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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 (36)

  • Paul says:

    The issue with the above maths is that you can only generally buy points on flex room, not the cheapest rate. This is usually £15-40 extra depending on the stay.

    • Rob says:

      Not many people book pre-paid. I’ve just booked 12 nights in Norway across 3 properties and all fully flexible. Want to keep my options open for better deals / price cuts over the next 8 weeks, plus keep my ability to cancel the whole trip open if the weather turns unseasonably bad. 10% discount isn’t anywhere near enough to give up flexibility.

      • Andrew says:

        A slight straw-man there Rob, I’d counter that and say the majority of people here don’t book and stay on the Best Available Rate at IHG – whether that’s the flexible railcard rate, other corporate codes, a good redemption, the virtuoso rate etc – which does mean there’s an additional cost to these bonus points.

        (Also I’d hazard a guess that most people’s flights are not redemptions, so a flexible hotel isn’t worth much if you can’t refund flights for a voucher this side of the pond either..)

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          I agree with you Andrew.

          I think the vast majority of people book prepaid or deposit non cancellable or refundable cheap rates rather than BFR and rates like RC etc.

          I think we often get into the mindset that everyone on HfP is booking flexible rates and then checking every week or so to see if the rate has dropped and cancelling and rebooking,

          • Nick says:

            “I think we often get into the mindset that everyone on HfP is booking flexible rates and then checking every week or so to see if the rate has dropped and cancelling and rebooking”

            That’s exactly what I do, and have done for many years, and it’s definitely served us well. Only last week we stayed at one of the London Indigo hotels, where the rate around 6 weeks before was over £150/night higher than we ended up paying, after three changes.

            Sure, I accept that it doesn’t work for all properties, or all people, but it’s definitely worked for us over the years.

          • Daniel says:

            I actually have been doing this on my current trip! but as I mentioned in my first comment on this post this offer only works for the BEST flexible rate. Almost all my bookings are 5-day cancellation or 3 day (railcard) rates. It’s £20+ more per night to go from those to the most flexible rate. Not worth it just to have the option to buy points.

          • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

            @Nick and I do it too but not everyone does it and it comes as a shock to some that you can do it with very little effort.

            I just sit with the app on my iPad and my bookings spreadsheet on my laptop and work my way down. Sometimes there’s no change and some times it does save a load of points or cash.

            My main point is the assumption that we all do it and do it I regularly.

            Other assumptions made are we all have Amex cards and piles of 2-4-1s at our disposal and millions of points sloshing around.

      • Daniel says:

        I just doubt these are the most flexible rate you need to be able to buy the points. Why are you booking day-before cancellable stays when you can usually book 3 or 5 day cancellable stays that cost £20ish a night less? It’s just throwing money away

    • John says:

      Use Amex offers to offset it

      Also I’ve noticed for over 50% of my IHG bookings the flexible rate drops towards the day of the stay so can rebook for less

      • Scott says:

        I find 95% of my hotel stays increase.

        Years ago, when jumping around the US, I used to book flex rates, cancel, rebook etc., but now it’s say £70 and a day or two later, £77, then £109 etc.

        Only ever cancelled one IHG stay on the day (due to late flights and would have cost $$$ to get to the hotrl for 3hrs tops) and a Premier Inn a couple of times due to change of plans (but had to rebook at the same hotel for another date rather than a refund).

    • TimM says:

      I do wish people would not use the word “maths” (or, worse, “math”) when they mean arithmetic. In my school days “maths” was differential calculus, topology, number theory, algebra, trigonometry, statistics, mechanics etc… How many school children know how to calculate the centre of gravity of an irregular object from first principles now, or the philosophical difference between ‘1’, ‘2’ and zero? None, I would imagine, because the subject of mathematics is no longer taught in the UK. When it is counting the cost of two cans of baked beans, please use the word “arithmetic” as the closest approximation. Alan Turing famously proved that arithmetic, as we know it now, was incomputable and so anything that relies upon it is logically unsound. Arithmetic is convenient but provably unsound. To hear people bander the word “maths’ around when they ignorantly mean arithmetic hurts the senses.

      • RussellH says:

        I would agree, though on slightly different grounds.

        At primary, in the 1950s, we did arithmetic. I was slow at it and found it difficult. And others in the class were much better at it. These days I always use a calculator. Previously I was a great fan of the slide rule (any one else??)
        At secondary, we did maths, starting with trigonometry, which I found very interesting. Did not do statistics or number theory or topology, even at A level, but those that followed me to the same secondary and were good at arithmetic did not even do A level maths.

        This showed me that while arithmetic may have been part of maths, mathsarithmetic.

      • Paul says:

        In Scotland I studied and past ‘O’ grade Arithmetic and Maths so I agree with you. Bizarrely I only got a C for Arithmetic but a B for Maths.

  • John says:

    Did this last year to renew diamond. The best packages tended to be at IC, Indigo and Voco. IC Wellington had 5000 points for NZ$19, about £8.50. Yes flexible rate but it wasn’t that much more

    In total did 18 nights with 5000 = 90k meaning I spent just north of US$3000 (and the 150k redeemable points earned) on stays of which I had 40 total to get lounge pass for 2 years.

  • Jeff says:

    This is the way I retain status every year. However, as others have pointed out above, this article misses out that only the Best Flexible Rate allows booking of these points packages, and so you are paying a premium versus using a cheaper (but similarly flexible) rate such as the Railcard Partner Rate (corporate code 786996886).

    The maths works for me, but I’m under no illusions that I’m paying for my status – it’s certainly not “almost free”.

  • NorthernLass says:

    I was busted down to Platinum at the beginning of this year after 2 years of Diamond, and to be honest, have not really missed it. For 1-night stays there’s usually a HIEX if we really want breakfast before we head out (and in the US, avid was a decent budget option). The option of drinks vouchers for Platinum has actually given better value than free breakfast on some stays – at the HIEX AGP last month we got 4 vouchers (they doubled it when my OH mentioned it was my birthday), and the room rate was only 63 euros!

  • Clive O says:

    Sorry if this is a naïve question, but: How is this situation/benefits affected if one is (already)an IHG Ambassador level member (or uses points or even ££ to upgrade to it)?

    • NorthernLass says:

      You still have to get the 120k points for Diamond. If you’re happy enough with the Platinum granted via Ambassador, you can just keep renewing that if it makes sense for you. I might do this next year.

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