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What is the best way to spend your Nectar points? Is Avios the sensible option?

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What is the best way to spend Nectar points?

It is now three years since Avios and Nectar unveiled their partnership. The lustre has faded somewhat since then due to two sharp devaluations, neither of which members were pro-actively told about in advance.

However, what is true is that Avios is still the most valuable Nectar redemption for most HfP readers, assuming you value an Avios at around 1p.

400 Nectar points gets you 250 Avios, which implies a value per Nectar point of 0.625p if you value an Avios at 1p.

What is the best way to spend your Nectar points?

There is no longer any value in moving Avios to Nectar, since the value of 1 Avios has been cut from 0.8p of Nectar points to 0.5p over the last three years. The number of ways of spending Nectar points has also been cut, with eBay the biggest departure. Brakes, Marks & Spencer and Viking are amongst other losses although Viking remains an ‘earn’ partner.

What is a Nectar point worth?

Let’s start with valuation, because you need to know this to put the later sections in context.

A Nectar point is worth 0.5p, in virtually all cases. Avios is one exception, getting you 0.625p if you believe that 1 Avios = 1p.

What the fixed 0.5p rate means is that – apart from Avios and two other niche exceptions – no Nectar redemption is ‘better’ than any other. Whilst it is true that you can turn 1,000 Nectar points into a £5 Eurostar voucher, there is no particular benefit to doing that if you could get an identical £5 discount in Sainsbury’s simply by scanning your card at the till.

Where can I spend Nectar points?

There is a dedicated page for each of these offers at nectar.com where you can find out more. Use the search box on the home page.

How to spend Nectar points at Sainsbury’s / Habitat / Tu

How to spend Nectar points at Sainsbury’s / Habitat / Tu

Sainsbury’s, if you are not aware, now owns the Nectar scheme. It took full control six years ago as we covered here. This made sense as Sainsbury’s (which also owns Argos, Habitat and Tu) had become by far the biggest partner.

The spend rate in Sainsbury’s is £2.50 per 500 Nectar points.

Points can be spent online or in-store.

How to spend Nectar points at Argos

How to spend Nectar points at Argos

The spend rate in Argos is £2.50 per 500 Nectar points.

There is a limit of 100,000 Nectar points (£500) per transaction.

Feedback from readers is that if articles are refunded, you receive the full refund in cash.

You can learn more on the Argos website.

How to spend Nectar points at Vue Cinemas

How to spend Nectar points at Vue Cinemas

Redemptions at Vue are currently suspended but the Nectar website implies that this is not a permanent move. I suggest that this is untrue, as the message has been there for around three years.

How to spend Nectar points at eBay

How to spend Nectar points at eBay

You can turn your Nectar points into eBay vouchers at the rate of £2.50 per 500 Nectar points.

However, eBay is leaving Nectar on 31st August. It will not be possible to earn or spend Nectar points via eBay from 1st September 2024 although any eBay vouchers redeemed before then will remain valid.

You can find out more in this HfP article.

How to spend Nectar points at Caffe Nero

How to spend Nectar points at Caffe Nero

Caffe Nero is a Nectar redemption partner which is NOT an earn partner.

It is also the best value redemption partner, even better than redeeming for Avios, in many cases.

400 Nectar points will get you a voucher (in the form of a QR code, saved in the Nectar app, to be scanned in-store) for ANY hot or iced drink, of any size.

If you look at the price list on this website, you will see that it virtually impossible to pay less than £3.60 for a drink, and qualifying drinks can cost over £5.

This means that you are certain to get more than 0.5p per Nectar point and that any drink costing more than (400 points x 0.625p) £2.50 is better value than redeeming for Avios, if you value an Avios at 1p.

Caffe Nero is currently the best way of maximising the value of your Nectar points.

How to spend Nectar points at Eurostar

How to spend Nectar points at Eurostar

Eurostar is another ‘redeem only’ partner.

The spend rate at Eurostar is £2.50 per 500 Nectar points.

There is a 2,000 point minimum, with vouchers only available for £10, £25, £50 and £100.

Multiple vouchers can be used in one transaction if booking a train-only ticket on the Eurostar website, but only one voucher per transaction can be used if booking a ‘train and hotel’ package.

How to spend Nectar points at Esso

How to spend Nectar points at Esso

Esso is a slightly confusing one. At participating Esso garages (ie ones without a Tesco Express shop) you can redeem 300 Nectar points for a discount of 5p per litre on your purchase.

As 300 points is usually worth £1.50, the breakeven point is 30 litres. Fill up by more than that and you are getting more than 0.5p per point.

You are capped at 60 litres per transaction for a maximum saving of £3.

That said …. if your tank can take 60 litres at once, you will get 1p per Nectar point by redeeming 300 points for a 5p/litre discount.

How to spend Nectar points at Nectar Hotels

How to spend Nectar points at Nectar Hotels

You can redeem Nectar points via the Nectar Hotels room booking service.

