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Why IHG One Rewards ‘bonus points packages’ get you elite status quickly – and almost free

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In 2022 IHG launched its new IHG One Rewards loyalty programme, which covers Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza, Hotel Indigo, InterContinental, Holiday Inn Express etc.

We were very pleasantly surprised with what IHG had done with IHG One Rewards. Our full review of IHG One Rewards is here. Suddenly, IHG had a loyalty scheme which could genuinely compete with Marriott and Hilton.

The bad news was that to earn top tier Diamond Elite status – which is what you need for free breakfast and the best upgrades – you now require 120,000 status points per year. This is a lot, by any standards.

There is a way of short cutting this, however.

Why IHG One Rewards 'bonus points packages' get you elite status quickly

If you are looking to earn status in IHG One Rewards, one of the easiest ways of doing it is by booking ‘bonus points packages’.

There are other ways to get easy status-qualifying points, as this HfP article explains, but the methods are fewer than they were.

When you are search for hotels on ihg.com, you will often – but not always – come across a situation like this when booking a refundable rate:

Why IHG One Rewards 'bonus points packages' get you elite status quickly

In this example, you are paying an extra £14 for 3,000 IHG One Rewards points.  This is only slightly above the value of the points – I value an IHG point at 0.4p, so you are getting £12-worth of bonus points.

Note that the 3,000 bonus points are awarded per night.  For a long stay, the bonus will add up.

The number of points and the cash cost are not fixed. Here is an example from Berlin where a Holiday Inn Express is offering 5,000 points per night and where the pricing is higher than the London example above:

Why IHG One Rewards 'bonus points packages' get you elite status quickly

These points also qualify for elite status

This is the real reason why you may want to book a ‘bonus points package’.

As well as counting towards booking a free night, the points you earn are ‘elite qualifying’.  This means that they count towards status renewal or promotion.

Because the bonus is per night, you can easily earn a substantial number of points.

Annoying IHG has now removed the explanatory box on the website which confirmed this. At one point there was a ‘?’ check box which said this when clicked:

Why IHG One Rewards 'bonus points packages' get you elite status quickly

Does the maths work? Possibly

Let’s imagine that you would naturally earn 50,000 IHG One Rewards base points per year, based on 30 nights at £150 each (£125 excluding VAT, which is $168 at 10 base points per $1).

Based on the costs in the first example above – the one capped at 3,000 points per night – buying 3,000 additional points on 24 of those nights would cost you (£14 x 24) £336.

This would get you 72,000 additional base points which, when added to the 50,000 base points you will earn naturally, triggers top tier Diamond Elite status at 120,000 points.

Here’s the key thing. We value an IHG One Rewards points at 0.4p. This is easy to achieve when redeeming. This means that the 72,000 points you have bought will get you (72,000 x 0.4p) £288 of future hotel stays for which you paid £336. Your Diamond Elite status has effectively cost you £48.

If you are smarter on your redemptions and can average 0.5p per IHG point when redeeming, the 72,000 points you purchased will get you £360 of free stays. You’ve made a £24 profit on the £336 you spent and earned Diamond Elite.

Remember one thing though ….

When you read about IHG One Rewards, you will see references to guaranteed club lounge access and guaranteed ‘confirmed in advance’ suite upgrades.

These are NOT status benefits. They are ‘Milestone Rewards’, triggered when you do a specific number of nights. The key guaranteed benefit of Diamond Elite is free breakfast with the potential for ‘if available’ upgrades.

Whilst buying bonus points packages via the route we explain above IS a good way of getting IHG One Rewards status, it does not unlock all of the benefits of the programme. To earn Milestone Rewards – explained in this HfP article – you need to do ‘heads in beds’.

Comments (34)

  • Coleslaw says:

    “ Suddenly, IHG had a loyalty scheme which could genuinely compete with Marriott and Hilton.”

    If you’re aiming for Bonvoy or Hhonors then you’re setting the bar very low indeed.

  • Paul says:

    I had a stay in Qatar at the start of Ramadan and took the 5000 point offer at around £23 a night. It was a 10 night stay and bonus points did indeed count towards status.

