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Why Caffe Nero remains a better Nectar redemption than Avios

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Caffe Nero is, perhaps oddly, the best value Nectar redemption partner.

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.

With most drinks now costing over £3.50, at least in London, you are certain to get more than the usual 0.5p per Nectar point.

Redeem Nectar points at Caffe Nero

A regular Americano costs £3.60 in Central London. Using 400 Nectar points instead (which is the equivalent of 250 Avios) means you’d need to value Avios at more than 1.44p before it made more sense to transfer them there.

(There’s no point ordering a regular drink, of course, because the voucher is good for any size. Make it a large one, even if you’d usually have a regular coffee when using cash!)

Go for anything more exciting than a regular Americano – for example a £5+ frappe, or a £5.45 tiramisu latte – and you’d need to value an Avios at 2p+ before it made more sense to convert.

Should you convert Avios into Nectar points?

This is only a great deal if you already have the Nectar points from shopping and are considering the trade-off between Avios and free coffee.

It is a worse deal if you don’t already have Nectar points and intend to convert some from Avios. The Avios transfer rate INTO Nectar is now 400 Avios = 400 Nectar points, so a 400 Nectar point drink will require you to transfer 400 Avios in. You are still getting 0.9p per Avios based on a £3.60 drink which isn’t very exciting.

Admittedly, if you’re addicted to £5+ frappes, it may make sense! You’d be getting at least 1.25p per Avios.

Should you convert American Express points into Nectar points?

Not really.

Redeem Nectar points at Caffe Nero

You can turn 1 American Express Membership Rewards point into 1 Avios (or many other airline currencies) or 1 Nectar point. If you are only getting 0.9p by converting 400 points to Nectar and redeeming for a £3.60, you are probably losing out compared to taking airline miles.

Of course, this is still FAR better value than using your Membership Rewards points for statement credit (0.45p per point) or shopping vouchers (0.5p per point).

It also makes sense if your preferred Caffe Nero drink is one of the pricier £5+ ones.

How do you redeem Nectar points for Caffe Nero drinks?

The deal is a bit fiddly to find in the Nectar app. You need to scroll down the home page to the bottom until you get to ‘Explore partner offers’. Type ‘Nero’ into the search box and the deal will pop up.

You can order drinks vouchers via your phone as long as you have access to your email, as 2FA is in place. Click on the ‘Saved’ tab in the app menu and it will take you to your voucher bar codes for scanning in the store.

You can learn more about this deal on the Caffe Nero page of the Nectar website here.

PS. Don’t forget that Marriott Bonvoy will become a Nectar partner very soon. We don’t know what the exchange rate will be, but you may want to hold off getting free coffee until you know how good the deal is.

Comments (77)

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

  • e14 says:

    This content has not been sponsored by Weight Watchers

  • TimM says:

    Paying £3.60 to £5.45 for a coffee appears to be a tax on foolishness.

    It reminds me of teaching all day in St. Paul’s Hall, Huddersfield when my students brought their expensive coffees with them, paid for out of their accumulating debt, while I, on a salary, took my coffee in a flask from home, along with my sandwiches.

    The article should have included the value of a cup of coffee.

    • JDB says:

      It does seem a silly amount of money to spend on something which, for me anyway, had just become a habit rather than something I actually needed or wanted and in fact none of them make very good coffee. Stopped in Dec 2022 and don’t miss it one jot.

      • Steve says:

        Stopped drinking coffee or just buying coffee on the go?

        • JDB says:

          @Steve – just stopped buying coffee on the go!

          @Lumma – I didn’t say the my choice or ‘logic’ was anything to do with cost or convenience! I go to the pub because it’s convivial, the centre of village life and lots of nice people there. Eating out is more complicated when you live in a very rural place as we do. There is a bigger trade off there as well, so many bad/bad value restaurants that one can eat so much better at home.

          For me, high street coffee had just become a lazy habit. The fact such coffee isn’t really very good and it’s so expensive reinforced the wish to kick the habit. I’m genuinely pleased to be without it.

      • Lumma says:

        But by that logic, there’s no point in going to the pub when you can have a beer at home, there’s no point going to a restaurant because you can cook yourself.

        The thing that irritates me is that it’s so expensive to get just a black coffee or espresso on the go as I don’t like milk.

        • Dev says:

          I’ll be honest, I’m addicted to coffee after never drinking the stuff until 2015. However, I can make do a cup of instant coffee so long as there is a kettle in the office. Spending £3.50+ is a waste … much rather put that towards a pint on the way home!