The rate is what you would expect – 0.5p per Nectar point. However, you need to remember that Nectar Hotels bookings are ‘third party’ and so won’t earn any hotel loyalty points. You will also not receive any status benefits you may be due.

Another catch is that, if you’d paid cash at Nectar hotels, you would have earned a lot of Nectar points back. It is best to redeem Nectar points at a partner which doesn’t earn Nectar points, because you are not losing out on the ‘earn’ element.

We reviewed Nectar Hotels in detail here.

How to spend Nectar points on movie rentals via Sky Store

Film rentals via Sky Store are still listed on the Nectar ‘spend partners’ page, but all information has been removed from the dedicated Sky partner page.

I suspect that this has now been removed as a ‘spend’ option. You can continue to earn Nectar points with selected ‘new customer’ Sky offers.

How to spend Nectar points at Dulux Decorator Centre

You can redeem points for Dulux Decorator Centre vouchers at the rate of 4,000 Nectar points for a £20 voucher.

Vouchers must be ordered by telephone from Nectar and will be posted to you, for use in-store. They are not valid online.

Conclusion

It isn’t tricky to get your head around the options for spending Nectar points.

Everything gets you 0.5p per Nectar point with the exception of:

  • Avios, where you get 0.625p per Nectar point if you believe that an Avios is worth 1p
  • Caffe Nero drink vouchers, which can be worth over 1p per Nectar point if you buy the priciest drinks – and will definitely beat 0.5p per point because there are no drinks so cheap that your voucher would get you so little
  • Esso fuel discounts, but only if you are doing a big fill, preferably to the maximum 60 litres allowed for the discount

Comments (52)

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

  • John says:

    In interest of fairness and balance, you should note that there are too many reports of losing hard-earned BA Avios balances on the death of the account holder. If you can produce an extract from a valid will, it can be possible/marginally easier but often requires protracted attempts following multiple denials.

    It is a stupid PR own goal at a time of great family sadness.

    Nectar allows the transfers without hassle. So those account holders with significant Avios balances ( and maybe travelling less) need to research, consider and make a decision.

    • Rob says:

      Very easy to use Avios after death of an account holder if you have their log in, and BA is happy to transfer with probate details. We have a long article on this if you search.

      • jjoohhnn says:

        Yeah. My late wife has 34 avios remaining in her account! When the nectar partnership happened, i was able to transfer her balance into my nectar account very easily, and then back to my BA account, which was helpful. Not sure that is still possible now, but obviously household account is an option to keep burning through them if you can’t.

    • John says:

      There isn’t any need to provide any real details to nectar so death is irrelevant

  • aseftel says:

    Given how much Caffe Nero discounts through partners (Octopus free, Three £1, Compare the Market 25% off, Vitality, Waitrose) plus whatever’s going on in their app, I think that valuation is a bit toppy.

    • CamFlyer says:

      Rob’s calculation is based on how to use Nectar points for Nero, not the cheapest way of buying a Nero coffee. What if (as on Monday) I am with CamFlyer2 and each of us wants one?

  • Christian says:

    I’ve not seen it posted here but something that has not been documented here is restrictions on Nectar Hotels when used abroad.

    Having been abroad in Asia on a working holiday for 6 months I have been completely unable to view/login Nectar.com and the Nectar Hotels site without a VPN. In addition, when attempting to book a hotel – it errors when finalizing a booking. Could HfP corroborate this?

    • Rob says:

      Correct. For security reasons you cannot access Nectar accounts from outside the UK. Not that it seems to have improved their security ….

      • Christian says:

        Yes. I was told something similar when I first called them to ask why I cannot access the site.

        Also it is likely that Nectar.com is violating GDPR data privacy laws to prevent the transaction since even when I do not consent to cookies on Nectar.com and using a VPN set to the UK they are erroring on checkout.

        • Rob says:

          Nope, Nectar can set whatever cookies they want if they are ‘essential’. Good luck persuading the data protection people that something aimed at stopping rampant fraud is not ‘essential’.

          • The Original David says:

            What if it’s totally inept at actually preventing fraud? Any company blocking access based on foreign IP address for “security” has totally missed the point: any organised group of fraudsters competent enough to hack into Nectar accounts systematically will know how to use a VPN. The only people actually blocked will be the legitimate owners trying to access their account while on holiday, and who have no idea what a VPN is.

          • Rob says:

            You say that, but we blocked non-EU IPs from registering for the HfP forum and – whilst a VPN would get around this – forum spam has dropped by 90%.

  • Christian says:

    Another point about Nectar Hotels that HfP review hasn’t touched on is price comparison to hotels in the same group aka Agoda/Booking.com. These prices upmarked 10-30% when paying with nectar points, meaning your actual redemption value is not the face value of Nectar points (aka 0.5p) when redeeming this way.

