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Creation offers to settle with HfP readers over forced IHG One Rewards credit card closures

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IHG One Rewards used to market two excellent UK credit cards. They were arguably the best Visa or Mastercard options on the market. Whilst closed to new applicants some time ago, some readers still hold them today.

IHG had put together a smart range of benefits which both encouraged people to get the card and to use it.

We’ll get to why it all went pear-shaped in a minute, but to recap:

Creation settles with HfP readers over forced IHG One Rewards credit card closures
  • the free IHG One Rewards card was decent. You earned 1 IHG One Rewards points per £1 spent (2 points per £1 for FX spend and at IHG hotels) and you received Gold status in what was at that time IHG Rewards Club. The points counted towards elite status too.
  • the £99 per year Premium card was excellent. As well as earning 2 IHG One Rewards points per £1 (4 points per £1 for FX spend and at IHG hotels) – which also counted towards elite status – you received Platinum status in IHG Rewards Club. When you spent £10,000 per year on the card, you received a voucher for a free night redemption.

Whilst this was not officially part of the benefits package, the cards had two other quirks:

  • you could pay off your monthly bill with another credit card, so you earned points twice
  • the free night vouchers, at least towards the end, were not coded properly and could be redeemed for pretty much anything in the Mr & Mrs Smith collection – some HfP readers stayed in £1,000+ top suites at the Cliveden country house hotel in Berkshire, for example

Then, in late 2021, Creation Financial Services – issuer of the card – shut down a large percentage of accounts with minimal notice. One call centre agent said that 1,800 accounts were closed.

Why did Creation close down card accounts?

It was never made explicitly clear, and of course Creation has the right to withdraw credit from anyone it wants at any time without giving a reason.

It seemed that the common factor was that cardholders had been linking their IHG credit cards to a Curve Card.

Curve Card is a debit card which recharges your transactions to a linked Visa or Mastercard credit card. This meant that you could make transactions which were only possible with a debit card – such as paying HMRC, buying Premium Bonds, putting money into Hargreaves Lansdown etc – and they would be recharged to your IHG credit card.

Importantly, these transactions would earn points and count towards your free night voucher.

Another popular use of Curve was for card spending abroad. Curve did not charge FX fees, so you could make a transaction with Curve in a foreign currency which was recharged to your IHG credit card whilst avoiding the fee.

A third use of Curve was to gain access to Apple Wallet. Creation cards did not work with Apple Wallet but Curve cards did.

(The Curve Card website is here if you want to learn more. I strongly recommend reading the Curve threads in the ‘Other payment cards’ part of our forum first.)

Creation settles with HfP readers over forced IHG One Rewards credit card closures

What happened when accounts were closed?

This is where Creation made a mistake, arguably.

When cards were closed, very little notice was given. Cardholders were not even awarded points for their most recent spending.

More importantly, holders of the Premium credit card did not receive their free night voucher for the year. It was a feature of the IHG credit card that, irrespective of how quickly the cardholder spent £10,000, the voucher did not appear until the end of their membership year.

What happened next?

Many HfP readers raised complaints with the Financial Ombudsman Service, using our forum to share their knowledge. I know that some readers also launched legal action against Creation, with many successful in getting the value of a free night in a five star hotel.

The Financial Ombudsman Service eventually decided to pursue a single settlement with Creation.

This is the email that was received yesterday by people who had lodged a complaint:

Thank you for your patience while we’ve been progressing your complaint. As you’re aware we’ve been having regular discussions with Creation Financial Services Limited (Creation) to ensure an outcome that is fair and reasonable in the circumstances

Throughout these conversations, Creation have provided additional information and it’s been important to take this into account for the individual circumstances of each case. As a result of our conversations with Creation, we’re pleased to let you know that Creation have made an offer to resolve your complaint.

The offer Creation have made will depend on the type of account you held with them. I’ve explained more details below.

The closure of credit card accounts with Creation affected two of their credit card products which provided associated benefits.