        • TimM says:

          Lumma, absolutely – the main thing that irritates me about eating out is that the food is never as good as my own cooking! Then the cutlery is inferior, the music inferior and you have to put up with complete strangers. Would you choose a public urinal above your own bathroom? That is the comparison.

          We are all different. I like my coffee 100% skimmed milk, zero water, with ‘bog blend’/’student blend’ brown label Nescafe and no sugar. I have never had a better coffee at any price and certainly not from the machines that grind beans for each cup.

          These coffee habits are imported from the USA.

          • cranzle says:

            The food (and coffee) at cafes in Europe are of much higher quality than here in the UK.

            The toilets are of a far higher standard too.

          • daveinitalia says:

            @cranzle:
            “The food (and coffee) at cafes in Europe are of much higher quality than here in the UK.

            The toilets are of a far higher standard too”

            You use of Europe sounds like you’re saying everywhere in Europe is better than the UK.

            There’s still public toilets in some countries that consist of a hole in the floor!

          • Brian says:

            ‘Would you choose a public urinal over your own bathroom?’ Some people would…

          • Sandgrounder says:

            I’d choose a public urinal over my own bathroom every time if I am more than 5 mins from home!

            I do go to Nero, i get a free one and one for £1 every week, and with a tastecard discount my large black decaf americano is £2.69.
            I don’t drink, i don’t smoke, so spending about £12-15 per week on the odd hot drink is not exactly the worst of vices.
            We could all live in one room with no furniture bar a mattress on the floor to save money, but you have to enjoy some comforts in life.

    • Rich says:

      Why stay in hotels when you can bring a tent?

  • Lynn says:

    Using comparethemarket for insurance (even travel insurance for a week) you receive 2 discount codes a day for 25% off drinks and pastries at Cafe Nero

    • mkcol says:

      Why get a whole week’s policy, a single night will be sufficient for a few quid outlay.

  • BJ says:

    Not arguing with this in general but it falls ‘flat’ for most of the HfP community as they’ll be getting £5+ of value from 250 avios thanks yo vouchers. Not only that, many will get further outsized value from redeeming in clever ways. I suppose it is attractive to those that crave adulterated coffee creations but for me I’ll save my avios and stick to a decent Colombian wherevthe beans themselves are the star of the show, I haven’t found it in a chain store yet so just continue to make my own.

    • TimM says:

      Lidl do a great Columbian instant coffee.

      Instant coffee is grossly underrated. The freshly-picked green coffee beans are roasted, ground and freeze-dried quickly rather than sitting around for months, or years, as old beans to be used in the likes of Cafe Nero. I suppose it depends upon your vulnerability to marketing is.

      I had a university friend whose parents had a tea/coffee shop in Harrogate. His father would sprinkle a few coffee beans on the pavement outside every morning to be crushed by the passers-by then serve customers plain (Brown Label) Nescafe. It had the reputation of serving the best coffee in Harrogate.

  • cranzle says:

    I was disappointed to learn that Nero no longer give you a loyalty stamp if you apply any type of discount to your transaction.

    • The Original David says:

      Oh do Nectar redemptions no longer get Nero stamps? I know the free Octopus codes don’t, but pretty sure the T&C’s for Nectar redemptions used to permit it.

    • Nick says:

      That’s why I always bring my own cup now. I get 1 stamp a week with Octopus free Nero and every 9 weeks (fewer if I actually pay for a coffee) I get another free one.

    • Zain says:

      That’s incorrect. I always get a stamp on my £1 coffee every week, courtesy the Three app

      • Sandgrounder says:

        Do you use a physical card? Pretty sure they have stopped all discounted drinks from getting one via the app. I’ve tried tastecard, nectar, octopus and three with no joy.

        • Zain says:

          Nope, via the Nero app. Been collecting stamps via this route for years and I have 8 or 9 drinks stamps in the app just via this. If you’re not receiving stamps in the app, I’d definitely recommend reaching out to their customer care team.

        • Zain says:

          Only thing I can think of is you might be paying any balance (say £1 in my case) using your Apple wallet or physical credit card, in which case the Nero app wouldn’t register your purchase.

