Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Is ‘wait and see’ a better points strategy than ‘earn and burn’?

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Is ‘earning and burning’ the best strategy for your hotel points and airline miles? There is a common view that it is, but it isn’t one I agree with.

As it happens, four things lined up this week which made me think it was worth looking at this topic:

  • a conversation I had at a press event, with someone who is very switched on but was still surprised how many Virgin Points I am sitting on (seven figures)
  • preparing updates to our ‘What are your hotel points worth?’ articles, where we show you the average redemption value BUT also what you can get on a good day if you wait
  • the fact that those articles will go out whilst I will be in Turkey on the best ‘pence per point’ Marriott Bonvoy redemption I have ever done (2p per point vs our 0.5p target) which used a balance it took me a few years to build

I’ll say in advance, with no shame, that the structure of this article is taken directly from the Frequent Miler article linked to above. There’s no point reinventing a very efficient wheel. Thanks Greg.

Is ‘earn and burn’ a bad idea?

There is a common view amongst many miles and points collectors that ‘earn and burn’ is the way to go.

I’ll define ‘earn and burn’ as spending your points as quickly as you earn them, so that your total balances do not build up over time. If you don’t, the logic goes, you’re at risk of devaluations.

Oddly, the same people don’t say ‘Don’t save your money, spend it as soon as you earn it’. This is despite the fact that inflation will eat away at the value of your money if you don’t. However, I don’t see anyone giving that advice and I doubt you’d listen if they did.

You want to save money for your future needs, perhaps unexpected future needs. Shouldn’t you treat your miles and points in the same way?

Bad stuff happens

I can’t argue that lots of bad stuff happens in the miles and points world:

This is only what we’ve seen in the last six months from the two main UK airlines.

Looking at the hotel schemes, we have seen consistent unwelcome tweaks. A few years ago, Hilton moved its top price from 50,000 points to 95,000 points with no notice. It isn’t that long ago that the most expensive IHG redemption was 30,000 points – now it is 120,000 points.

Remember that it’s less than 18 months since Radisson Rewards trashed its reward scheme by moving to revenue-based pricing with no notice. Points which got you 0.33p of value and often 0.5p of value now get you a fixed 0.15p.

Even Hyatt, which is still the gold standard for a hotel scheme which holds its value, has introduced a new Category 8 and peak / off-peak pricing. These factors combined to lift their top price from 30,000 points to 45,000 points per night.

Hyatt (and Marriott before it dropped categories) are also adept at moving hotels into pricier reward categories without nominally changing the reward chart.

You can’t sugar coat the fact that the list above has some pretty bad stuff on it. I know from HfP comments that Radisson loyalists who saw the value of their points balances wiped out 18 months ago have not forgiven the company.

I’m not including the recent changes to Hotels.com Rewards on this list because they don’t impact the value of your EXISTING credit balance.

But good stuff happens too

It’s unfashionable to admit it – and we don’t want to give the people who run the programmes the idea that they have leeway to try some more bad stuff – but the list of new ‘good stuff’ that we’ve seen in recent years is arguably longer than the bad list.

If you weren’t sitting on a pile of points, you wouldn’t have been well positioned to take advantage of any of this:

  • Avios introduced ‘Reward Flight Saver’ on long haul flights – whilst cash neutral for standard redemptions (you need more Avios but use less cash) it is a massive saving for anyone with a large Avios balance – who can book the ‘most Avios, least cash’ option – and using a British Airways American Express 2-4-1 voucher
  • Both Avios and Virgin Flying Club introduced GUARANTEED reward availability on every flight. It’s hard to overstate what a big change this was, and it is still one which is unique to Avios partners and Virgin Atlantic. Redemptions may have been nominally cheaper in the past but the seats were not there at peak times – now they are.
  • There has been a step change of the quality of premium airline seats, including Qsuite, Club Suite and the new Virgin Atlantic seats – your miles get you a better business class product now than they did five years ago
  • Virgin Atlantic joined SkyTeam, adding a huge number of new airline redemption partners
  • The launch of Virgin Red added new redemption options, including good value Virgin Voyages cruises, the new box at The O2 in London and – soon – Virgin Hotels
  • Qatar Airways adopted Avios, leading to a HUGE drop in the cost of getting to Asia and Australasia. BA wants 340,000 Avios to fly to Sydney on a peak date and the seats are never there anyway. Qatar Airways only wants 180,000 Avios return in Business Class, you can fly Qsuite, you can choose from six destinations in Australasia and availability (whilst it comes and goes) is often very good.
  • Qatar Airways lets you redeem Avios for JetBlue flights on transatlantic routes (and of course US domestic routes too)
  • Hilton has just brought 400 Small Luxury Hotels on board and is offering redemptions priced off their standard reward chart. You won’t pay more than 130,000 points per night even for (as an example) the all-inclusive villas at Hermitage Bay in Antigua or at Milaidhoo in the Maldives.
  • Luxury hotel redemption options have improved massively – IHG has added Regent and Six Senses (the latter not fully integrated, I accept), Hyatt added Thompson, Mr & Mrs Smith and is buying The Standard, Hilton just added NoMad and Graduate Hotels as well as SLH

You need to be ready when opportunity knocks

Clearly, over the long term, the value of your miles and points will decline. This is no different to the way that the value of your cash will decline though. I am still surprised every time that I realise a Twix is no longer 10p.

