Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Possible 18,750 Avios for £53 via the Daily Mail

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The Daily Mail has been emailing selected members of its MyMail website with a generous subscription offer.

You will receive 30,000 Nectar points (worth 18,750 Avios) when you subscribe to ‘The Ultimate Pack’ of the Daily Mail and The Mail on Sunday for just two months.

If you are not a fan of the Mail, don’t worry. You do not receive physical newspapers. You receive a book of vouchers in the post which can be redeemed daily at your local newsagent – or binned if you prefer.

The price is £26.80 per month, so £53.60 in total. The Nectar points will arrive within “25 days of renewing the second month subscription“.

This is, clearly, a very good deal at £53.60 for 18,750 Avios. The only reason I am not pushing it harder is that the offer is not openly showing on the MyMail website. You need this link from the email.

On the other hand, the T&Cs in the email do not say that it is only open to the recipient:

“Offer available to new subscribers taking out a subscription between 12.02.21 and 28.02.21. UK residents aged 18+. To collect £150 worth of Nectar points, buy a subscription to The Ultimate Pack, paying for a minimum of two consecutive months, price £26.80 pcm. £150 worth of Nectar points will be credited per person, per one subscription only, within 25 days of renewing the second month subscription. Subscription will auto renew after the expiry of the first calendar month at a cost of £26.80.”

(EDIT: To add to the confusion, it seems that the confirmation page you see is an old one and shows a different set of terms which mention a three month minimum. Caveat emptor.)

If you want to sign-up to see if you receive the points, the link is here.

You should create a MyMail account and link it to your Nectar account before signing up.

For absolutely clarity, do not sign-up for this unless you are prepared to accept some risk that you will not receive the points because you did not receive the original email.

As a no-risk alternative, you may want to register with MyMail, link your account to your Nectar account, and wait to see if you are targetted for a similar offer in the future.


How to earn Avios points from UK credit cards

How to earn Avios from UK credit cards (December 2021)

As a reminder, there are various ways of earning Avios points from UK credit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses!

There are two official British Airways American Express cards with attractive sign-up bonuses:

British Airways BA Amex American Express card

British Airways American Express

5,000 Avios for signing up, no annual fee and an Economy 2-4-1 voucher for spending ….. Read our full review

British Airways BA Premium Plus American Express Amex credit card

British Airways American Express Premium Plus

25,000 Avios and the UK’s most valuable credit card perk – the 2-4-1 companion voucher Read our full review

You can also get generous sign-up bonuses by applying for American Express cards which earn Membership Rewards points, such as:

Nectar American Express

American Express Preferred Rewards Gold

Your best beginner’s card – 20,000 points, FREE for a year & two airport lounge passes Read our full review

American Express Platinum card Amex

The Platinum Card from American Express

30,000 points and an unbeatable set of travel benefits – for a fee Read our full review

Run your own business?

We recommend Capital On Tap for limited companies. You earn 1 Avios per £1 which is impressive for a Visa card, along with a sign-up bonus worth 10,500 Avios:

Capital On Tap Business Rewards Visa

The most generous Avios Visa or Mastercard for a limited company Read our full review

You should also consider the British Airways Accelerating Business credit card. This is open to sole traders as well as limited companies and has a 30,000 Avios sign-up bonus:

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express card

British Airways Accelerating Business American Express

30,000 Avios sign-up bonus – plus annual bonuses of up to 30,000 Avios Read our full review

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which earn Avios. This includes both personal and small business cards.

(Want to earn more Avios?  Click here to visit our home page for our latest articles on earning and spending your Avios points and click here to see how to earn more Avios this month from offers and promotions.)

Comments (312)

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

  • Crafty says:

    Those upthread who were disputing that you can use Nectar points for M&S vouchers – you can, it seems, via this “My Mail” account that you need to sign up to to avail of this offer.

  • VinZ says:

    I’m always amused when I read how much people hate the DM, nobody reads the rug etc
    How they manage to survive though, as a foreigner who’s lived in the country long enough, is still a mystery to me.
    Nobody read it but then everybody has the app, knows all the nonsense they write about etc

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Usually readers are so behind the times that they haven’t got to grips with anything other than commenting on the daily Mail website.

      Why not one else anywhere else says they read it.

      Also genuinely it has a higher readership outside the uk than inside (c70% abroad and mostly USA.)

      • Lashious says:

        All the world nannas read it. I’ve never met anyone over 65 that doesn’t. Anyway, sometimes they have really good beauty offers, I specifically used to nick the daily mail out of esporta gym after my workout, and get the decleor offers and the other french brand that they have on QVC, but whose name escapes me.

  • 747_Brat says:

    I can’t seem to enter various Nectar offers available on the DM website. It says subscribed users don’t need unique codes and can enter directly, but unfortunately it doesn’t work with my account. Am I missing a trick?

  • Martyn Ford says:

    Having signed up yesterday I rang this morning and the Daly Mail confirmed that only people directly invited to apply for this promotion would receive the Nectar points. I cancelled and paypal refund was immediate.

