Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Holiday lessons (2): ‘Earn and burn’ is not always your best strategy

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I spent 17 nights in the Middle East over Christmas and New Year. I had to use a variety of techniques to get the cost of this trip down, since we booked at short notice and hotel costs were not far behind what you would pay in the Maldives or Barbados.

Instead of reviewing each stage of the trip, I want to focus on lessons worth sharing.

Entry level accommodation at The Ritz Carlton Al Wadi Resort

The first article in this three-part series was called ‘Avios is not always the answer’ and you can find it here. It explains why – on specific routes and in specific flight classes – other airline schemes can offer far better value even if you have an Amex companion voucher.

This is the second of the three articles. I am trying to keep the story in chronological order, so at this point we have checked out of the Burj Al Arab after three days to spend three days at The Ritz Carlton Al Wadi Desert Resort in Ras Al Khaimah (website here).

A full review of the resort will follow in a few days, so I won’t cover it here.

Let’s call today’s topic:

‘Earn and burn is not always the answer’

One of the general principles of collecting miles and points is ‘earn and burn’.

By ‘earn and burn’ I mean don’t let your balances build up. The idea is that you try to spend at roughly the pace you earn.

Airlines and hotels love to devalue their reward charts. I can remember when all InterContinental hotels were 30,000 points per night – now many are 70,000. It is only five years ago that Hilton capped rewards at 50,000 points per night – now it is 95,000.

You can take this mantra too seriously though.

There is a lot to be said for sitting on your points until a blockbuster redemption comes along.

The Ritz Carlton Al Wadi Desert WAS a blockbuster redemption.

Irrespective of the UK weather over Christmas, it is a great time to visit the Middle East. With a daily peak of 26-27 degrees, it is pleasantly warm but not excessive. It is good enough to sunbathe but you are unlikely to get burnt. You can walk around without breaking into a sweat. Unless your sole intention is to burn your body to a crisp, the climate is ideal.

Not usually available for points – the tents at The Ritz Carlton Al Wadi

Here is the maths

We booked Al Wadi for three nights and took two rooms, since my kids are too tall now to spend much time on rollaways or sofa beds.

A ‘room’ at Al Wadi is basically a house. If you look at the first picture above, each block is two semi-detached units. They connect seamlessly so if you have two you end up with a massive 3,400 square foot detached house. Each has its own private pool – so we ended up with two!

This doesn’t come cheap at peak periods.

The cash cost for three nights, per room, was Dhs 11,432 including taxes. This was £2,429 at the time we booked, so for two rooms the cash cost would have been almost £5,000 for three nights.

Using Marriott Bonvoy points, it averaged out at 200,000 points for each room, so 66,666 points per night.

To save you getting your calculator out, this worked out at 1.2p per Marriott Bonvoy point.

My usual valuation of a Marriott Bonvoy point is 0.5p. I usually say that if you get an opportunity to redeem at this level then you are doing OK. I got well over double my recommended value here.

Why ‘earn and burn’ would have meant a disaster here

The snag was that I needed 400,000 Marriott Bonvoy points to book this.

The reason I had so many points sitting around is that, for a decade, I have been earning far more than I have been spending.

My Bonvoy points are primarily from the old Starwood Preferred Guest days, where the best value was for mid-market hotels. We don’t stay in many mid-market hotels, given a choice, so the points mounted up. Most of my redemptions were for tickets for concerts in the SPG Suite at the O2 in London, or other SPG Moments events.

If I had taken a strict ‘earn and burn’ approach, redeeming whenever I could have got 0.5p per point, I wouldn’t have been able to do the Al Wadi Desert redemption.

Who should do ‘earn and burn’?

I do understand the contradiction here.

I keep telling you in articles that a certain value per point is ‘acceptable’, but then I keep telling you that I managed to redeem for a substantially higher valuation.

(I don’t do myself any favours here. If I pretended that it was easy to get 1.2p per Marriott Bonvoy point then I could probably sell a lot more Marriott Bonvoy American Express cards, given the 20,000 points sign-up bonus.)

Who should ‘earn and not burn’?

The following groups should be able to massively beat my recommended points valuations and so should not redeem until they find a blockbuster deal like mine:

  • People with children, or teachers, because you are tied down to school holiday redemptions and prices are generally higher, so redemptions better value
  • People who like to travel at peak periods because that is generally when the weather is better and more attractions are open, or because you travel to see ‘peak period’ events

However, if you fall into one of the following categories you are unlikely to get blockbuster returns from your hotel points:

  • People who are free to travel at any time of the year and so can target periods when hotels and flights are cheaper and attractions quieter (the irony of travelling at peak periods is that you pay more but generally get worse service and poorer upgrades)
  • People who travel mainly to second-tier cities where peak pricing doesn’t really exist (the Crowne Plaza Sheffield doesn’t cost much for a week in August)

There IS a risk from ‘earning and not burning’

Clearly you are taking a risk by not redeeming whenever you get the opportunity. As sure as night follows day, you can be sure that a loyalty scheme will devalue over time.

This is why you need to be sure that you will get an opportunity to do a ‘blockbuster’ redemption if you are going to hoard your points. There is no point turning down a Marriott redemption worth 0.5p per point because you think you might find one worth 0.6p per point in a year. This level of saving can be wiped out in a devaluation.