    As per the linked review:
    ”’PS. You can also spend Nectar points at Nectar Hotels. You get the same ‘0.5p per point’ rate as you get with other partners so – as you’d earn points if you paid cash – it’s best to save your points to use elsewhere.”’

    ‘You get the same ‘0.5p per point’ rate as you get with other partners’ is factually incorrect.

  • jj says:

    Here’s my problem with Nectar. I don’t think I’m unusual in this.

    The local Esso fuel station is 2p per litre and further away than Tesco.

    Sainsbury’s is 15% more expensive (source: Which?) and further away than Aldi where I do half my shopping, and doesn’t match the quality of M&S and the local butcher where I do the rest.

    Nero is the best of the big coffee chains, but the quality doesn’t come close to nearer locally owned places.

    Nectar hotels give only 0.4p value after lost discounts are considered, and the selection is restricted.

    There’s only so much you can buy in Argos, and I haven’t used it since the local store closed as it’s now easier to go online to a wider range of retailers.

    That leaves Avios. Only Avios.

    So the oft-touted floor value of Avios doesn’t exist for me. I can’t get more than about 0.35p for a Nectar point, as I just don’t use and don’t want to use the Nectar partners.

    • Andrew. says:

      Aldi has really vicious bollards to exit that require great care, or judging by the multi-colour stripes not enough care, it’s also really hard to turn right out of. Life is too short.

      Lidl is handy, but not around shift change-over at BMW.

      Tesco Ginger Beer tastes filthy, and they never have enough shallow trolleys.

      Sainsbury’s has nice wide parking spaces, they sell rape-free Organic Mayo, and their Ginger Beer is nom.

      Sometimes a choice of supermarket goes beyond the total on the receipt.

      • Gerrard Cross says:

        All irrelevant to other people nom

      • jj says:

        @Andrew, that’s exactly my point. If you typically shop with a Nectar partner, the points have real vale. If the Nectar partner is nconvenient, expensive or unsuitable, the value of the points is greatly diminished, and the Avios/Nectar conversion route does nothing to put a floor value on an Avios.

        • Rob says:

          Of course, in such a case you probably wouldn’t earn Nectar points in the first place ……

          • jj says:

            Of course I don’t earn Nectar points in any meaningful amounts, Rob, but I do collect lots of Avios. The point is that you often say that Avios have a floor value of 0.5p as they can be converted 1:1 into Nectar, which is as good as cash. That’s only true if you regularly shop with a Nectar partner.

    • Christian says:

      Indeed. Not to mention that Avios redemptions seem to get devalued and or lose partners every year, and that to use most of your redemptions you either need to go through Qatar (which is a fun experience in itself) or BA which has a history of not showing redemption routes, upmarking them, or just in general being a clown fiesta of IT mishaps.

  • southlondonphil says:

    Given the steadily-diminishing number of Nectar partners and also IAG Loyalty’s desire for Avios to be “not just an airline currency” how long before the Nectar scheme is would-up/subsumed into Avios completely and Sainsbury’s, Argos etc. become direct earn/burn Avios partners?

    • Rob says:

      Never, because its all about the data and Sainsburys won’t give up control of that again.

  • CamFlyer says:

    My Nectar points all go for Nero coffee. It’s not my first choice, but their iced coffee is good and other coffees good enough, and there is one right by my station. If I want a good coffee I go to the independent across the plaza; if I want iced coffee or just more caffeine it’s Nero through Octopus or Nectar.

    • ADS says:

      I looked up the Nero terms to see how long the voucher lasts … but they didn’t say … so I risked it … and voucher I just triggered expires on 1st August 2025

      Is a 1 year validity standard – or does it change?

  • AJA says:

    Speaking of Nectar I just got a fruit and veg challenge on the app. Buy 80g portions of fruit and veg and get bonus Nectar points. I can get a total of 1500NP split over weekly targets. Spend by 17 September. Certain exclusions such as potatoes ,garlic, ginger.

    • ADS says:

      My offer hasn’t arrived on my app yet … I guess they are deploying them gradually …

      excluding potatoes is fair enough – but banning garlic and ginger seems harsh!

      • Scott says:

        Same sort of offer.
        Got to buy 90 portions for my first challenge and a 150g pack of raspberries counted as 2 (80g per portion).

        On until the 17th Sept, so time to hit one or two targets.
        7 bags of onions will probably hit the first target
        Not going to go outvof my way though. My usual buys of avocado, spinach and berries is going to require quite a few purchases due to their low weights.

        Still got the Esso challenge. Will put at least 15l of petrol in today for 200 bonus points, and I’ve another 200 point offer in my offers.

        Got a “500 points when you spend £20 on Tu clothing” till spit yesterday. 4 t-shirts, that I need, gets me that.

        I just auto-convert my points. Works for me, keeps my Avios balance ticking over, and I make more than I would from a lot of BA flights.

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

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