Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

What are Accor Live Limitless hotel points worth?

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

This article is our attempt to decide what Accor Live Limitless points are worth. How should you value them?

Valuing miles and hotel points is a thankless job. We have always published articles on what Avios points are worth, but that Avios article is so complex that it simply proves my point.

In the face of constant reader requests, however, I wrote this series of articles on how we value each of the major hotel points currencies.

We are updating the series this week. Accor is the most boring article but alphabetically it has to go first!

What are Accor Live Limitless hotel points worth?

The reason I changed my mind about publishing valuations after all these years was that I found a methodology that worked for me. It takes a subjective valuation and then explains the boundaries around it. Or, in plain English:

  • I will tell you (without justifying it) what I think an Accor Live Limitless point is worth
  • I will tell you, on the upside, how far wrong I can be (which is good news)
  • I will tell you, on the downside, how far wrong I can be (which is bad news)
  • I will tell you what Accor Live Limitless points are worth if you turn them into something else – usually airline miles – which effectively locks in a floor value

Why I think ‘range’ is important when valuing hotel points

When we look at using Avios for business or First Class flights, the ‘cash alternative’ is often a poor comparison. Most HfP readers don’t want to, or simply can’t afford to, pay cash for business or First Class flights. Their choice is Avios or nothing. Even if you can afford to pay, what are you comparing with? A cheap non-refundable sale flight? A pricier flexible ticket? The cost of an indirect flight, not on BA?

Hotels redemptions are different:

  • you stay in far more hotels each year compared to the number of premium cabin flights you take, so you can be selective about when you use points
  • you can usually afford to pay for a hotel if you choose not to use points
  • there are far more options in the hotel market than in the flight market – most people only have a lot of miles in one airline programme, whereas you are likely to hold hotel points in multiple schemes
What are Accor Live Limitless points worth?

It is easy to sit on hotel points until you get a good deal

The net result of the three facts above is that it is easy to turn down a hotel redemption when it doesn’t seem like good value. You can pay cash or redeem via another hotel scheme instead.

Here is the crux of what I am trying to say. If you compare two hotel schemes:

  • scheme A usually gets you 0.3p per point but if you are lucky you can get 1p
  • scheme B usually gets you 0.4p per point but if you are lucky you can get 0.6p

…. scheme A may actually be the best.

Most people who try to ‘value’ hotel points don’t take this into account.

If you redeemed points for every stay you did, regardless of the cash price, scheme B would be the best. No-one does this though. In reality you can pay cash for your stays in scheme A until the day when a bumper redemption arrives and you can get 1p.

Here’s a real example. I value Marriott Bonvoy points at 0.5p as our article will show in a few days. If you do 20 Marriott hotel stays and use Bonvoy points for all of them, I think you will average 0.5p, give or take.

However, in Summer 2023 I spent five nights at the JW Marriott Resort & Spa in Venice, reviewed here. We booked two Junior Suites for 594,000 points in total. I got 1.0p per point, and this was a ‘real’ saving – I have stayed in these rooms before at this hotel and would have paid cash if needed.

Three years ago, I booked three nights at the Al Maha desert resort in Dubai. This got me 1.5p per Bonvoy point vs my 0.5p valuation.

In Summer 2024 I booked The Bodrum EDITION in Turkey where I got 1.5p per Bonvoy point. Admittedly this is not a ‘real’ saving as I wouldn’t have paid the stupendous four figures per night cash price ….

These redemptions justified all of the Marriott stays where I paid cash rather than redeem for 0.5p per point.

What are Accor Live Limitless points worth?

What are Accor Live Limitless points worth?

With our methodology out of the way, let’s take a look at what Accor Live Limitless points are worth.

To keep things simple, we do not adjust for the fact that you would earn points back if you paid cash instead. This can have a noticeable impact when generous bonuses are running.

Accor Live Limitless is different to other hotel programmes

Accor Live Limitless is different to other hotel schemes and this article is structured differently to the rest of the series.

For all of the other programmes we cover, our valuation is an educated estimate based on years of redeeming points. For Accor Live Limitless, it is NOT a guess. Your points have a fixed cash value.

This is both good and bad. The real problem it causes is psychological. It is difficult to get excited about Accor Live Limitless because you can never ‘beat the system’.