    • degsy says:

      Yes they seem to have really tightened up on some of these things – if you use Meerkat now for 25% discount you no longer earn stamps (apart from one for your own cup). Nor are you eligible for the spin-the-wheel & Xmas cracker promos – i do like the sense of jeopardy though if I decide to gamble and not use Meerkat

  • John says:

    I dislike coffee but I visit Nero twice a year as I have a client who insists on meeting me there.

    I am in a survey panel that pays out in gift cards that can be used at Nero. I get 25p every time I screen out, which is easier than trying to answer the survey questions without failing the validation.

    I usually have about £100 of these gift cards so I just get whatever I and the client wants, without caring how much it costs. Nonetheless, £10 or so to rent a meeting space for 2 hours is an ok deal.

    The turnover of customers is so high that we could stay all day without the staff noticing.

    • JDB says:

      @John – the cheap office rental angle is probably the best aspect of these coffee shops.

      They have majored on this as well as some sort of lifestyle concept whereby they can offer indifferent coffee and cheap cakes at high prices. And people somehow feel they ‘need’ it.

    • daveinitalia says:

      Someone said to me that you can’t really compare the prices of coffee in Italy to that of the UK because of the different way people consume coffee. In Italy it’s a quick transaction, people drink it there and then at the counter pay a relatively small amount and then go. Whereas in the UK there’s many people who get out their laptops and spend more time there. Although there’s a lot of washing up to do as cardboard cups are rarely used. Even McDonald’s in Italy gives your coffee in a proper cup if you’re not taking away.

      • Ken says:

        But seemingly 50% of people take a coffee away for the same price.

        I think it’s more rent, rates, mom and pop places in Italy and Spain , VAT , minimum wage

  • The real Swiss Tony says:

    Given both my insurer and my electricity provider will give me a free coffee, any size etc etc from nero every week – and that was without me even trying – I reckon a full blown caffeine hound could probably find seven of these codes to last them – then still use the Nectar points for Avios. Or more coffee…

    • JDB says:

      Are they actually ‘free’? The customer is paying for these gimmicks, not the insurer!

      • Matt says:

        Of course they’re free. You don’t get a discount on your energy bill if you refuse the coffee.

        You sound like my Dad who last weekend said he doesn’t claim delay repay on trains because “if everyone did that, they’d just put the ticket price up”. Good logic Dad.

        • JDB says:

          @matt – they are obviously not the same! Things like delay repay and EC261 are statutory so unavoidable and are factored into prices.

          Coffee, cinema tickets etc. are marketing gimmicks that you the customer have to pay for. A no frills / gimmicks provider may well provide the better quality less expensive product.

      • tony says:

        Whilst I see your point, I believe the reason they strike this deal is the coffee costs pennies and they’re doing it to get you in the store to meet a friend, buy some cake etc etc.

        For the insurer, it also provides a useful validation of the commission tracking. By insurer I meant comparison platform, who gave me a free coffee a month and a £20 Sainsburys voucher on a £300 policy. Could I have found a better deal somewhere else? Possibly. Do I value my time above minimum wage? Definitely.

        (But of course it’s fool me as I never redeem the free coffees)

      • Gordon says:

        They are more than free! I saved £250 on my car insurance renewal this month, in the current merry go round of ups and downs of vehicle insurance, and got the coffee as a sweetener, so I am far from paying for it!

  • Mark says:

    Really noticed the ££ saved when I moved from an employer that only had instant coffee so I was buying one a day vs my last 2 who have proper coffee machines. £3.50 a day if in the office 3 days a week really adds up!

    • Matt says:

      Try a decent coffee bag. I like Paddy & Scott. They’re individually sealed so convenient for putting a couple in your work bag. If you buy 100 and add a promo code or subscribe, you’re paying around 40p per bag. They taste much nicer than the coffee machines in my office. Not a patch on my home coffee with Sage Barista Pro using decent fresh roasted beans, but good for on the go.

      • Richie says:

        BTW The Sage bean to cup machines get very good reviews.

        • S says:

          They are pretty good. I am in the process of disposing of my employers rented office space (in favour of a co-working arrangement) so I have requisitioned the little-used Sage machine, and it’s now in my kitchen at home. Even with my limited abilities, I can make a coffee that approximates anything from a main chain for about 75p a cup.

          When I do go to the office, I’ll use a free Nero or Greggs coupon, but if I’m paying, i’ll go to a local barista coffee shop and get something actually decent for my money.

      • Peter K says:

        +1 for coffee bags. It can take a bit of searching to find one you really like, but they are superior to instant coffee, and chain coffee shop coffees, want day of the week.

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