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What are IHG One Rewards hotel points worth?

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This article is our attempt to decide what IHG One Rewards points are worth. How should you value them?

Valuing miles and 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 articles this week.

You can buy IHG One Rewards points directly from IHG here.

What are IHG One Rewards points worth?

You can see the full series of articles here:

The reason I have changed my mind after all these years is that I have found a methodology that works 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 IHG One Rewards 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 IHG One Rewards 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 IHG One Rewards 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 IHG One Rewards points worth?

What are IHG One Rewards points worth?

With our methodology out of the way, let’s take a look at what IHG One Rewards 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.

IHG One Rewards has historically run more generous promotions than the other major chains, but this has not been true since the pandemic. Hilton Honors is the only scheme running back to back promotions these days.

The HfP average valuation of an IHG One Rewards point:

0.4p

We are not justifying this valuation, except to say that I have looked at enough IHG One Rewards redemptions over the years to be happy with it.

How high can value go on the upside?

Not very high, which is not good.

If you can get 0.6p per point then take it.

Over the last three years, IHG One Rewards has been bringing in ‘revenue based redemptions’. In plain English, this means that the points required are linked more closely to the cash price.

Hilton has a similar system, but Hilton was smarter. Hilton still has a ‘points price cap’ for each hotel. You know that you will rarely pay more than 120,000 points per night at its top hotels, and proportionately less at mid-market ones.

IHG One Rewards appears to cap redemptions at 120,000 points per night. The cheaper brands do not have lower caps. There are some exceptions, such as the Maldives hotels, but it holds in major cities such as New York and London.

This means, based on our 0.4p ‘fair value’ opinion, you can beat this if your hotel is selling for £480+ per night. This doesn’t happen often but it does happen. Those are the nights when the best value is to be found.

Of course, even 120,000 points per night is a crazy figure at some brands. Here are two Holiday Inn Express properties in New York at 120,000 points:

What are IHG One Rewards points worth?

When I started collecting IHG points, you could book ANY InterContinental hotel globally for a fixed 30,000 points per night. Other brands cost even less. Things have changed ….

You need to be clear that this is not premium ‘last room availability’ pricing. Hotels are still only obliged to make 5% of their rooms available for redemption. IHG is also still only paying hotels the usual peanuts figure for redemptions. On a stay at Hotel Indigo Bath (reviewed here) I was given IHG’s receipt by mistake which showed they paid £32 for my room.

New hotels can often provide value

One trend that we have seen is IHG using redemptions to drive business at new hotels. It takes time for a hotel to grow demand, and IHG is keen to show the owner that the reward scheme can deliver guests. New hotels can often give you a superior ‘pence per point’ as a result.

That said, realistically, the best value you can expect from IHG One Rewards is 0.6p per point. If you are booking a hotel where your points are worth 0.6p, take it and pocket the cash saving.

What are IHG One Rewards points worth?

How low can value go on the downside?

Low, but not disastrously so.

One upside of the move to revenue-based redemption pricing is that you will rarely get a truly terrible deal.

My London analysis in 2021 showed that 0.25p per IHG One Rewards point is about as bad as it gets. I’ve not seen anything to change my view since then.

That said, 0.25p is still 35% worse than our benchmark of 0.4p per point, so you should absolutely avoid redeeming at this level if at all possible.

If IHG One Rewards devalues hugely tomorrow, what is your escape route?

This is our floor price. What can you do with your points if IHG One Rewards devalues massively overnight?

With IHG One Rewards, the best value is to convert your points to airline miles or to gift cards. It doesn’t end well either way.

Airline miles:

The conversion rate to Avios and other major airline currencies is 5:1.

If we assume an airline mile is worth 1p, then you are getting 0.2p per IHG One Rewards point in the worse case scenario.

Gift cards:

If you redeem IHG One Rewards points for a UK High Street gift card it is even worse. The catalogue is here.

At the top end – it is worse for smaller balances – 55,000 points gets you a £100 voucher for a UK High Street store or restaurant chain. This is 0.18p per IHG One Rewards point.

These gift card deals devalue year on year – last year they were 53,000 points, the year before they were 52,500 points and the year before they were 49,000 points. Someone at IHG thinks they are being clever by improving their P&L each year with a devaluation whilst actually killing the redemption via a thousand cuts.

By redeeming for gift cards, you are losing more than 50% of the value compared to an average hotel redemption and almost 75% of the value compared to a ‘good’ hotel redemption.

In summary …. what do we think IHG One Rewards points are worth?

