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Get a 30% bonus converting American Express points to Marriott Bonvoy – worth it?

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American Express has launched a 30% bonus when you transfer Membership Rewards points into Marriott Bonvoy points.

This is, I think, the first Bonvoy transfer bonus we’ve seen since 2019 – and in 2019 it was targeted. This one appears to be open to all.

The usual transfer rate is 1.5 Marriott Bonvoy points per 1 Membership Rewards point. Under this offer, you will receive 1.95 Marriott Bonvoy points per American Express point.

30% bonus converting American Express Membership Rewards points to Marriott Bonvoy

The offer does not seem to be targeted. However, it shows very clearly on the Membership Rewards website if you attempt to make a transfer. If you don’t see any mention of the bonus, don’t do it – or just do a small transfer as a test first.

Here is the small print:

  • the offer runs to 30th September 2024
  • there is no minimum transfer to receive the bonus, apart from the usual ‘Amex to Marriott’ minimum of 400 Membership Rewards points
  • it seems that you can receive the bonus on multiple transfers
  • your standard points should transfer instantly to Marriott Bonvoy but the small print says that the bonus points could take eight weeks to arrive – that said, reports in our forum yesterday said that the bonus was posting immediately

Is this a good deal?

Yes. I value a Marriott Bonvoy point at 0.5p.  On that basis, via this offer you are getting 0.975p per Amex point as opposed to the usual 0.75p.

This puts Bonvoy points on a par with redeeming for Avios or other airline miles, which I tend to value at 1p each.

However, it is relatively easy to get outsize value from your Marriott Bonvoy points. I have a spreadsheet showing my Starwood and Marriott redemptions over the last 10 years and I have averaged 0.75p. This is the equivalent of getting almost 1.5p per American Express point if I transfer under this offer.

30% bonus converting American Express Membership Rewards points to Marriott Bonvoy

Don’t get carried away though

You can buy Marriott Bonvoy points directly from Marriott – see here.

When a 40% bonus on purchased points is running, which happens a couple of times per year, you can buy Bonvoy points for around 0.7p each. You shouldn’t value Bonvoy points any higher than the cost of buying them directly, albeit there is an annual cap on the number of points you can purchase.

This offer may also work for airline miles

Marriott Bonvoy has 40 airline partners.  Not only does it have the biggest range of airline partners of any hotel scheme, it also has the most generous conversion rate.

Take a look at the full list on the Marriott Bonvoy site here.

In most programmes, including Avios and Virgin Flying Club, you receive 1 airline mile for every 3 Marriott Bonvoy points you convert.

If you convert in chunks of 60,000 Bonvoy points, you receive an additional 25% bonus – you get 25,000 miles instead of 20,000.

Let’s see what that means:

  • You convert 30,770 Amex Membership Rewards points to Marriott Bonvoy under this offer
  • You receive 60,000 Marriott Bonvoy points in your account (46,155 base points plus the 30% bonus)
  • You transfer those 60,000 Marriott Bonvoy points into airline miles
  • You receive 25,000 airline miles

This means that you receive 0.81 airline miles per Membership Rewards point.

Obviously this is not a good deal for those airlines which are already Membership Rewards partners at a 1:1 rate.  However, if you collect miles in an airline programme which is NOT a UK Membership Rewards partner, this is a great opportunity to convert them and get a ratio of 1 to 0.81 on the transfer.

Amusingly, if you want Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer miles, it is now a better deal to convert like this than directly from American Express into KrisFlyer. This is because the transfer rate between Membership Rewards and Singapore Airlines is only 1 to 0.66.

Conclusion

This is the first Marriott Bonvoy transfer bonus we’ve seen in five years (I think) and you have to go back even further to find one that was open to all.

If you know how to get value out of Marriott Bonvoy points then it is definitely worth a look. The only potential issue is the ‘bonus may take eight weeks to arrive’ clause although forum comments imply this is not happening.

With my own Bonvoy balance down to five figures following a big redemption this month, I suspect that my wife or I will take advantage. I wouldn’t normally stockpile Bonvoy points because transfers from Amex are instant, but a 30% bonus will probably swing me.


How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Marriott Bonvoy points and status from UK credit cards (September 2024)

There are various ways of earning Marriott Bonvoy points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

The official Marriott Bonvoy American Express card comes with 20,000 points for signing up, 2 points for every £1 you spend and 15 elite night credits per year.

You can apply here.

Marriott Bonvoy American Express

20,000 points for signing up and 15 elite night credits each year Read our full review

You can also earn Marriott Bonvoy points by converting American Express Membership Rewards points at the rate of 2:3.

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

The Platinum Card from American Express

40,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Marriott Bonvoy points indirectly:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Marriott Bonvoy points is 2:3.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Marriott Bonvoy points

(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 (41)

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

  • Oliver says:

    Has anyone else noticed recently that when comparing Marriott cash rates to the points rate, it rarely makes sense to use points? I’ve just completed a 4 week trip to Canada and US West Coast in some expensive cities, and on almost all occasions, it was better value paying cash, often at USD $350-400 per night rates. I even saw Courtyard and Moxy hotels at 70,000 points per night! Unless staying for 5 nights, I feel the points rate has really dropped in value over the past 6 months or so. Same story when booking Asia hotels for a trip in September. I’ve now started to value a Bonvoy point at 0.7p!