However, opportunities are always coming along and you need to be ready.

The only way to jump on deals that emerge is to either keep a stash of miles and points available in your preferred currencies, or to have points which transfer instantly (or in the worse case overnight) into those currencies. You don’t want to find yourself with an empty account at the wrong time.

It’s not for me to say what you should choose, but this is how I approach things:

  • I try to keep 400,000 Avios across my household accounts. This is roughly what we’d need (with 2 x 2-4-1 vouchers) to book a long-haul Club Suite trip for four if BA announces a new route – and every day, every flight is available immediately to book – or opens up a pile of seats to somewhere we’d like to go. This plan paid off with the Dubai ‘Avios only’ flight this year and a trip we did to Mauritius a couple of years ago.
  • For the same reason, I try to ensure I always have 2 x BA Amex 2-4-1 vouchers available in my British Airways account
  • I try to keep at least 100,000 Hilton Honors points available, which is what I’d need if a really good ‘buy it now’ experiences redemption popped up – one which would disappear if I had to wait 24 hours for an American Express Membership Rewards transfer to arrive. I should perhaps have had more though, because the best Small Luxury Hotels redemptions went quickly when loaded last month.
  • I buy the maximum number of World of Hyatt points each year for my wife and myself when a good bonus offer is on – this gets me 55,000 points per account plus the bonus. It’s hard not to get value from Hyatt points even if you buy them. I’ve just upgraded to the top suite at Andaz Amsterdam for just 9,000 points for an October stay, for example.

The only balance I have which is arguably too high is Virgin Points. However, within 3-5 years both my children with be gone during term time and it is a LOT easier to get 2 x Virgin Atlantic Upper Class seats than it is to get four. I could burn through my balance in 2-3 trips to the Caribbean and US with my wife.

I should, potentially, have run down my IHG One Rewards points. With around 600,000 between my wife and I, the move to revenue based redemptions has lost me some value. On the upside, IHG is expanding its ‘experiences’ rewards and I hope to pick up some good value VIP tickets to an event at some point. We may also see full Six Senses integration.

Earning is easier, so perhaps you should burn?

This article is NOT about earning points. It is about how you spend them.

However …. we should also touch on how easy it is to replenish your account. You may be more willing to burn points if you know they are easy enough to replace. Similarly, I am hesitent about burning more than 150,000 Hyatt points per year, because this is the maximum (with a bonus) that my wife and I can buy between us.

Everyone has a different willingness to ‘churn’ credit cards for their sign-up bonuses. However, you can’t argue that we have seen record sign-up deals in the last couple of years:

  • 100,000 American Express Membership Rewards points on both the personal Platinum card and Business Platinum
  • 70,000 Avios on the British Airways Premium Plus American Express card
  • 100,000 Avios for opening a Barclays Premier current account and taking out the Avios Plus credit card

…. etc etc. With bonuses repeatable after two years once you have cancelled a card, and doubled up across a couple, replenishing your points has arguably never been easier.

One spanner in the works, of course, is if American Express goes through with its constantly delayed plans to stop pro-rata fee refunds.

Conclusion

There’s nothing new in anything I’ve written above. For years our articles on hotel point valuations have used two figures – our average value and our ‘what you’ll get if you wait for a good day’ value.

The bigger picture is that you’re wrong to believe that your miles and points should be burnt at the earliest opportunity.

Whilst saving your points for retirement is never smart – some schemes won’t let you do that anyway because of ‘hard’ expiries which wipe your points after a few years (hello Lufthansa, hello Emirates, hello Singapore Airlines) – neither is keeping very low balances.

The safest points to hold are convertible points – mainly American Express Membership Rewards points but also HSBC Premier credit card points. Even if Avios or Virgin Red go on a crazy devaluation spree tomorrow, you’ll still be OK if your points are sitting with Amex – you can simply transfer to another partner instead. You may even get lucky and hit a transfer bonus like the current ‘30% bonus transferring Amex points to Marriott Bonvoy’ offer.

You will always see some horror devaluation stories – hello Radisson – but are ALL your points balances going to tank overnight? No. You could look at them in the same way that you’d look at a share portfolio – you’ll get the odd dud but the majority should pay off, and the odd one pay off spectacularly.

We’re also approaching an inflection point in the travel cycle. With the post-covid travel boom over, we’re going to see more empty airline seats and more empty hotel rooms. A lot of these are going to be dumped into their respective loyalty schemes. You want to be ready.