  • on average: 0.4p per point
  • on a very good day: 0.6p per point – usually there is little ability to go beyond this unless you want a luxury hotel in New York, London, Paris etc
  • on a bad day: 0.25p per point
  • if you transfer out in a worse case scenario: 0.2p per point for airline miles or UK retailer gift cards

The lack of a pricing cap per hotel (ignoring the non-brand specific 120,000 points cap) makes IHG One Rewards less attractive than Hilton Honors or World of Hyatt. Marriott Bonvoy also seems to be retaining some sort of caps at its priciest hotels. Not having a cap at the high end sharply reduces your ability to get outsize value.

There is no point saving up for a bumper redemption at a luxury resort. Revenue-based pricing makes those rewards no better value than your local Holiday Inn Express.

If you find that a certain hotel can get you 0.6p per point then you should pull the trigger, because you will struggle to do better. Any redemptions which get you 0.4p to 0.5p should be seen as acceptable.

If you want to buy additional IHG One Rewards points from IHG, the link to buy is here.


IHG One Rewards news

IHG One Rewards update – August 2025:

Get bonus points: IHG is currently running TWO global promotions. You can register for both.

Promo 1: IHG One Rewards will give you your choice of either 2,000 bonus points for every two nights or 8,000 bonus points for every four nights you stay.  The offer period is 20th May to 31st August. Click here to register and learn more.

Promo 2: IHG One Rewards is running a promotion aimed at five brands – Crowne Plaza, voco, Vignette, Candlewood and Garner.  You will earn triple base points for stays at these brands until 30th September. Click here to register and learn more.

New to IHG One Rewards?  Read our overview of IHG One Rewards here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on ‘What are IHG One Rewards points worth?’ is here.

Buy points: If you need additional IHG One Rewards points, you can buy them here.

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from IHG and the other major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Comments (28)

  • ffwd says:

    I don’t know much about IHG but recently booked Galapagos Indigo. The Standard Room through to King Oceanfront were all the same points per night, although the cash price difference for those 2 rooms was 9%.

    • John says:

      I believe IHG centrally sets a single price for redemptions. Hotels have to allow standard rooms to be booked on points and are free to allow redemptions for higher categories as well, but the price will remain the same.

      • NorthernLass says:

        I think it’s more of an intern-style error. The Holiday Inn GCM charges 25k points for standard rooms and 45k for suites.

  • Craig says:

    My wife and I got lucky about 3 years ago. We used our modest stash of points topped up with a buy points and get 100% bonus. Our incredible villa at Six Senses Vietnam worked out at £250 a night instead of £750. However, working the figures recently any 100% extra offers will cost the same as booking most hotels with cash.

    • JDB says:

      Three years ago was eons ago in hotel pricing terms as the world emerged from covid. The customer called the shots then, but that is no longer the case.

  • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

    A few advantages with points bookings

    1 you can use CSU with them which isn’t n possible with some of the cheaper £ rates

    2 the ability to cancel and rebook should the rate fall- again something not available with all £ rates.

    • BlairWaldorfSalad says:

      I had an ar5ey attitude at an IC earlier this year when the check in agent noted that I have 5 screenfuls of pages of past reservations – mostly cancelled for a lower points price. I felt it was an opportune monent to deploy the line “Don’t hate the player, hate the game.” On the next stay there I was mistakenly like Rob charged by the hotel for the amount they bill IHG for. It was $35.

      • yorkshireRich says:

        I had this in Prague the other month at a GHA hotel. I had cancelled 3 times and then by the end booked a non refundable rate. The assistant manager said “you cancelled them, this is your fault”. It’s the first time I have even thought twice about cancelling and re-booking.

      • John says:

        The only time this happened to me was at Dublin where I cancelled and rebooked a cash stay, once, for €5 less. For some reason the guy decided to make a point of mentioning it and asked me if I was sure I had really meant to cancel that booking…

        I had 4 nights at an IC initially for 133000 points and eventually got it for 121000. I had rebooked it almost every time the total dropped by 1000. Even though every booking was done as a single stay, on my IHG account each night shows as cancelled and rebooked individually, so there were over 80 entries in my account activity. Noone at the hotel said a thing about this – and I believe the hotel would have received the same reimbursement regardless of how many points are actually spent.