If you are turning down a Marriott redemption worth my target of 0.5p, you need to believe that you can get 1p+ at some point two or three years down the line. If you have children or otherwise travel at peak periods, this is a sensible view. If you are free to travel when you want, you may want to stick with ‘earn and burn’ because you will never find yourself needing a room at a peak period somewhere.

Feel free to share your thoughts below.

PS. There is a difference between hotel points and airline miles here, I think. A hotel is more likely to have a room for points at peak periods than an airline is to have a flight for miles.

Hyatt guarantees you can book on points if a standard cash room is available, irrespective of the cost of that room. Marriott does the same, albeit there are more loopholes for hotels to exploit. Across all chains, hotels are incentivised to open up reward rooms on peak nights because, if occupancy is 95%+, the loyalty scheme pays them the full cash rate for your room rather than a nominal $25-$50.

PPS. Another factor to consider is your ability to buy miles and points cheaply if a blockbuster redemption comes along. For much of 2020 we saw bigger discounts and longer promotional periods than usual. The final article in the series will look at this.

Comments (81)

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

  • DT says:

    As a couple who don’t work in education and have no kids, we are primarily in the earn and burn camp. Having gone basically nowhere for leisure since March last year but travelled more for work, I’m sitting on larger balances than usual and really itching to spend them!

  • Harry T says:

    To be honest, I do have some degree of flexibility but I don’t burn Marriott points below 0.7-0.8p per point and usually aim for closer to 1p per point, as luxury properties in UK and Europe can often be silly expensive during the nicest times of year to travel. Even with no kids or fixed holiday periods, it’s nicer to go to places when the weather is warmer. The caveat of course is that to derive this kind of points value you would have to be willing to spend over £500 a night on a hotel, or find a sweet spot in the Bonvoy portfolio where category creep hasn’t made the points price ridiculous. There’s also something to be said for redeeming points at a property you could never afford, but then you perhaps can’t truly say you derived a certain glorious value per point!

    There’s also something to be said for how hard it is to earn Bonvoy points, and this is another reason why I tend to save them for a slam dunk redemption.

    I don’t burn points often at the moment though, as healthcare rates are widely available at the better hotels in the Bonvoy portfolio. I suspect cash rates are better in general at the moment than usual, even without such rates, so plenty of us may be building a balance.

    • Alan says:

      Any details re healthcare rates at Bonvoy? Am aware of the ones at Hilton but didn’t know they offered them too.

      • Jonathan says:

        Use code HJH in the rate box. Be aware from my experience of 3 hotels they will ask for photo ID at check in.

        I’m not seeing as good availability as last year & the discounts seem to be lower but worth a look. Only Europe & ME I believe. (Certainly nothing in USA that I could find for second half of the year).

      • Harry T says:

        HJH in UK, Middle East and Europe. QWO in the US, I think. I did a lot of stats last year and was asked for ID about half the time (NHS badge with my obviously eligible job title sufficed). They don’t appear to have rolled it out to all the same hotels as last time and the discount period varies. It’s very very good for London. The Barcelona EDITION has been added this time – an absolute treat for £150ish a night vs the usual rates well in excess of £300.

        • Alan says:

          Excellent, thanks Harry.

        • BP says:

          We didn’t get asked for ID at Marriott Park Lane but my wife did have her ID if required. I definitely wouldn’t be booking these if I didn’t have ID unless I wanted to pay the rack rate.

  • Genghis says:

    Good article. I’m generally in the earn and burn camp but not allowing balances to be so low that you can’t pounce on a deal. But given we’ve got a young’un where we’ve travelled less anyway and COVID the past year, balances have built up significantly.

    I’d like to have seen / see you build out the buying of points idea a bit more. Generally, i think if you’re getting better value than the general replacement cost of the points and you genuinely would pay cash, you should use points. Obviously there’s caps to the amount you can buy but a bird in the hand and all that…

    • Rob says:

      This is essentially what the 3rd article is about, since we bought enough Hilton points (for a four figure sum) to get 2 rooms x 5 nights at the W-A.

  • mr_jetlag says:

    Two kids, so currently sitting on half a million avios and a fair few hotels.com nights waiting for travel to normalize…

  • Dance-Ace-Base says:

    Accumulate and ruminate

  • Roger Jones says:

    Travelling during covid? No concern.

    • Aliks says:

      Socially distanced travelling to the airport and outside the UK, following the rules of the country you visit? No concern.

  • Chris Heyes says:

    To be honest i never earn n burn, we tend to collect largish amounts of Avois and Hilton points and use as necessary
    Always off peak September and an earlier off peak Month or two.
    We holiday for 3/4 weeks at a time keeps Avios spend low
    Although Gold in a lot of Hotel scheme’s we have only stayed in Hilton, Acorr and Best Western, plus Hotels.com (if you count them)
    (Gold from when we both had Platinum)
    I’m debating if i should try another hotel scheme ?
    But as were cutting down our Holidays over next years not sure it’s worth it ?
    This year our last long haul Holiday (if it goes ahead)
    Partner even considering only having two week holidays instead of 3/4 weeks
    Please tell her that’s not good lol

  • Mikeact says:

    We personally would not go to Hotel X, somewhere, just because it may offer the best ‘points’ option. Dubai or wherever is certainly not for all…and I’ve been there many times, albeit on business. We are always driven by…’where would we like go next’.

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