Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Bits: win £50 for our 200,000th comment, 100% bonus buying IHG points, SAS / Avis deal

Links on Head for Points may pay us an affiliate commission. A list of partners is here.

News in brief:

Make our 200,000th approved comment

At some point this morning, approved comment number 200,000 will be made on Head for Points.

This is a slightly crazy and very impressive achievement – especially as well over 199,000 of them have been polite and thoughtful.  And at least 198,000 have had no mention of Harry’s ‘place in the sun’ …..

Thank you to everyone for your contributions.  The site genuinely would not be the same without you.

You can go onto a site like Fiverr and buy yourself thousands of fake page views, Twitter followers or Facebook likes.  Online readership statistics can be faked in a hundred different ways.  What you can’t fake, however, are 200,000 comments, and whenever we have a marketing meeting we always point to the discussions on HfP as the best measure of the success of the site.

Anyway …. we’re going to send a £50 Amazon voucher to whoever makes the 200,000th comment.  Unless it is me or Anika.  Or the person did not give their real email on the comment form.  Anyway, we will decide on a winner and let them know.

InterContinental Times Square

100% bonus when you buy IHG Rewards Club points

IHG Rewards Club – the InterContinental, Holiday Inn, Crowne Plaza etc scheme – has brought back its ‘100% buy points bonus’ promotion.  It is as generous an offer as you will ever see for IHG points.

The page to buy points is here.  The deal runs until tomorrow night, 29th September.

Here are the standard purchase rates which do NOT include the bonus:

  • 1,000 – 10,000 points for $13.50 per 1,000 points
  • 11,000 – 25,000 points for $12.50 per 1,000 points
  • 26,000 – 60,000 points for $11.50 per 1,000 points

You receive a 100% bonus with any order of 5,000 points or more.  

With a 100% bonus, you would be able to buy 120,000 IHG points for (at current exchange rates) £515.  This assumes your credit card has 0% FX fees.

Here are a few examples of how this deal may work.

At the top end of the IHG Rewards Club portfolio, you have InterContinental properties which top out at 50,000 – 60,000 points per night. That’s what you would pay for InterContinental Le Grand in Paris or the InterContinental Amstel in Amsterdam.

With a 100% bonus, IHG is effectively selling you a night at a 50,000 point property for £230 all-in.  A 60,000 point hotel would be £275.  At the bottom end, the points for a 5,000 point PointBreaks night would cost just £23.

You should look at this if you have a ‘buy points’ target for your Accelerate promotion – although it makes more sense to buy 5,000 and get the bonus than buy 1,000 for no bonus.  If you are topping off your account, it is also a good deal irrespective of the exact cents per point cost.  The maximum number of points you can buy per year is 120,000 (ie 60,000 plus the 60,000 bonus).

You can buy via this link.

PS.  The image above is of the InterContinental New York Times Square.  IHG and the owners of the hotel are currently heading to court – the owners want to drop the InterContinental brand, and IHG is insisting on $175m of compensation if they do.  You might want to be careful about making any reward bookings here for late 2018 although there is no short-term risk of rooms being cancelled.

Good SAS EuroBonus deal with Avis

We don’t cover SAS EuroBonus much on Head for Points, although the scheme is an American Express Membership Rewards airline partner.

Until the end of October, SAS is running a very attractive Avis deal.  Take 2 x 2-day Avis rentals before the end of the year (to be booked by 31st October) and you will receive a whopping 12,000 EuroBonus miles.

That won’t necessarily get you far, but you could do a top-up via Membership Rewards.  You can get a night in a Radisson hotel for 20,000 SAS miles for example – that is how I got my free night at The May Fair in London 18 months ago.

Using them for flights is less attractive.  You need 20,000 SAS miles, plus taxes, for a one-way European flight on any Star Alliance airline.  That said, if you stretched the definition of Europe to its far reaches then it still may be an OK deal if the taxes made sense.

Full details are on this page of the Avis site.

Comments (410)

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.

  • Callum Hughes says:

    Amazing achievement…First read every day before BBC news,

  • Djouzif says:

    Thank you for the voucher 🙂

  • slonik says:

    OT (and in the hope of being the lucky 200,000!).
    Is there any site/app that tracks when new reward seats are opened up on BA routes, and lets you set up email alerts? I am looking for one seat on a specific flight in the summer (date sadly non-negotiable), which is already full and was hoping they might open up more seats….

  • Fred says:

    I always look forward to your morning newsletter!

  • Roberto says:

    Its amazing what tripe people will write with the hope of winning £50… 🙂

  • Alan says:

    How can you find how many points you need to stay at a particular IHG hotel? Looking to see whether its worth buying the points for a planned pre-cruise stay in Southampton.

    Thanks

    • Alan says:

      Ah. I think I’ve found it but, apparently, there are no rooms available for points purchase at the HIE in Southampton – for any date whatsoever!

      Is availability usually this difficult to find or is it because I was a 2 Adult & 1 child room (which they have available to purchase for cash)

      • Rob says:

        The hotel MUST open up 5% of standard rooms every day for rewards but they can all be the smallest standard rooms.

      • John says:

        We are sorry, the IHG® Rewards Club system is currently unavailable. Please try again later or contact the IHG® Rewards Club Customer Care Centre for assistance. You may still make reservations without your IHG® Rewards Club member number. Just modify your reservation later to add your member number or present it upon check-in at the hotel.

  • Scott says:

    I’m going to be in New York next month, arriving from Boston around 1:30pm.

    I’ve got a flight on AA to LAX at 8am next morning (Saturday).

    How early should I get to JFK?
    (BA Gold / GGL, TSA PRE, flying business on the transcon).

    Was looking at staying at a hotel at the airport but a lot of them are coming in at a good £200 for the night and sure I could stay elsewhere and get a cab or the subway for far less.
    I’ve taken the subway to JFK from Queens for a 9am CX flight and made that by 7:30am but not sure about traffic etc. as I’ve been in a cab before and it was busy.

    Keeping IHG and Hilton points for the following weekend so don’t really want to blow them.

    • Anna says:

      Have you tried Priceline? A few years ago I got a Holiday Inn at JFK for about £50 per night using the bidding system. You get a guaranteed location and minimum star rating – the only drawback for us is that you can only do this for a double room (i.e. not family).

      • Anna says:

        It’s actually “name your own price”, not a bid. Haven’t used it since I started booking with hotels.com so don’t know if the bargains are still as good.

    • Billy Buzzjet says:

      As someone who presents themselves as a frequent flyer (BA Gold, GCL etc.) I’m sure you know the answer to your own question.

  • BigDave says:

    200,00 comment attempt – sorry have nothing better to add!

This article is closed to new posts. Discussion continues in the HfP Forums.