Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Some insights into a big hotel loyalty programme from MeliaRewards

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

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.

  • aseftel says:

    The low average number of stays may well also be due to their leisure focus. I would imagine the average resort stay is around a week.

  • Dimitri says:

    In Spain one can get Melia Platinum status when spending 10k euros in a year on their co-branded Amex Gold card. 5k spend gives a Gold status.

  • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

    Melia were one of the hotel chains that acted less than honourably in the pandemic, at least in the first year: I had booked 3 rooms for Mrs GT & her sisters in one of their Spanish hotels. It was meant to be a cheap short break so we agreed to go the pre-paid, non-refundable rate… of course, you can guess the rest. Their country and indeed the hotel itself was closed to visitors by government decree but would they refund me – would they heck! I spent a very frustrating (literally and in terms of contract law) time trying to explain to them that, while the booking had been non-refundable, as it was impossible for them to offer the service booked they should still refund me. In the end they started ignoring my messages! Thank heavens for the Amex charge back route, which sorted out a return of our funds in short order. There were a lot of tales of woe like this online at the time – I plan on never darkening their doors again and told them so in my final communication – not that it seems to even have registered with them, as i got no response, but at least it made me feel better!!

  • Nick says:

    Given the (relatively) low number of Golds, it’s even more frustrating that recognition of any kind is non-existent. I get more elite benefits at IHG despite no status and a points balance of 0 than I ever do at Melia. Add that to consistently terrible service and I actively go out of my way to avoid them. I do wonder if they have a separate (internal) tier for ‘Amex Gold’ or whether it’s consistently bad for everyone.

  • dan_a_man says:

    Any Melia Platinum members here who can give an insight on status recognition? I have often made the experience that hotels or timings of the year (e.g. recently Roomers Munich for Octoberfest we even got upgraded even though sold out) where there is a lower rate of HH Diamond or MB Platinum, my status was recognised much better. Surely with most people leisure travelers, top status holders should be put on pedestal?!

    • Deckard says:

      Just checked in to the Melia Innside NYC as a plat. The US aren’t good. Previously I’ve had to explain late checkout rules to them and the time before was dire. This trip was BAH so recognition not expected.

    • Niall says:

      I’m general highly mixed and recently upgrades have recently become worse. It seems the company is allowing hotels to limit the amount it upgrades in the app more (or perhaps adding more sub classes of rooms). On a recent stay in Gran Melia Palacio de Isora I received no upgrade despite rooms being available for sale in two classes immediately above my room and which I had been upgraded to before. They wouldn’t even budget when confronted with this at check in. On the other hand, in previous stays I have always received some
      Upgrade even if minor. ME dubai I think was the hotel which gave the best.

      You are probably best to check in the forum about specific hotels for stays as status recognition varies a lot more than it should.

  • Niall says:

    I think we shouldn’t mix up the experience at individual Meliá hotels and from the company. The service at different Meliá hotels is massively inconsistent. Many of the hotels have excellent service (Eg Palacio de los Duques), many don’t (eg Palacio de Isora).

    I am Meliá platinum from actual stays and have to say that almost everything at the company level is worst in class awful. Some examples:

    – As someone else mentioned they were one of (or maybe the) worst hotel chain for COVID policy. I had to travel via a third country to be able to go to the Dominican Republic in order not to lose an expensive booking.

    – Their IT is shocking. Issues last years. The app that they push heavily is super slow and information is very frequently out of date. I have heard from hotel staff that it is very difficult and slow it is for the hotel to update the information with the company. Additionally every hotel check in agent appears to be able to change the data stored on your MeliáRewards account. My passport information in their is always a mess for this reason and once included someone else’s data.

    – Nobody on their staff who can be contacted knows about MeliaRewards. I have been told inaccurate things more often than accurate! To contact them by email you have to go to your account and go to file a claim for missing points where you can find somewhere to contact them.

    – They made a massive devaluation earlier this year without notifying or hinting at it to anyone. The devaluation made points bookings go from an excellent option with often amazing value to something which is now incredibly rarely worth it. Along with the devaluation it seems that also the stock of rooms available for standard (now high) redemption rates has reduced. Finally with the devaluation, the standard redemption rates for hotels now varies a lot more than previously. Making an already complex system ridiculously complicated.

    – On one memorable Melia booking in Punta Cana I noticed in reviews a couple of days before my arrival that the hotel was actually closed. Melia were still selling rooms and then directing people to their other hotel nearby on arrival. All staff were using the line ‘congratulations you have been upgraded to our other resort’. For me, the new resort didnt even have the same(/as good) room type. It was impossible to contact the hotels and the general Melia numbers (mainly sales) were completely unable to help. They kept telling me my hotel was open.

    • Niall says:

      I realise these are only some of the examples.

      Melia I expect have the worst reputation amongst their genuine frequent guests of any hotel chain.

      My big question recently is if hotels have decided that frequent questions are not worth their efforts. Devaluations (by not just Melia) and reduced benefits suggest so. For Melia in particular, their 20% off 3 stays a year mean the really frequent guests are likely to have paid more than those with free gold from a card.

  • Concerto says:

    The Mélia website is an exercise in pure excrement. Even worse than that of Iberia or the Lufthansa Group. If you need to use it, try and find the address for the old Mélia site, which is still working properly (have a look at Flyertalk).

    • AndreasJ says:

      www1. etc etc I always use the old site, which is hardly perfect but it does the basics as expected. The new one is quite bad and can’t even handle the basics many times.

  • gulz says:

    As a Melia Gold (via Amex platinum) member, we stayed at Innside during the Berlin marathon weekend last month. It was a paid stay and was meant to have included a complementary welcome drink. When we (me + 2 kids) did check-in, there was no recognition of status, no drinks. Makes me wonder why should I choose Melia ever again when they cannot keep up their end of the conrtact. I’ve had other hotels go out of their way when I check in with kid(s) – the least of is being kind with the kids and not ignoring their presence at checkin desk.
    Also, Melia points are probably the worst redemption of any kind out there. Never did a redemption stay so far but its always such poor value that I end up at a different hotel chain.

    • Concerto says:

      Mélia Berlin really isn’t great. I’ve been there once and I will never go again.

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.