  • IHG Rewards Club Premium Credit Card – customers were able to earn IHG Rewards Club points, and Anniversary Night Vouchers for an annual account fee
  • IHG Rewards Club Credit Card – customers were able to earn IHG Rewards Club points

For any customers who held an IHG Rewards Club Premium Credit Card, Creation have offered to

  • refund the unused proportion of the account fee on a pro-rata basis,
  • transfer the outstanding IHG Rewards Club points to their IHG account, and
  • grant Anniversary Night Vouchers for eligible customers.

For any customer who held an IHG Rewards Club Credit Card, Creation have offered to

  • transfer the outstanding IHG Rewards Club points to their IHG account.

I would be grateful if you could let us know whether you accept the offer from Creation in full and final settlement of your complaint by 31 March 2023.

If we don’t hear from you by then, we will assume your acceptance of this offer, and ask Creation to action the settlement and close your complaint.

If you would like to accept Creation Financial Services Limited’s offer, please let me know by 31 March 2023 and I’ll arrange for Creation Financial Services Limited to get in touch with you.

If you are not happy with the offer, please let me know why by 31 March 2023 and we’ll continue to investigate.

Creation settles with HfP readers over forced IHG One Rewards credit card closures

There are two obvious questions here ….

The first is over the annual free night voucher.

It isn’t clear if anyone who had not hit £10,000 of annual spend, but would have done so if their account was not closed, will receive their voucher. If Creation was refunding the entire annual fee for these people it could arguably get away with not awarding a voucher. Since it is only refunding the annual fee pro-rata, I think that anyone who was on course (pro-rata) to earn the free night voucher should receive one.

The second is what happens if you were not part of the FOS action.

The email is vague. It implies that this offer is being made to all cardholders, but I suspect that FOS means that it is being made available to all cardholders who made a complaint.

What should you do if your IHG credit card was closed down and you did not make a complaint to FOS?

You may want to wait to see if Creation gets in touch with you to offer you the same settlement that FOS has agreed for those who raised a complaint.

Your other option is to raise a complaint now with the Financial Ombudsman Service and say that you wish to be opted in to the settlement agreed between Creation and FOS. This was not a ‘group action’ to the extent that there was any sort of cut-off date.

Unless there is a limit to how long you can wait before making a complaint to FOS, I don’t see why any new complaint made now would not have the same outcome.

Conclusion

This has been a rather pitiful process. Whilst Creation has the right to give out credit to whoever it chooses, and to withdraw that credit if it wishes, the refusal to:

  • transfer over outstanding points
  • refund the unused portion of the annual card fee
  • award free night vouchers to people who had already hit the £10,000 spend target

…. was simply illogical and bound to end as it has now ended. A lot of time and effort has been wasted – Creation even sent legal representation to every court case I know about to defend itself, instead of settling.

The sums of money involved are peanuts at the end of the day, especially for a business (BNP Paribas) that has seen its market value drop by €17 billion in the last month.

Whilst readers will now get what they were due, there is nothing in these proposals which adds anything for the 18 months of inconvenience and delay.


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 (242)

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

  • Alex W says:

    Decent outcome, the only thing missing is the 25,000 points I would have got for qualifying for Spire Elite that year.

    • Lady London says:

      put it into your response requesting exact confirmation of figures so that you can accept.

      Your contract (card agreement) with Creation is individual. You may have losses due to Creation’s breaches which others may not.

  • Charlotte says:

    ?? Marriott Creation card? Mine was pulled for same reasons. I wrote to Creation several times but never to Ombudsman Any hope now for it to return? C

    • Nick says:

      I am in the same position.. surely they should resolve in the same way for us if they have been found to be acting incorrectly

  • SammyJ says:

    I’ve still got the free IHG card, but not used it for a couple of years. Is there any benefit to having it? I hear about people paying cards off with other cards, adding money to savings erc etc, but never sure where to start on that front. Is it worth looking into with this old card (that I don’t care about!) or should I just close it and forget about it?

    • _nate says:

      Use the card once in a while as you still keep IHG Gold with it and avoid points expiring. They closed mine for inactivity.

