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Hotels.com Rewards may be coming back, as it attempts to recover market share

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Whilst HfP readers may put the changes at British Airways Club down as the biggest loyalty disaster in recent times (although arguably Virgin Atlantic’s bodged move to dynamic redemption pricing is even worse), the real winner for biggest loyalty screw-up this decade is Expedia Group.

Say what you like about the British Airways and Virgin Atlantic changes, but neither had such a big impact on sales as the launch of One Key.

Dropping Hotels.com Rewards for the anaemic One Key has been a disaster for Expedia Group. The response was so bad that the roll-out has been abandoned. Unfortunately, the US and the UK – which had already switched – are stuck with it.

Hotels.com Rewards is coming back

You didn’t need to be a loyalty guru to realise that – when you are selling a commodity product (someone else’s hotel room) – cutting the kickback to the buyer from 10% to 2% is a disaster waiting to happen. And so it proved.

One Key appears to be going away

Heavy stayers (or, I should say, ex-heavy stayers) at Hotels.com have received a survey this week. There is a £500 raffle prize to encourage people to complete it.

The survey is far, far too complex for people to bother completing it seriously, unfortunately – especially as it seems to have gone to lapsed customers.

The key part, however, is this.

Expedia Group is asking people to choose between two options:

Option 1:

Hotels.com Rewards returns but with a different reward structure

Under Option 1, you would earn HotelsCash. This is basically the same structure as OneKeyCash BUT at a far higher rate. You would start at 6% and go up to 10% if you hit 30 nights per year. You can cash out your accumulated HotelsCash for a room discount at any time.

Hotels.com Rewards is coming back

Option 2:

Hotels.com Rewards returns with the original structure

Under Option 2, the old programme returns. For every 10 nights you book, you receive a free night for the average cost of those 10 nights. You can’t cash out until you have done 10 nights.

It is worth noting that there is no ‘Option 3 – Retain One Key’.

The rest of the survey is just sweating the small stuff:

  • What sort of bonus would you like for hitting elite status?
  • Should Hotels.com match your elite status with the major hotel loyalty schemes?
  • Are you excited by getting gifts of Uber credit, coworking space vouchers, guaranteed upgrade vouchers, free laundry at select hotels, upgrades if available at check-in, airport security fast track vouchers, price drop protection, earning HotelsCash on Starbucks purchases etc?

The bottom line is that One Key appears to be on the way out and Hotels.com Rewards appears to be on the way back.

Whether this is in the form of ‘buy 10, get one free’ as it was originally, or simply a 6% minimum reward (vs 2% today) remains to be seen.

You could give Expedia Group some credit for listening. In truth it didn’t listen before it launched One Key and – as it turned out – didn’t have the slightest understanding of why people (or at least the 20% of people who represented 80% of its bookings) were using Hotels.com in the first place.


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Hotel offers update – June 2025:

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.

Want to buy hotel points?

  • Marriott Bonvoy is offering a 30% to 50% bonus (varies by individual) when you buy points by 16th July 2025. Click here to buy.
  • World of Hyatt is offering a 20% bonus when you buy points by 21st July 2025. Click here to buy.

Comments (96)

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

  • Tracey says:

    Having been a loyal hotels.com player, who lost out when previous bookings were moved from the old scheme to keys, I did say never again. Since then have been using BAH whenever possible, but that too has lost its silver lining. So it could be time for a revisit.

  • Erico1875 says:

    I’ve never found Hotels.com competitive even with TCB or rebates etc.
    Any hotel I’ve looked at could always be undercut via Trivago or google

    Although our holiday rental is on Expedia/hotels.com, all our bookings come via 80% booking.com 20% Airbnb

    • jj says:

      The old scheme of eleven nights for the price of ten gave 9.1% benefit, not 10%.

      Either way, I haven’t used hotels.com since the switch to OneKey, except to draw-down my balance. I used to spend several £’000 with them most years. It doesn’t take many people like me to cause a huge P&L problem.

      • Rob says:

        There were plenty of HfP readers doing 50-100 nights per year through them. Lots of little positive quirks eg you could book for anyone. Need a hotel for my parents in law? No bother. Credits go to you. Need 4 rooms? No problem, you get 4 nights credit (few chains allow that).

        • Rui N. says:

          Indeed, most of my stamps came from booking hotels for other people, mostly my parents and the in-laws.