Redeem in the Ibis Rotherham East or the Raffles Maldives Meradhoo resort and you get the same value per point – 2.0 Eurocents. There is no logical reason to save your points for a high value redemption, and as you can never be sure that Accor won’t devalue it could even be risky. ‘Earn and burn’ is the logical option with Accor.

‘Earn and burn’ is bad for Accor. Members do not build up huge balances – there is no reason to do so – and so the programme sees cash going out more quickly than it otherwise would. Members are not incentivised to spend at Accor because there is no reason to target ‘aspirational’ redemptions.

The HfP average valuation of an Accor Live Limitless point:

2.0 Eurocents (currently 1.73p)

This is not an estimate. It is your guaranteed return when you redeem Accor Live Limitless points for payment towards a hotel room.

One caveat is that you may want to adjust downwards to offset the fact that you do not earn points on redemption stays. The higher your status in Accor Live Limitless, the more points you would have earned if you had paid cash.

The other caveat is that some rates, including pre-paid ones, cannot be booked with Accor credit. If you always book pre-paid rates then you will need to deliberately pay more than necessary on the trip where you redeem your points.

What are Accor Live Limitless points worth?

How high can value go on the upside?

2.0 Eurocents

Because your reward is fixed, you can’t do better than 2.0 Eurocents per point. Don’t hoard your points.

If you want to extract maximum value, redeem at a hotel which charges in Euro. You will receive the full 2 Eurocents per point without being hit by a potentially dubious FX calculation by Accor.

If you really want to squeeze every last cent of value out of your points, redeem at an ibis or another brand which earns Accor Live Limitless points at a reduced rate. You don’t earn points back on the element paid in points, and as ibis hotels earn at a lower rate, your loss is lower.

(Other brands which earn at a reduced rate are Mama Shelter, Mantra, Peppers, Breakfree, Art Series, Adagio Original, Adagio Access, Jo&Joe, Greet and all extended-stay brands. The absolute lowest earning rate is at Adagio Access, Jo&Joe and Greet.)

Similarly, if you currently have elite status and receive a status bonus, you may want to avoid redeeming points until a future year when you have no or lower status. You are giving up fewer points by redeeming instead.

There is one exception to this strategy ….

There is one exception. Accor runs a small events programme via the Accor Experiences website.

Events promoted on this page tend to be offered cheaply compared to what you get. We have written about many of them on HfP, such as the ALL Terrace at OVO Arena Wembley, VIP tickets for SailGP in Portsmouth or the French Open tennis championships.

Accor runs relatively few UK events via this platform so it isn’t a realistic route for spending large amounts of points. That said, if you are based in London it may be worth sitting on them and keeping an eye out for interesting Accor Experiences events.

How low can value go on the downside?

2.0 Eurocents

There is never a bad day to redeem Accor Live Limitless points. You will receive 2 Eurocents per point everywhere, on every day.

Some people clearly value this level of certainty or Accor would not continue offering it. If you are reading this website, however, I imagine that you are the sort of person who wants to maximise their returns via a higher than usual ‘pence per point’ redemption. Accor Live Limitless is not the programme for you.

What are Accor Live Limitless points worth?

If Accor Live Limitless devalues hugely tomorrow, what is your escape route?

This is our floor price. What can you do with your points if Accor Live Limitless devalues massively overnight? It could, with very little IT trouble, change the rate from 2 Eurocents per point to 1.5 Eurocents or worse.

With Accor Live Limitless, the best value is to convert your points to airline miles.

What is confusing about Accor is that there are generally two different rates used for converting to airline miles. Some programmes convert at 2:1 whilst others convert at 1:1.

Even more confusing is that:

  • Accor to Iberia Club Avios is 1:1 but
  • Accor to The British Airways Club Avios is 2:1

If you are converting Accor Live Limitless points to Avios, send them to an Iberia Club account and use ‘Combine My Avios’ – explained here – to move them to The British Airways Club. You will double the Avios you receive. Note that minimum transfer thresholds apply.

Head for Points values airline miles at 1p, for simplicity.

This means that, converting Accor Live Limitless points to Iberia Club Avios, you are getting 1p (1.16 Eurocents) per Accor point. You are losing 40% of their value compared to redeeming for a hotel room.

Looked at from the other direction, you are ‘paying’ 1.73p per Avios, which is too high.