      • Alex Sm says:

        I stopped using mine after they abruptly cut the link with Curve. Only using it for (rare) IHG bookings in the UK. And they downgraded me from Gold to Silver 😭

    • RussellH says:

      If you still want to get some IHG points through a channel other than hotel stays, it is your only option.
      I have no intention of getting rid of my white IHG card, and I have kept my Marriott card forever too, while my partner does most of her spending on her black IHG card.

      • SammyJ says:

        I used to use it a lot, but now we’ve got 2 BA Amex, 2 Avios Barclaycard, 2 Virgin cards and a few months remaining of Chase 1% for anything else, it hasn’t seen light of day for years! I guess as suggested, it’s worth keeping just for that rare UK IHG spending.

        • RussellH says:

          Everyone is different. For us, hotel points are far more useful than airline points. I have a Virgin CC, but it gets very little use. My partner put her Avios Barclaycard in the drawer. I have hardly touched my Amex cards this year, as my priority is spending £10 000 on my Hilton Visa to maintain Gold status.
          And for me, that is a lot.

  • Lula says:

    Surely the offer is less clear than the article states. There’s certainly no guarantee that anyone who had spent 10k but hadn’t reached the card anniversary will be awarded the free night voucher.

    • Rob says:

      The email says they will. The only issue is those who hadn’t hit £10k but would have.

      • Lula says:

        No the email doesn’t say that. It says it will be paid to “eligible customers” but doesn’t define eligible. And attempts to clarify with the FOS have been unsuccessful.

        • TGLoyalty says:

          Come on you know what eligible means

          You were eligible for the voucher having made the spend when your card was closed but you didn’t actually get it.

          There’s no need to be so pedantic

          • Anna says:

            Didn’t a judge decide that a reader was not eligible because the card wasn’t open on the anniversary date? I don’t think it’s as clear cut as you make out.

      • Alex Sm says:

        It’s still a very arbitrary assumption that people would have qualified or were “on path” to qualify. No one knows what could have happened, so there is a pretty strong case against paying anything to people just on the basis of that assumption

  • Dace says:

    Can I still complain? I got a reply back from Creation about 13 months ago but I never took it up with the FOS. I thought I only had six months?

    • Alex Ma says:

      Same here. I just lodged to FoS anyway requesting to be opt-in to the settlement. Never know if I never try.

    • Rui N. says:

      No. You have 6 years to complain with Creation, but after you get their response you only have 6 months to escalate to FOS. Your only option are the courts now.

      • Lady London says:

        Make a new complaint, ensure there is something new in it.

        Wait 8 weeks, whatever the reason if you haven’t received full satisfaction by then you can submit to FOS

        • Alex Ma says:

          Thanks, have lodged a new complaint on outstanding points as it was not covered in the last one.

  • jj says:

    @Rob, at the risk sounding like a pedant, the headline of this article is wrong. IHG has not ‘reached’ a settlement; it has offered a settlement.

    Many readers, myself included, will accept the offer. I don’t really care that my voucher will be delivered late; I’m content simply to receive it.

    Other readers will have different issues and will be free to continue to pursue their case through the FOS. Maybe they paid a substantial cash sum for a hotel that should have been available with a voucher, for example. Or perhaps their health has declined and they can no longer use a voucher.

    This is not a FOS ruling; it’s an offer from Creation. Where individuals’ circumstances mean that Creation’s offer does not adequately compensate them for their losses. If so, they should not accept the proposed settlement and continue down the FOS route.

  • Carl says:

    Still have the black card as my AMEX back-up and trigger the free night voucher every year which makes this card a keeper for me.

    I didn’t know about the option of paying the bill with another credit card but wouldn’t this trigger a balance transfer fee on the card you use to pay the bill?

  • Matarredonda says:

    Carl you are right and I think Creation to warn that doing g this might trigger a fee as the paying card might co sider it a cash transaction.
    Personally have both cards and use as my main reward card having g so far never had any issues.

    • Anna says:

      They do charge fees, it’s just possible to minimise them by paying off the outstanding balance immediately.

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

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