Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Should you convert Amex, Heathrow Rewards or HSBC points to Avios on receipt?

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A regular question I receive from readers is about ‘convertible’ points.  There is a psychological desire to move, say, your American Express Membership Rewards points to Avios as soon as you receive them, perhaps because you like to see your Avios balance increasing.

Is this the right approach, or should you leave your points where they are for as long as you can?

Why ‘convertible’ points are more valuable than other points

Let’s recap why you should value ‘convertible’ points more highly than other points, and why you definitely should not rush to convert them.

Should you convert points to Avios?

In general, you should value ‘convertible’ points more highly than a point which has no other use.  It is worth choosing ‘convertible’ points when given the choice, and you should keep your points unconverted for as long as possible.

There are a number of ‘convertible’ currencies you will come across.  The main one is American Express Membership Rewards points, which can be earned from The Platinum Card, Preferred Rewards Gold, American Express Rewards Credit Card, Business Platinum or Business Gold.

Other convertible currencies include Tesco Clubcard points (to Virgin Points), Heathrow Rewards points (to various schemes including Avios and Virgin Points) and HSBC Premier Mastercard points (to Avios and various other airline and hotel programmes). Most hotel scheme points are also, to a lesser or greater extent, convertible.

(I am not discussing Nectar to Avios transfers in this article, because those points can be moved in either direction, albeit with a loss of value.  This is not the case for the other transfers listed above.)

There is one thing you need to remember

This is the key point I want to make:

There are various reasons for this:

  • An American Express point will hold its value better.   If you transfer them to Avios and Avios devalues, you have lost out – you can’t convert them back.  Keeping them as Amex Membership Rewards points means that you have alternative options. Look at what happened to Virgin Points last October ….
  • American Express or British Airways may decide to run a conversion bonus at some point for moving your points across to Avios.  If this happened, 1 Amex point would be worth more than 1 Avios.  Whilst I admit that Amex and Clubcard bonuses are rare, Heathrow Rewards (admittedly not since the pandemic) and HSBC Premier (annually to Avios and occasionally to other schemes) do run them.
Should you convert points to Avios?
  • American Express may run a great promotion with another partner which allows you to get far more value from a Membership Rewards point than you would get from 1 Avios
  • Your personal priorities may change and you may decide that you would prefer to use your Amex / Heathrow Rewards / Clubcard / HSBC Premier points for something else other than Avios or Virgin Points.  By not converting, you retain the flexibility. 

I have written on HfP before that, even before the partnership ended, I did not convert my Tesco Clubcard points into Avios.  For years I used them for Safestore as we have some furniture with them and Safestore accepted Clubcard vouchers at 3x face value.

When that deal ended, we switched to Uber credit at 3x face value.  My choice was to use 100 Clubcard points for either £3 off my Uber bills or receive 240 Avios.  If I took Avios I would be valuing them at 1.25p each – and I don’t.

Of course, the Clubcard / Uber deal is now over too.  The few Clubcard points I earn – and it is only a few these days – get sent over to Virgin Points to keep my life easy.

Fast transfers are another reason to leave points where they are

There is another reason why keeping American Express, HSBC and Tesco points in their ‘original’ form as long as possible makes sense.

American Express Membership Rewards points now convert INSTANTLY to Avios, as well as Virgin Points, Delta SkyMiles and Marriott Bonvoy points.

HSBC Premier credit card points transfer instantly to ALL partners.

There is absolutely no reason whatsoever, except for a conversion bonus, why you should move points to those partners before you need them.

Tesco Clubcard points usually convert to Virgin Atlantic within 24 hours. If a reward seat opened up and I didn’t have enough Virgin Points, I would be confident enough to assume that the seat would still be there tomorrow morning when I could have converted points across.

Some transfers, admittedly, are not instant.  Slow transfers are one reason why you may want to move across hotel points before you need them.  The last time I moved some Starwood (now Marriott Bonvoy) points to Lufthansa it took 28 days! I was lucky that the redemption I wanted was still available.