If your preferred airline partner has a 2:1 conversion rate from Accor, moving Accor points to miles is a terrible deal. You are giving up 4 Eurocents (3.46p) of hotel room for every airline mile you receive.

Let’s be clear though. I suspect the chance of Accor devaluing its ‘2 Eurocents per point’ redemption rate is low. It is a key part of the programme and any change would be painfully obvious to all members.

In summary …. what do we think Accor Live Limitless points are worth?

  • on average: 2.0 Eurocents (1.73p) per point – this isn’t an estimate, it is a fact
  • on a very good day: 2.0 Eurocents per point unless you get lucky with an Accor Experiences event ticket
  • on a bad day: 2.0 Eurocents per point
  • if you transfer out in a worse case scenario: 0.5p or 1p per Accor point, depending on the transfer rate to your preferred frequent flyer programme

The bottom line with Accor Live Limitless is that there is no point saving up for a bumper redemption at a luxury resort because revenue-based pricing makes those rewards no better value than your local Novotel.

As soon as your balance reaches 1,000 points, you should pull the trigger and redeem for a €20 discount on your next booking. There is no value in holding on unless you would consider redeeming points for an Accor Experiences VIP event.

Comments (33)

  • Alesacat says:

    I opened an ALL account to get a reduced rate on a hotel in Vietnam. This stay gave me immediate Silver membership. I linked the account to Qatar which gave me avios as well as the hotel points. I then linked the account to my BA account so I can transfer the avios (I have not done this yet!). This option was not mentioned in the article so just wondered what the thoughts on this are?

    • Rob says:

      We cover this in other articles (this one is purely about spending) – it’s a good deal.

  • Lumma says:

    For myself, I tend to use Accor only when their hotels come up on a booking site as I know it will almost certainly cost less booking direct and my points get auto converted to Iberia after each stay (I believe this is a legacy thing and you’re meant to have 3000 points before converting).

    I’m not sure if I’m becoming a snob, but the last two Ibis Hotels I’ve stayed in have been absolute dumps (Luton Airport and Bamberg Aldstadt), and I always thought they were perfectly acceptable

    • RussellH says:

      I do not know either of the Ibis Hotels that you mention, but I would agree that (like many chains) Ibises can be very variable in quality. The same is true of Novotels, and even more pronounced – Mercures

      • Throwawayname says:

        The red Ibis hotels tend to wear out really quickly because of the type of use (lots of short stays by people who aren’t overly bothered about pristine surroundings and may be less careful than those staying in a better hotel). However, I’ve yet to stay in a green Ibis (Styles) which has been in anything less than great condition.

        Novotels do tend to be consistent and just vary in age and/or quality of maintenance, but a Mercure can literally be anything – a fallen-from-glory luxury hotel, a 2-star property where the rooms are too big for an Ibis, a seriously good 4* with a pool and sauna, a faux-boutique midrange with niceish rooms without a desk area, or even a ‘we really wanted to build a Sofitel but nobody would pay for that in this city/neighbourhood’ Grand Mercure.

        • The Savage Squirrel says:

          Or in the case of the local Mercure; closed to the public and housing Asylum Seekers.

    • Inman says:

      Luton and dump on the same sentence. How surprising 😀

  • Ryan del Mundo says:

    You should probably take off 5% or 10% from your value as its not quite as straightforward as 1 pt = E.02

    You can only redeem them in lots of 2000 points online or (if you are creative and know what you’re doing) in lots of 1000 points at hotels.

    So you aren’t getting exactly E.02 each. I just had the situation where the room was 46E and no matter how I tried to slice and dice he redemption by adding nights I still had to pay a signification cash portion out of pocket.

    The best rates are prepaid so you will maybe be able to pay say E200 of a E230 rate but the other E30 is cash. (E200=8000 points. Would need to spend another E10 to make the rate E240 to spend it all on points). And prepaid rates can’t be figured out later at the hotel, obviously.

    You can get around this if you pay at the hotel as they take 1000 points at E20. But these rates aren’t usually cheaper than prepaid. You can then eat a bit at the restaurant etc to fill up the gap to the next 1000/2000 point level. But its a game.

    So you might want to discount your level a bit as you can’t just throw 49233 points at E.02 at a booking. Sorry for the long winded answer, nothing is simple with Accor, you kind of need a math degree, an accounting background, and a spreadsheet to maximize all their wrinkles.

Leave a Reply to Douglas 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.