. Even with the 20% off it’s still not cheap.

        • Mark says:

          If you email me Markdhayes at hotmail dot com I can send you over my thoughts. Too much to type here

    • jjoohhnn says:

      You can buy dollars up front now though and pay in cash!

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

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