  • Peter says:

    Completely agree. Just done 10 nights in the States, 5,000 additional points and am about 80% of the way to retaining Diamond.

    In the States, especially in InterContinentals and Indigos the breakfasts are not cheap, so the principal benefit of “free breakfast” for two is worth it, though increasingly instead of a free breakfast you get a certain amount of $ credit towards the cost of breakfast, so beware.

    • John says:

      I’d complain to IHG about that, unless there has been a T&C change which I missed?

  • Daniel says:

    The monetary evaluation of this does not work in practice as these points offers only show up with the most flexible rate so you have to pay more than you ordinarily would just to be able to buy extra points.

    Even other flexible rates don’t offer the option if there is a more flexible rate available (e.g 5 day cancellation vs 1 day)

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      Indeed the “diamond for £48’ only works out to be that if you only ever book BFR (and all your stays are £ 150 a night!)

      If you normally only pay non refundable rates moving to pay BFR is an expensive bump.

      • aseftel says:

        Even if you’d book a flex rate, you’re leaving a lot of value on the table not booking a Destined rate (at participating properties), including the free breakfast that is the impetus for all this.

  • TimM says:

    My dislike of chain hotels is well-known (‘they are for non-travellers looking not to travel’ sums it up) but, accidentally, I am booked into the Iberostar Select Kantaoui Bay hotel, the one formerly known as the Riu Imperial Marhaba Hotel, before the massacre, the poshest hotel in Tunisia, in December. The Iberostar brand comes under the “etc.” in this article on IHG (P.S. I think here should be two dots after etc. as it is an abbreviation and also the end of a sentence). Given its history, rates are very good value and the rooms and public areas surprisingly spacious. I have found guest relations to be exceptionally helpful. Iberostar needs a mention, from time to time, as part of IHG.

  • Craig says:

    Nice article thanks. I find buying Ambassador with points each year works pretty well for my wife and I. This comes with Platinum status for 40,000 points. Apart from the Diamond guaranteed breakfast I don’t think there is a massive difference between the two. I always message a hotel in advance to try and get confirmation of an upgrade. This hit the jackpot in Monterey a couple of months ago and we were allocated probably the best room in the hotel. On the occasions when no upgrade is offered I take the guaranteed points. Four failed upgrades gets enough for the next year’s Ambassador status. I realise everyone’s travel profile is different but this works for us.

    • davedent says:

      The difference between Ambassador and Diamond is that diamond works at Regent and Kimpton. The valuable perks are the lounge membership milestone and the confirmed suite upgrades. At a regent a lounge membership can save you $300 per couple per night for all day free flow champagne and food.

      • Craig says:

        Platinum Ambassador deffo works at Kimpton. I have had upgrades in London and Barcelona.

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          What is working at Kimpton is your IHG Platinum status not the Ambassador.

          • Craig says:

            Purchase Ambassador and Platinum comes as part of the package so in a way they are one and the same?

          • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

            No they aren’t the same.

            Plat is a benefit of AMB but not the reverse.

            Plat won’t get you a 4pm checkout at an IC but AMB will for example.

            AMB on it’s own won’t get you extra points only Plat will do that.

  • Josh says:

    Rob, I think highly inaccurate to say that IHG has a loyalty program which competes with Marriott. I would agree with Hilton comparison but then again Hilton and IHG are both second tier. I at Marriott: 1. always get 4 PM check out. 3.often get a suite upgrade in Asia and Europe. 3. Always get executive lounge access..
    my partner has ihg diamond, but we still rarely stay at ihg those three very important benefits are missing.

    • Rob says:

      You can take suite upgrade vouchers and lounge passes as milestone rewards though which closes the gap.

  • Neil says:

    Extra elite points may be available on Non refundable rates.

    Before I booked Raffles (largely because of. Rob’s review) I was looking at non refundable rates for the InterContinental Warsaw for July 11 – 13, and was offered to ‘add extras’ including adding elite-qualifying points for £22 but nowhere did it state how many extra points.

    The points earned example with the extra points ticked or not is the same amount on the review your reservation page.

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