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Is it worth buying IHG One Rewards points to retain your Diamond status?

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If you have Diamond status with IHG One Rewards, you may have received an interesting offer yesterday.

(Or you may not – I know not all Diamond members did.)

IHG will sell you, at a higher-than-usual rate, IHG One Rewards points and they will qualify towards elite status.

IHG One Rewards buy diamond status

If you have Diamond Elite status and did not receive an email yesterday, you can see if you have the offer by logging in on this page. Some readers have been successful with this but my wife was not.

Is it worth buying IHG points to retain status?

It’s not an easy question to answer.

For a start, IHG is giving different prices to different people.

There seem to be three versions:

  • 120,000 points (100% of what you need for Diamond) for $800 (£630)
  • 120,000 points for $1,000 (£787)
  • 120,000 points for $1,200 (£945)

Obviously these pro-rata down so you can buy the exact number you need to hit 120,000 based on what you have at the moment.

These are also redeemable points

The website for buying these special points (which I can’t link to, because everyone gets a personalised link) does not make it totally clear that these are also redeemable points.

However, if you read the terms and conditions, it seems that they are.

This changes the maths entirely. We value at IHG One Rewards point at 0.4p as you are very likely to get around that level when booking a redemption room.

This means that 120,000 points will get you £480 of future hotel stays. You can treat this as a pseudo-discount on what you are being asked to pay to retain status.

The three options now look like this, for a Diamond who hasn’t done a single cash stay all year and who has zero status points:

  • 120,000 points for $800 (£630) which gets you £480 of stays so you pay £150 for Diamond
  • 120,000 points for $1,000 (£787) which gets you £480 of stays so you pay £307 for Diamond
  • 120,000 points for $1,200 (£945) which gets you £480 of stays so you pay £465 for Diamond

There is now a MASSIVE difference between the value of the three offers.

IHG One Rewards buy diamond status

Free breakfast should be the factor that swings it for you

The main firm benefit of IHG One Rewards Diamond status is free breakfast. You will get a 100% bonus on base points on cash stays and a decent but not guaranteed chance of an upgrade, but you can’t easily put a financial value on that.

Let’s look at two extreme examples.

  • If you did zero cash stays this year and have the most expensive $1,200 (£945) offer, you are paying £465 to retain Diamond. (You are actually paying £945 but receive points worth £480 in return plus the status.) I cannot see any value here at all. You’d need to do at least 12 nights for two people before you’d break-even on the breakfast savings.
  • On the other hand, imagine someone who already has 100,000 base points and received the offer of 120,000 points for $800 (£630). They would only need to buy 20,000 points to retain Diamond. I think you’d be crazy to say no on that basis.

To decide if this is for you, you need to work out:

  • how many elite qualifying points you need to buy
  • what rate is being offered and
  • what the net cost is after deducting the ‘redemption value’ of 0.4p per point

As a VERY rough rule of thumb, I would say:

  • if you have the ‘120,000 points for $800’ offer then it is worth consideration, irrespective of how many elite qualifying points you already have
  • if you have the ‘120,000 points for $1,000’ offer then think about it if you already have at least 50,000 elite qualifying points
  • if you have the ‘120,000 points for $1,200’ offer then I would ignore the offer unless you already have at least 80,000 elite qualifying points

This is only a guideline though. Someone with 10 IHG nights already booked for next year can put a guaranteed value on the free breakfasts, whilst someone with no planned bookings is taking a far bigger gamble.

My wife is Diamond but hasn’t had the offer (yet?). She has 4,999 elite qualifying points and one booked night at an InterContinental where we’ll be on the hook for £50, at a guess, for breakfast. If she got the $800 deal I would probably take it but I don’t see the maths working on the $1,000 or $1,200 options.


IHG One Rewards news

IHG One Rewards update – April 2025:

Get bonus points: IHG is not currently running a global promotion.

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 (108)

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

  • Jimbob says:

    My ‘offer’ seems to be dufferent $1,080 after a $120 discount is applied for 120,000.
    It is offering me upto 200,000 points for $1,800 after a $200 discount.
    I can not tell if they are the standard points or elite qualifying though.
    How can I tell if they are elite qualifying please ??
    Cheers

    • Alan says:

      The T&Cs will say and the URL has eqp in it. Be careful you’re not just looking at the usual buy points link, this is different.

  • Pangolin says:

    No offer for me (23 nights and 23k EQP) but not surprising as I’ve never received any status challenge or diamond retention offer from them either, like many others seem to get.

    It was nice while it lasted but from now on I can at least direct all my stays to Marriott and get closer to Lifetime Platinum (120 nights needed)

    • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

      @Pangolin it may be worth checking your contact preferences to see if you opted out of marketing when you enrolled. Mrs Globetrotter didn’t get this offer while I did and when I checked the settings on her account she had most of the their offers turned off…

      • Pangolin says:

        No I hadn’t opted out of marketing.

        I just called the Diamond Line to check and they said it was a targeted offer and I was not invited.

        • Rob says:

          It is all over ihg.com when you log-in if you are targetted so it doesn’t seem to be down to marketing preferences (and wouldn’t need to be for that reason).