          • Rob says:

            I bet they don’t even know what % of bookings were for someone else other than the person who got the credit, even though you supplied the guest name.

        • Bagoly says:

          So that’s another market too – serving Friends&Family informal Travel Agents!

          • meta says:

            Not just Friends&Family, you could book for anyone. I had a whole operation at one point. It was event planners dream.

            @John it will also depend on the level you had in hotels.com Silvers and Golds got shown better pricing than just members.

    • John says:

      That’s odd, trivago was always more expensive when I could be bothered to check. The only way we can both be correct is if we stay in different kinds of hotels where this difference is reflected in their pricing to trivago and hotels.com??

      • Tim S says:

        I had the same experience. Trivago didn’t even offer up the mid priced hotels I looked at.

        It might have given me good rates for super luxury hotels far above my price range, but for my price range it was useless.

        That was a few years ago, could be different now.

  • Eric says:

    I knew a few people who had zero interest in loyalty schemes and points – too confusing, expiring points, hard to extract value, not enough travel with single providers etc – but loved Hotels.com because it was really obvious what they were getting and easy to trigger a voucher. It’s easy on here to think about everything through an expert lens where people know the layering of Amex offers, comparisons to Bonvoy and use of specialist credit cards etc but I reckon a big chunk of this was just alienating everyday users who saw it as taking away free nights and giving back some seemingly worthless points.

  • Rob says:

    Indeed. There is a view in the industry that GenZ have the attention span of a knat and won’t take part in any loyalty scheme that does not allow instant rewards. The idea of doing 10 nights to be rewarded is meant to bring them out in a cold sweat.

    This may well be true. However, chasing this market has a lot of issues. They don’t have much money to spend. They don’t actually book many hotel nights. They don’t know your brand so the marketing costs are high. More importantly, a lot are just packaging hotels with flights via Expedia anyway.

    Expedia Group already has a low reward hotel platform called Expedia. What was smart about Hotels.com is that it was a separate platform which attracted high, regular spenders. Leave the ‘I book one hotel night per year’ market to Expedia or even Booking.com.

    Bottom line – the average member of a UK frequent flyer scheme (and indeed HfP reader) is mid 40s. The number of people of this age group working in advertising / marketing / PR in the UK is probably about 5. One Key is the equivalent of what you get if you ask my kids to design a marketing campaign for stairlifts.

    • Robin says:

      Is a knat related to Monty Python’s “kniggit”?!

    • Ladyshopper says:

      My kids are Gen Z, and their go to when looking for somewhere to stay in airbnb. Whereas that’s probably my last place to look (although saying that, we did use it recently in Rome and got a great place to stay).

    • jj says:

      “One Key is the equivalent of what you get if you ask my kids to design a marketing campaign for stairlifts.”

      My favourite comment of the day.

    • Chrisasaurus says:

      Fun fact – many years ago a Microsoft Research study found that human attention spans had trended down from 12 seconds to 8 seconds on average. Believe to be driven by the influx of digital distractions and feeds.

      By comparison a goldfish is believed to have a span of 9 seconds.

      Just leave that with you all.

      • strickers says:

        Which is why Tinder and TikTok are so popular, swipe, swipe, swipe.

  • Alex says:

    The biggest irony is a couple of years back they trashed the previously great app in order to facilitate One Key, as all the Expedia brands needed to be on the same IT system. Even before OK was launched they were hurting their business for it

  • John says:

    Yeah, even though I was not happy about the change, hotels.com has remained cheaper than other consolidators 90% of the time, and the same price or less than direct when taking TCB into account.

    In any case I just opened an new hotels.com account outside the UK and got back onto the old scheme straight away. I’m not sure why others were unable to do this.

  • Mikeact says:

    Despite cash back sites etc., I for one called it a day with the OneKey introduction. The ‘ free’ night previous offer was far superior for us while travelling around…so easy to use.

  • Matt says:

    If they want to attract loyalty, they should do a tiered model where you get an increasing % back as credit when you progress to Silver, Gold etc.

    • Rob says:

      That’s Option 1. 6% then 8% then 10%.

    • Dubious says:

      Only if the tier is retained for the subsequent year. Otherwise by the time you reach gold you don’t get to enjoy the benefit very much.

      Also you end up needing to do cheaper stays to qualify followed by more expensive stays once Gold to maximise the benefit.

      • Matt says:

        Agree with this – gives you much more of an incentive to retain gold each year.

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

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