Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Who are the HSBC Premier credit card airline and hotel transfer partners?

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

Three years ago, HSBC Premier undertook a substantial upgrading of its credit card transfer partners.

What was a bit of a laughing stock – although Avios was a partner – suddenly became a real contender, at least for airline miles.

Even better, transfers to airline and hotel partners are instant and there is no minimum points transfer.

The only snag is that the HSBC Premier credit card is a faff to get. You need to sign up for free to HSBC’s Premier current account (£100,000 income or £100,000 in a HSBC investment product required) in order to apply for the free Premier credit card or the paid-for Premier World Elite credit card.

HSBC airline and hotel credit card partners

The two HSBC credit cards earn as follows:

The free HSBC Premier card, reviewed here, earns 1 HSBC point per £1 spent, which translates to 0.5 airline miles or hotel points. Overseas spend earns double points but has a 2.99% FX fee.

The representative APR is 23.9% variable.

The £290 HSBC Premier World Elite card, reviewed here, earns 3 HSBC points per £1 spent, which translates to 1.5 airline miles or hotel points. Overseas spend earns 4 HSBC points per £2 spent but incurs a 2.99% FX fee. There is a sign-up bonus of 40,000 points, worth 20,000 airline miles or hotel points.

The representative APR is 100.2% variable, including the annual fee.  The representative APR on purchases is 29.9% variable.

How to transfer points to travel partners

Annoyingly, it is not possible to make points transfers via the HSBC app. You need to log in to the HSBC UK website using your HSBC Premier details.

One bit of positive news is there are no transfer minimums.

2 HSBC points will get you 1 airline mile or 1 hotel point.

HSBC airline and hotel credit card partners

Transfers to partners are instantaneous

Yes, instant. In the UK points market, this is still rare.

You aren’t at risk of missing out on a redemption by waiting for your HSBC points to go across.

Who are the HSBC Premier credit card travel partners?

You can transfer your HSBC Premier points into the following airline schemes:

  • Asia Miles
  • British Airways Club
  • Emirates Skywards
  • Etihad Guest
  • EVA Air Infinity MileageLands
  • Finnair Plus
  • Flying Blue (Air France KLM)
  • Qantas Frequent Flyer
  • Qatar Airways Privilege Club
  • Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer
  • TAP Miles&Go

There are also two hotel partners:

  • Wyndham Rewards
  • IHG One Rewards

Are these transfers good value?

There are two ways of looking at this:

  • Are airline and hotel scheme transfers good value compared to redeeming for shopping gift cards etc?
  • If they are, are any of the airline or hotel options significantly better or worse?

Are miles and points transfers good value compared to the alternatives?

Yes. Unlike many credit cards, airline miles are excellent value compared to taking shopping vouchers which is the only other option.

1,500 HSBC points gets you 750 airline miles or £5 of vouchers (Amazon, Costa, M&S, John Lewis, Tesco etc) so you are ‘paying’ just 0.66p per airline mile.

HSBC airline and hotel credit card partners

Are any of the airline or hotel options significantly better or worse?

Since we always value airline miles at around 1p, at least as long as they are used for premium cabin flight redemptions, we can say that they are a good use of your HSBC points. Compared to taking shopping vouchers, you are ‘paying’ 0.66p per mile which is a great deal.

However, the hotel transfer ratios stink.

The exchange rate from HSBC to hotel points is 2:1 – the same rate as used for airline miles. This is shocking value because, using a very broad generalisation, airline miles are worth double what hotel points are worth.

For example, I value an IHG One Rewards point at 0.4p. This means that 2 HSBC points gets you 0.4p of IHG One Rewards points – but would also get you 0.66p of shopping vouchers! Avoid – unless you need the points immediately, since the transfer to IHG is instant.

Are there ever transfer bonuses?

Yes. HSBC has run, on a roughly annual basis, a 20% to 30% bonus for transfer into Avios via British Airways Club.

This year it has also run a transfer bonus into Avios via Qatar Airways Privilege Club.

We have also seen trials of bonuses into other programmes, most recently a 20% bonus on transfers into Qantas Points.

Conclusion

HSBC Premier has established itself as the clear leader in the Visa / Mastercard space for anyone who wants a ‘convertible currency’ that can be moved to multiple travel rewards schemes.

For 11 of the 13 partners (the two Avios airlines being the exceptions) it is the only way of earning these points from Visa or Mastercard spend.