  • DavidC says:

    I will lose Diamond status at the end of this year. Do I have a soft landing and drop one level to Platinum or do I go back to the start and have no status at all?

  • Paul says:

    40 nights but I was offered $1200 for 120,000 so its a no from me. I will use my lounge pass for 2 years and Hilton where necessary. I would have bitten at $800.

    • BBbetter says:

      Surely you have some EQPs from 40 nights already? So just need to top up? You won’t be paying $1200 then?

      • John says:

        If the stays were $100 per night they’d only have 40k points and the cost of 80k points is $1000 (not $800)

  • Tim says:

    I had this offer, albeit I had a stay already booked that would have seen me requalify. My offer: 5,000 points for £197. I needed c. 4,000 points. My stay was for the HIX in Aberdeen (with a bonus points package) for £320. It’s a pretty outdated property, so I took the points offer instead.

    • John says:

      How on earth is the HIX Aberdeen charging £320? I stayed there for not much more than £32 before covid

  • Harrier25 says:

    I don’t have the offer but their loss. I’ll just be staying mostly in Hilton properties from 2025.

    • David says:

      Lol

    • John says:

      Plenty of Hilton people moving to IHG

      • Harrier25 says:

        God knows why. Clearly people with no taste.

      • Harrier25 says:

        Anyway, show me the proof for your comment @John, or are you just blowing out hot air?

        • Rob says:

          For people picking up points purely for high end redemptions, the wind is very much with Hilton following the SLH deal and the very reasonable reward pricing they launched.

          IHG has really stuffed themselves here. They started buying up luxury brands to encourage people to stay at HIX, HI etc and later redeem upmarket, but then failed to integrate Six Senses due to contractual issues and moved to dynamic pricing, meaning those aspirational rooms are out of reach anyway.

          Hotel Indigo is the only place where I think IHG has an edge over Hilton in a particular market niche. We’ve reviewed a grand total of one IHG hotel this year which is a sign that there’s very little going on we find exciting or redemptions worth booking.

          • Harrier25 says:

            …and some of those HI’s & HIX’s are enough to put one off the IHG brand for life because there are some horrible hellholes out there, especially with HI and Crowne Plaza brands.

  • Paul (another one) says:

    I can’t even log in to that page (I can log into my account ok).. but as a lapsed Diamond (now Plat thanks to the Ambassador), I second the general consensus that the IHG breakfasts aren’t great. I have definitely done better moving my stays to Hilton where Gold = decent breakfast, if outside the US.

  • supergers49 says:

    My Diamond is going to lapse going into 2025 (virtually all redemption stays in 2024), and I will need to purchase the full 120k to retain it. We have IC Estoril (5 Nights), IC Bangkok (4 Nights), and IC KL (2 Nights) redemptions already planned for 2025 (plus some other Voco and HI stays likely). We would have a use for the 120k points in 2026, where we normally achieve 0.5p per point. Finally, during our IC stays in 2025 we would typically take breakfast (for both practical and enjoyment reasons).

    Therefore my maths is:
    120k = $1,000/£790 (Cost)
    120k = £480 (Value – even though I get 0.5p there will be an offer for 0.4p at some point).
    11 Nights x 2 People = 22 Breakfasts

    Which means we are effectively buying 22 breakfasts for £14.00 each.

    Given the Estoril breakfast is ~£20 pp and those in Bangkok and KL are ~£19 pp, the transaction makes sense but isn’t a complete slam dunk.

    • Guernsey Globetrotter says:

      There are some other marginal or situational benefits that may be worth taking into account also and in your case tip the scales further toward the ‘YES’ side (credit to @Swiss Jim from the forum):
      – Extra bonus points on cash stays (100% v 60% @ plat, 40% @ gold or 20% @silver)
      – Possibility of better upgrades
      – Having diamond for another year may bring future benefits in terms of extension/matching offer opportunities
      Plus dedicated diamond support. Not sure on value of this but I did get very fast and helpful service on a recent enquiry.

      • supergers49 says:

        All good points, especially the bonus points on cash stays as they have a clear monetary value.

    • meta says:

      But how much would breakfast cost in Portugal in a restaurant next door? Same with Bangkok and KL…

      • supergers49 says:

        @meta – the breakfast in the IC Estoril is quite special. The food is nice but it’s the views and the location that make it well worth £20+ let alone the £14 from this deal. Less sure about the KL and Bangkok though.

    • RobH not Rob says:

      How is the Estoril breakfast ? We’re there for a few days over New Year . . . .

      • supergers49 says:

        The buffet is very pleasant, the pastries are lovely and there is good bread. There is free pour Cava and dishes made to order (omelettes, eggs benedict, etc.). However, the real star of the show is the location of the breakfast room and the views it affords over the Atlantic. Even in February they often have to open the windows because of how sunny it gets and I would recommend taking sunglasses with you for breakfast.

    • John says:

      I expect that if take-up of this offer is lower than expected, in the new year there will be an offer along the lines of “stay 10 nights to get back to Diamond”

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