    • Dominic says:

      That’s more than the HfP valuation of 0.5p per point, so 0.7p would be a solid return, no?

    • Rob says:

      We value them at 0.5p so 0.7p is still better than that!

      Marriott still has points caps in place, they are just unpublished. This means that on very peak dates you will do very well, but the caps are set quite high compared to Hilton.

      • Oliver says:

        Apologies, I’ve not written/explained that well. I always buy the max amount of Bonvoy points per year, and even with a 50% bonus, the cheapest (depending on the USD FX rate at the time), is normally around 0.7p per point. So if I use this value per point and compare to the cash vs. points price, the cash rate is always more favourable. Maybe that is a flawed methodology (?), but I do the same with Avois, which I can often buy for less than 1p per point via Avois subscriptions, etc.

    • RussellH says:

      Have not booked Marriott since last Feb, but both the Dominican in Bruxelles and the Renaissance at St Pancras were both definitely cheaper on points, assuming a value of ½p per point.

    • memesweeper says:

      “Has anyone else noticed recently that when comparing Marriott cash rates to the points rate, it rarely makes sense to use points?”

      No, not me. I’ve just returned from five days in an Italian resort — great value on points versus cash. I’ve never had a problem getting value from Marriott points, I just have a problem earning enough!

      • Oliver says:

        If staying 5 nights or longer, points is generally always better value, as you get the 5th night free.

      • polly says:

        Agree, we usually get great value Some of the nights we stay at the W Sentosa, are £1006pn. V 60k points. The 544 nights makes it even better value, esp in peak November…. But in Bournemouth, it made complete sense to use up our pay 200/75 back with that recent promo.

  • NicktheGreek says:

    I’ve jumped at this. 62k MR into Marriott and then into Aeroplan netting me 50k miles. Valuing a MR at 1p, works out cheaper than buying Aeroplan miles in all but the most lucrative sale offers they have.

    It’s a shame AA don’t honour the 5k mile bonus for transfers as well.

    All in an interesting promotion. Hopefully more of it’s kind to come….

  • BJ says:

    Rob/Rhys, a little nit off topic but this probably does relate to amex MR transfers so may be of interest to others before proceeding with transfers to Bonvoy. I just had an email from Qatar Airways PC about boosting avios up to 6 times abd I’m guessing that includes amex MR transfers. Is this QAPC Boost new or have I just missed it to date? If it’s new could we have 1 or 2 articles on it please; both to explain it and to compare it to BA boost?

    • Rob says:

      It’s very simple – the price is so shockingly bad its not worth wasting pixels on. Unless something has changed it’s easier for everyone to forget it exists.

      • BJ says:

        Ok, thanks 🙂

      • Go197 says:

        1.16p/avios

        Not great, but is it really “shockingly bad”?

        It’s very easy to make a saving compared to QR J cash fares at that price, in cases where you don’t have enough Avios.

        • Rob says:

          Pretty sure it was nearer 1.65p when launched, they must have tweaked it.

  • ukpolak says:

    Hi – staying for a couple of nights in NJ around Christmas time for a family of four.

    $608 / £475 fully flex rate booked, however same room and conditions available for 78k Marriott points for both nights (that’s total points price).

    I guess with this bonus on a 1:1.95 rate :

    40k Amex = 78k Marriott which gives £475/$608 of bens in terms of two nights.

    I have no other major plans for a boat load of Amex points from various SUBs / retention chats but does above represent good value?

    • memesweeper says:

      40k Amex to avoid £ 475 spend? I’d take that for sure

      • ukpolak says:

        Thank you – I’ve never cashed out before and looking for decent redemptions. Will transfer now!

  • david says:

    I am not seeing any promotion or bonus for transferring amex points to Marriott.

  • Sunny says:

    Do others have a usual transfer rate of 1 Amex to 1.5 Marriott? I always see 1 to 1 and I do not see an elevated 30% bonus now either.

  • Anthony Heather says:

    Apologise if I missed. I have Amex Platinum, due to renew now, not worth £650, particularly as I don’t live in London! I have 115,000 Amex points, but don’t want to get a free Amex to retain the Amex points, so I can get more points in 2 years time! With current 30% bonus, 115,000 Amex points converts to 224,250 Marriott Bonvoy points, which are also flexible. With the 25% bonus on conversion I could convert to Avios, or Virgin, or any other airline in the future. Getting 25,000 miles per 60,000 Bonvoy, if I top up Bonvoy a little to 240,000, that would convert to 100,000 miles. If I went to airline miles direct would get 115,000, but keeping with Bonvoy don’t have to choose which airline yet? Would appreciate any confirmations, before I press the button! Thanks all.

    • Rob says:

      Your numbers look right, and if you’re happy to accept the (modest) loss if you do end up converting to Avios – in return for the flexibility offered by Bonvoy points – I’d say it is worth doing.

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

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