You shouldn’t rely on a hotel scheme moving your points across to British Airways in a hurry.  If you will be totally reliant on a hotel transfer to make a redemption you have planned, you may want to move them in advance.

Conclusion

In general, if you want to maximise the value of your points then you want to maximise their flexibility.  For ‘convertible’ currencies, this means keeping them in their original form as long as possible.

PS.  If you are planning to cancel an The Platinum Card or American Express Preferred Rewards Gold Credit Card but don’t want to empty out your Membership Rewards account, there is a solution.  Get The American Express Rewards Credit Card, which is FREE and allows you to keep your Membership Rewards account open.

This article explains why The American Express Rewards Credit Card is an easy way to save your Membership Rewards points.

Comments (21)

  • HampshireHog says:

    In Virgin’s brave new world I wouldn’t be sure the redemption I saw would be there at the same price tomorrow.

  • Polly says:

    Also, transferring to the ARCC to hold points prevents the 24 month pause starting. Depends on what your personal goal is. Now, we split our MRs roughly half in half between avios and bonvoy points. Aim to hold 200k plus bonvoys for our annual 5d W Sentosa stay.

  • Jonathan says:

    It’s probably advisable to note HSBC’s expiry policy on their points, don’t think they’ll be there as long as an account is open…

  • Stuart says:

    I’ve never redeemed any of my AMEX points, only massed about 60k. Looked at the AMEX travel and it appears thay are only worth 0.5p/point, so only giving me £300 to redeem. I don’t fly with BA/QR/AY etc. so not interested in Avios. Would like to be using them to chip a bit of the bill for a parents trip (Lufthansa and Holiday Inn on specific dates), but I guess I’d need to sign up to the LH or IHG programs (which I rather avoid signing up just for this trip as I don’t use either group myself) to use them at a better rate than 0.5p/point. If only Accor was a transfer partner then it’s be a no-brainer for myself.

  • Froggee says:

    I wonder how much Rob has spent storing that furniture by now?

    • RC says:

      You are making the point FOR Rob.
      Storing physical assets carries a storage cost, whereas there is no cost to hold onto intangible assets. The reverse applies – there is a cost (ie risk of devaluation and other typical BA bad stuff) of.converting early. For example, HSBC might run a conversion bonus you’ll miss out on.

      Now, as BA is having an almost unheard of June sale, that has JFK in it from £350 return that is booksble at short notice (still no good as NYC hotels are stratospheric cost), then all is not well at BA even though it runs ‘sakes’ like DFS.
      So I’d bet with the reward scheme changes for the worse they’ll be some good bonuses to come this autumn.

    • Rob says:

      Don’t get me started. It’s stuff I want thrown out but my wife insists on keeping and vice versa!

      It’s also cheaper than living somewhere bigger with a junk room!

      On the upside, I have started storing HfP stuff in it (the banners used at events etc) which allows me to writ off a % of the cost against tax 🙂

      • Erico1875 says:

        If it’s in there for a year, you don’t really need it or miss it.
        When we downsized from a 5 bed house we threw out a skip load of stuff from the attic, we had stored for 15 years 15 years+.
        2 years later, haven’t yearned for any of it

  • Martin says:

    Talking about convertible points, any news on the eagerly anticipated Nectar-Marriott tie-up originally said to be happening early in. 2025 🙄

  • Lee says:

    I took out the Amex Plat (for a 95,000 MR sign up bonus)
    Once I hit the spend target I plan to cancel and transfer the MR (probably to avios but will decide when the time comes, I can’t justify the annual fee long term)
    But just to comment that cancelling then restarts the 24 month timer for another sign up bonus which is not the case if I take out the free Amex simply in order to hold on to my MR.

  • Fazzy Bear says:

    One tidbit that I got from this site was to have Hilton points ready to redeem for some of their experiences.

    Waiting overnight for conversion from Amex would be risky in those scenarios.

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