  • Martin says:

    Using the latest (launched yesterday) 100% bonus offer, just bought 52k IHG points for $260 (circa 0.37p per point) and used them to book a two night stay in Harrisburg in September, which would have cost $325. So points value about 0.463p, $65 (£48) saved, not life changing but worth doing 😀

  • BlairWaldorfSalad says:

    The IHG nightly pricing needs to be considered in the context of US credit cardholders getting 4 nights for 3

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      Does it when the number of HfP readers having an IHG CC would be a very small number indeed?

      • BlairWaldorfSalad says:

        Yes because IHG’s calibration of nightly points pricing to elicit ongoing scheme interest takes account of US cardholders being able to significantly undercut the price we see. UK user may baulk at 120K per night; a US user may not if that 120K is effectively 90K for them

  • yorkshireRich says:

    I have a fair few points as I had an IHG stay in mind last year but didn’t go. I’m conscious I need to use them as I remember a comment on here a while ago saying that these programmes also designed to devalue over time.

    I’ve just booked the IC in Phuket in February. The plan is to stay for 6 nights in total. For the weekend it’s 85,000 points per night in a king classic pool view room (Fairly standard room, I think). Applying the weekend Ambassador voucher, I’ve decided to take the plunge and pay around £490 for the whole weekend in a pool access room. I may get a room upgrade and club lounge.
    I’ve then booked a further 4 nights in a king classic pool view room for 72750points per night. It’s currently 72,000 points per night but I’m undecided to re-book just yet due to my post above. 4 nights in the same room with 30 day flexibility is £1226 for 4 nights, as opposed to 291,000 points I’ve paid. To pay for around 292,000 points on the extremely rare 100% sale is around £1077. The plan is to hopefully stay in the same room category that I booked .

    Not much value and obviously I’m missing out on points that I would earn. I don’t think I’m getting ripped off at least.

  • Neil says:

    We’ve been steering our hotel stays towards IHG to get a suite upgrades to use at the Cannes Carlton since it reopened. We tend to stay just after the film festival and a standard room was about £500 per night this year, a little less last year but next year is almost £850 or 200k points. Who’s paying that for an entry level room when there’s no event in town??

    Out of curiosity, I thought I’d test their no blackout dates promise and enquired about a points booking for a night during the film festival. Obviously nothing was available but when pushed about there not being any blackout dates I was told there are not and I could book but it needs to be a minimum of 99 nights during the festival.

    • JDB says:

      Cannes is an expensive, in demand place anyway but that particular hotel is (and always has been) popular with a very specific type of ‘guest’ that will pay the price.

      • NorthernLass says:

        Do they slip the waiter 50 euros for the table on the terrace?!

        • JDB says:

          €50 won’t get you anything from the staff there except a sneery look; the opening bid is much higher. The €50 story was not too far away at the Colombe d’Or! I know the price for having a table on the terrace at the Carlton cleared of guests on a fireworks night was the equivalent of about £250 twenty five years ago.

          It’s a place that the local well heeled French call ‘un peu spécial’ which is difficult to translate, but here is definitely used in a pejorative sense. A lot of trade of various types goes on there…

          • Neil says:

            @JDB How much time have you spent there since it reopened? I’ve been there several times since either on points or low category rooms and the service has been incredible. Never had to tip for a good table or anything else. Any gratuity has been after the fact. Never been kicked off a table because some wealthy guest decided they wanted it either.

          • JDB says:

            @Neil – plenty of times, plus a bit of insider knowledge about what really goes on (and hasn’t changed since the refurb) and it’s still the weakest of the Big 3 in Cannes. All very glitzy but quite a thin veneer.

            As for payment, your original post was saying they have increased the price to play and seemingly giving you the run around.

    • Paul B says:

      I find Cannes is just generally expensive now come the Film Festival, Lions and through into Summer. There is a lot of smaller events in between. Reward avail, at the Carlton next Spring looks much more restrictive.

  • flyforfun says:

    “Airline miles:
    The conversion rate to Avios and other major airline currencies is 5:1.”

    This helps keep my AA miles alive. I’ve not had the opportunity to use them in years as I’ve been trying to take my leisure travel trips to burn a BAPP 2-4-1 voucher. I don’t want to fly to the US so can’t burn the AA miles that way and reward availability on the destinations I want to go to disappears by the time it’s available to AA members. With the lack of a credit card in the UK, Hotel miles seem the only way to keep them alive. I tried the AA e-shop, but ended up wasting £12 trying to get a voucher that never worked. The e-survey portal that some talk about seems not to be accepting new members when I look. My AA Miles are due for expiry in 3 months again, so I’ll transfer some hotel miles next month to allow plenty of time for issues!

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