The snag is that you need a HSBC Premier current account to apply for these cards. This requires a £100,000 income or the holding of £100,000 in a HSBC insurance or investment product – albeit Premier has decent benefits, including full travel insurance, and is free.

If you are 100% certain that you want to earn Avios, which as this is HfP is likely, then forget HSBC Premier. You should get the free Barclaycard Avios Mastercard or the paid-for Barclaycard Avios Plus Mastercard which has a 25,000 Avios bonus, and which doesn’t require you to move your current account.

Our full review of the free HSBC Premier credit card is here.

Our full review of the HSBC Premier World Elite credit card is here.

Comments (17)

  • Andy says:

    I’m considering travel to Salvador (Brasil) from London. Could I use this as a vehicle to convert my 200k avios to flytap miles? Would it be worth it?
    Currently earning ba Premier companion vouchers for business class seats to Rio and then having to do domestic flights to Salvador. (booked to fly next Feb. 100k avios +£575 for 2 business class seats + another 100k and £15 for the return)

    • meta says:

      Just check whether there is availability on tap. I only redeemed for their African routes and certain periods are blocked from redemptions. I actually prefer booking tap with Aeroplan. More straightforward and I don’t want to be dealing with difficult Portuguese CS let alone wait for months for refund.

    • Andrew T says:

      That is an option, but youd have to check out and back in, since your bags wont go all the way to Salvador.
      Since this is about HSBC, if you have this Credit Card, you could transfer points to TAP Miles&Go and then fly UK to Lisbon and then to Salvador.

    • Throwawayname says:

      Air Europa fly to SSA with a premium economy cabin which they often sell for less than £1k all-in return (you can do a multi city or an 1-day stopover to save on the APD). As the flight to the NE is only about 8 hours and going to GIG would entail a huge amount of backtracking, I think that option is superior compared to faffing about with a conversion to TAP and getting constrained by award availability.

  • Lumma says:

    I find it strange that most of the “rich people” current accounts have moved to £100k pa as the qualifying salary due to the tax implications of earning just beyond that.

    Or are they wanting the customers with the big investments rather than those that might just pay a large salary in for the free perks and transfer it elsewhere?

    • BBbetter says:

      That is the gross salary. In reality, even if gross salary is higher, very few are going to pay the marginal rate of 60%. Banks know this. The recent increase in qualification is just a catchup to rise in earnings in the last few years.

  • Pebbles says:

    I know someone that recently applied (due to the £500 Harrods voucher promo they were running) and was told they needed £100k NET to qualify and that HSBC would be looking for £8333 HITTING YOUR ACCOUNT each month.

    That would be somewhere about north of £160k gross.

    • Rob says:

      That’s obviously nonsense.

    • Maples says:

      Someone on Reddit asked that last year or so about how someone on the phone or branch told them they needed £75K coming into the account each year. These people probably don’t know the full details.

  • Dylan says:

    Sorry for the offtopic but I’d love to see HfP look at Yonder’s novel points system and whether it’s worth redeeming points for flights and hotels through them.

    • Lumma says:

      £180 a year and you get 0.95% cashback when used for flights, so put £2k a month through and you’ll be up a tenner after a year.

      • Jon says:

        Agree flights are not the best use for Yonder points. But, if there’s an “experience” you like (I’ve been to a handful of interesting restaurants as an example), you get more like 2% cashback.

        Of course you’ve got to take into account the fee (which is £160 if paid annually), though it does come with travel insurance.

        For me, I’ll probably switch to the free version when my trial runs out, but a good partner card for an Amex or Barclaycard.

  • Thywillbedone says:

    Why, oh why, do they have such terrible hotel partners?? Any idea if they plan to add others? (speaking as someone with far too many Avios)

    • Rob says:

      Rate is so bad that even if they added more you’d feel bad about redeeming!

  • Kowalski says:

    Would love to see them add World of Hyatt as a transfer partner at a sensible rate!

    I’ve had the Prem World Elite card for 8+ years now. Find it an excellent card. Best option in the UK for Krisflyer and Skywards

    • Rob says:

      Yes, 2:1 into Hyatt would be fair, indeed even a little generous, and might be enough to tempt me back to the card.

Leave a Reply to Lumma Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please click here to read our data protection policy before submitting your comment

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.