    • Dr C says:

      Well seeing as this offer is linked in google and no mentions about having to have received an email, they will be hard pressed not to give in

    • Rob says:

      Not necessarily the case, because they are unlikely to be able to track who was emailed and who wasn’t. Let’s see.

    • Julian says:

      You think their customer service staff are going to publicly admit that their offer promotion systems aren’t totally perfect and resilient and that they are totally in control?

      Surely the DM’s objective was to get as many new readers as possible and by definition they must be emailing people who don’t currently subscribe to the Daily Mail (but may be the ones they want to email who once did) so surely if people who were not subscribers before then subscribe they are happy.

      Usually these promotions run during a period where they need to raise subscribers numbers by a certain amount by a certain deadline that is the date on which charges to advertisers re subscriber numbers are based……..

  • Mark Ingall says:

    My feeling is that they think the terms and conditions mean that the nectar points will be credited when the 2nd month renewal subscription is paid AFTER the initial 3 month subscription. So, 5 months in total. So, if this is the case about £130 for about 18750 avios, which may still be attractive but not quite a brilliantly so as after just 2 months. Interesting debates may be had though about exactly how the wording should be interpreted, but probably given that they have the nectar points this could take a few months anyway to resolve – say up until the 2nd renewal month after the initial 3 months anyway!

  • Al says:

    Signed up yesterday as we have an elderly relative who I buy this for every Saturday via the Waitrose offer anyway.

    Happy to take a risk but tbh given all the checkout & confirmation email etc clearly state ‘The Ultimate Pack + £150 worth of Nectar points’ I’m fairly confident.

  • Dan says:

    The offer page now says only invited subscribers will be awarded the Nectar points!

  • Tim says:

    Hello everyone, I think the offer page has been updated, it now includes following which wasn’t there yesterday when I signed up!

    “This offer is only available to invited customers and all orders will be checked against the mailing list and if they do not qualify they will not be awarded the Nectar points.”

    • Rob says:

      That’s what happens a few hundred HfP readers sign-up!

      • Tim says:

        I didn’t screen grab it yesterday, is it a new addition?
        Not sure whether to cancel the d/d as soon as it appears now rather than pursue the points after payments

      • Julian says:

        Rob,

        Surely you should not have encouraged people to spend their money on this offer only to end up with a large stock of loopaper or firelighters when you should have always anticipated the Mail would have seen take up of the offer by non invited persons as being a violation of their Terms and Conditions.

        As with encouraging your readers to churn Amex cards regularly you surely can’t be surprised if the commercial entities involved hit back by changing their own rules in terms of those who qualify for these offers.

        Of course I suppose if the Mail reject people entirely and refund them then no major harm done but if they leave them stuck with at least a one month subscription to the paper but no Nectar points credit then obviously people are bound to get upset.

        It does seem to me that with something like this that rather than promoting an offer the sponsor wants as many people as possible to take up you are in effect acting in a hostile manner by encouraging your readers to try to earn an introductory bonus from an organisation who’s own commercial logic is reliant on those who sign up becoming long terms customers of the organisation……..

        Clearly Amex changed their rules on earning introductory bonuses from new card sign up for this very reason……….

        • AndyGWP says:

          Re: your first paragraph Julian, if people can’t read the short article that clearly states and warns people, then more fool them (and when this was posted yesterday, the T&C’s didn’t state anything that could be violated either)

          As a reminder, the article clearly states:
          “For absolutely clarity, do not sign-up for this unless you are prepared to accept some risk that you will not receive the points because you did not receive the original email.”

        • Rob says:

          Amex encouraged churning here (after the US restricted it) because senior staff were bonused on sign up numbers. Eventually the US twigged ….

        • Brian W says:

          @Julian,

          As @AndyGWP has already highlighted, the article Rob posted made clear that this offer was risky and warns it is a gamble. He hasn’t encouraged anything at all. He pointed out the possibility it may go wrong throughout!

          Do you actually read these articles before spouting your negative, uniformed, blinkered, nonsense?

    • Tim says:

      https://www.mailplus.co.uk/info/41145/offer-terms-and-conditions

      Further, this offer doesn’t appear under their special t&c offer page

    • Alex Sm says:

      I took the screenshots just in case. Will this be a proof? All confirmations include a line about the nectar points, so would be difficult for them to challenge this

      • Charlie says:

        The confirmation email plus my PayPal receipt both say about the bonus

      • Jayne says:

        You’ve used a personalised web line not meant for you, for an offer that is not meant for the general public.
        You’re not getting the points.

        • Jayne says:

          *weblink

        • Rob says:

          The offer is available by Google.

          Having done this for more years than many on here have been alive, I promise you that in the majority of cases you DO get the points. If you apply after the rules have been changed / warning published etc then perhaps not, but the odds are always in your favour otherwise.

          The Mail could have added a rule to the T&Cs in the email saying ‘not transferable’ and they could have added it to the website. They didn’t. They sent emails to those who signed up confirming that they are receiving the points. There is no way back unless they cancel the orders – if they take your money (ie physically process the payment) then there is a contract in place.

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