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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:

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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.
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Comments (96)

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

  • Tony says:

    Hotels.com is dead to me after the move to OneKey. I was a few stays off my first free night but I’m assiduous in not staying for the hell of it and I never could make those final two stamps required to get the free room.

    Most of my travel is with a major chain so I only used Hotels.com for jobs where I was out in the sticks and it had taken me years to get to eight stamps. Needless to say my free night redemption had taken on mythic significance. Financially it wasn’t going to amount to much but it FELT significant and that was key. So screw them. Unless they reinstate my old balance they can take a running jump…

    • Alex G says:

      @Tony. Your 80% of a free night should have been converted to One Key Cash, which you can use against your next booking. One upside of the new scheme is you don’t have to stay ten nights to get a reward.

      • Rob says:

        But no-one wants a 2% reward they can immediately cash in.

        You book a £100 hotel room. It’s £83 exc VAT. You get £1.60 of credit. That’s not enough to push someone back to H.com next time.

        On the other hand, do 4-5 nights, earn half the stamps needed for a reward and suddenly you are looking around desperately trying to find way of giving them more business because you want to unlock that pretty valuable reward which is now within your grasp.

        We’re back to irrational behaviour. If a loyalty scheme does not encourage irrational behaviour in its member then you should just close it down and save the huge cost of running it (and it is huge). No-one is dictating their hotel booking strategy on the back of getting OneKeyCash. It is literally worse than nothing at the moment from a P&L perspective.

        • memesweeper says:

          ^^^ this

          the stamps promoted loyalty, they made you “sticky”

          nothing about onekey cash is an incentive to use it at all

  • chris w says:

    10% discount on any booking is too generous to be sustainable. Maybe every 15th night free rather than 10th night would be more realistic.

    • Rob says:

      You are utterly, totally wrong.

      Have you learnt nothing from the decade of tech? Learnt nothing from seeing, for eg, Wise destroy margins in FX transfers?

      I mean, come on. Shein will sell you a shirt from China for £2 including delivery. You’re telling me that there’s no profit in selling a £200 hotel room online which pays you 22% commission after giving away 10% of that commission? With zero marketing costs, because by definition these are your locked-in loyal customers?

      Emyr will, personally, spend 20 minutes booking and doing the paperwork on a £200 hotel room for you, which pay him 8% commission which he splits with us. A pretty manual process. And you’re saying that Hotels.com can’t make money selling the same room for a 12% net commission (after rebate) with no manual input whatsoever?

      • points_worrier says:

        Giving away maximum 10%, in exchange for locking the customer in to you for a further 9 bookings. Plus the ‘free’ one. Which Hotels.com wouldnt have to pay the commission on, so in reality works out at 7.8% discount if you knock off the commission they would have got on the ‘free’ night.

        • Lumma says:

          Especially because personally, I often used the “free” night as a discount off a hotel more expensive than what I’d book normally

      • Adam says:

        I did not need to use wise for a few years. What has happened?

    • Peter K says:

      Looking at it through the optics of advertising, every 14 nights makes more sense. A free night to pamper yourself after 2 weeks of holidays.

      • Rob says:

        Starbucks etc have spent a FORTUNE researching this and 10 is the optimum number.

        Except, oddly, what is MORE effective than ‘buy 10, get 1 free’ is giving someone a coffee stamp card for ‘buy 12, get 1 free’ BUT having the first two spots pre-stamped. You still need to buy 10 but the rate of people who complete a card is a lot higher.

        If you want a good loyalty scheme, you’re better off with a psychologist than an accountant.

        • HertsSam says:

          Shame that BA and Virgin haven’t learnt that lesson.

          • John says:

            Or maybe something like buy 10 get 1 free isn’t profitable for airlines and they need to do complicated stuff with “tier points” – but they don’t want people to game it either

        • Daniel says:

          100% agree, it’s all about psychology… BA could learn a lesson or 2 here.

  • Rob says:

    Not sure why we are even having the debate. Expedia has publicly said that it has killed off bookings and hence the rollout of One Key has been scrapped outside the UK and US where it already exists. This is not a theoretical discussion we’re having! It’s fact.

  • Ted says:

    Disagree. Hotels.com was often 10% + the old programme

    • Ted says:

      I disagree with Daniel’s comment, not Rob’s!

    • Daniel says:

      Never when I looked on TCB, it was 2% if you took the free night stamps, 10% otherwise. i.e the same as now

  • Dave says:

    Why can’t they do a full roll back in US and UK? Tech issues or?

    • Rob says:

      Your existing nights got turned into a cash credit. Rolling back would be messy. I suspect your OneKeyCash would become ExpediaCash and usable only on there, even if earned on Hotels.com. Everyone would then restart with a zero nights balance in Hotels.com Rewards.

      • Nico says:

        Could have restarted from a certain date. There was nothing lost on nights conversion into cash so no real need to roll those back.

      • Chris says:

        What stops them from giving every account a one time use discount voucher equivalent to their OKC balances on the date it rolls back? Like issuing a reward night voucher of the OKC value.

  • ChasP says:

    Perhaps the biggest blunder was changing to OneKey in, what I assume, there 2 biggest markets

    • memesweeper says:

      absolutely — they could even have trialled with some smaller market or subset of the user base… completely amateurish to “try” in the USA first 🤦‍♂️

  • Tristophe says:

    With their recent bonus onekey offers, & now I’ve got to platinum, the rewards have been pretty good (though worse than before), & I prefer that you can use the total onekey cash pot against a hotel booking rather than being per night, which meant in some cases I’d lose some of the cash when redeeming.

    The bit I still really miss is price match / price drop protection as I saved around 15% on each booking even on non-refundable rooms, plus never needed to worry if I was booking at the right time price-wise.

    • Rob says:

      Price Protection worked well during covid. If you’d book a non-refundable hotel which was still open but you couldn’t fly there, you could make a Price Protection claim (because rates had invariably dropped by half or more) and get a decent % of your money back.

  • Jake says:

    Here’s hoping they bring the price match guarantee that made it golden

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