Comments (85)

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  • Paul says:

    Good read Rob. I wonder if IHG will do their 20% bonus on conversion to Avios. They don’t seem to have done that for some years but living in hope!

  • WillPS says:

    Bit of a false equivalence on the cash inflation comparison; both cash and points depreciate in value, true, but only the latter has a valuation which is set at the sole discretion of a single company.

    If Mars puts up the price of a Twix, you can just use your money for something else.

    • will says:

      Plus you can presently earn 4.5-5% on cash very easily and risk free.

    • BJ says:

      When BA stuffed us in many respects when they went global with RFS we ditched our BAPPs and moved our spebd to Qatar and Finnair. So, whike I get your point, yjere us other thingsf we can buy with avios, not just BA flights.

  • Gavin says:

    Many people who collect points here likely have savings and investments in various different things. It’s not much different to having a small % of your portfolio in a risky asset class. There’s a significant risk of losing value, but also a significant upside if you can jump immediately on a good redemption etc. I definitely wouldn’t “save for retirement” in points over a pension, but I’m happy to keep several grand worth of points in various schemes and I expect it’ll give me more value than my other investments.

  • flyforfun says:

    I’m finding my balance building because I don’t get the opportunity to use the points in schemes as often as I would like to. I often can’t plan far enough in advance to book 350 days out for example. I’ve blown 2-4-1 voucher that was going to expire on a trip to Scotland! (saying that, I used a BMI upgrade voucher on the even shorter LCY-LBA just so I didn’t loose it).

    I’ve cancelled my BAPP and will sit out 2 years and hope for a nice points bonus after that. Got my Barclaycard one to keep earning Avios, but unless I can get some decent long haul redemptions (still have 2 2-4-1 vouchers in my account along with a new AMEX rewards card to redeem with) I can only chip away at my balances.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      For the vast majority of routes (or people) there is no need to book 355 days in advance.

      The only people doing that are those with specific dates going to the handful of routes where it’s very unlikely BA will drop any more reward seats.

  • Timerichmoneypoor says:

    One thing worth considering for those who favour a “wait and see” strategy is what happens to your stash should something happen to you.
    Many (though of course not all) with the largest points balances are likely to be towards the “sniper’s alley” end of the age spectrum.
    So make sure that your various accounts are listed somewhere (as with all your assets) and that some of your loved one are aware of them.
    Also it is worth considering the various limitations or hoops to be jumped through in order to ensure that the points can be used by others.

  • SammyJ says:

    Just one additional point when you say you probably have too many IHG points – the ability to now use a Confirmable Suite Upgrade voucher on reward stays up to 5nts makes their scheme far more valuable now than it was last year.

    • Rob says:

      Good point, it does. If I earned one I would be more positive about I’m sure!

  • occasionalranter says:

    Of course, there are also people effectively running large points balances by booking multiple flight options for future trips and just cancelling the unwanted ones closer in. Or, looking at it the other way round, one major advantage of running a large points balance is that you can do this.

    • Richie says:

      Are the same people booking multiple restaurants for the same evening and then cancelling when they’ve decided which one they really really want?

      • Rob says:

        For as long as BA short haul cancellation fees remain 50p, holding speculative seats makes sense. Of course, the snag is that if/when they go back to £35 it will also apply retrospectively to all your speculative bookings.

        • HampshireHog says:

          This selfish behaviour shouldn’t be encouraged

          • David says:

            Why AA bookings are all gone soon as released as there fees to cancel are peanuts.

          • TGLoyalty says:

            100% but it works out for last min bookers like me. I hardly ever plan months out so pick up last min ET/CE these multi bookers are hogging.

          • occasionalranter says:

            I think I’ve advocated here previously that cancellation fees should be higher for Avios redemptions (and Aadvantage, to name the only other FF scheme I really know).

            If I book LHR-SYD in J for cash with someone like SQ or QR, I’d expect to pay about £300 minimum to cancel or change dates. A similar fee would be quite reasonable on Avios redemptions.

          • occasionalranter says:

            “I hardly ever plan months out so pick up last min ET/CE these multi bookers are hogging.”

            This worked out great for me coming back from Munich last week. About 48 hours out from having to fly the dreaded DAT A321, I was able to switch to an earlier flight the same day.

  • HH says:

    A mixed strategy is optimal for me. I’ve never redeemed MR so I’m sitting on 1m+ waiting for a unicorn redemption. Tempted by the current Marriott conversion bonus to use on a RC Reserve… Whereas Avios, I try to maintain only 100-200k to jump on redemptions suddenly opening up (worked a treat for Maldives, Mauritius and more thanks to HfP). Hilton I buy the max on 100% offers and use very soon after. Anywhere else I don’t hold six-figure balances so I’m less precious.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      30% bonus was enough to tempt me to send 200k of my 500k MR to Marriott and already redeemed 218k for a 3 night stay cash rate is £1,500, probably not worth that but happy to pay just over £1000 of points and keep hoping the price comes down between now and then lol

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