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Bits: get a 100% bonus buying IHG hotel points, Hilton Nottingham adds a pool charge

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News in brief:

Get a 100% bonus buying IHG One Rewards points

IHG One Rewards is offering a new 100% bonus for buying points.

This offer runs to 2nd February.

The maximum number of points you can buy is 300,000 (ie 150,000 plus the 150,000 bonus).  The minimum purchase to trigger the bonus is 30,000 points on my account but this could vary.

The page to buy points is here.

With a 100% bonus, you would be able to buy up to 300,000 IHG One Rewards points for (at current exchange rates for $1,500) £1,175.

I usually value IHG One Rewards points at 0.4p.  You are paying 0.39p here so it is not necessarily a slam dunk unless you are just topping up your account. The skill is to use them at hotels where you can get substantially more than 0.4p per point of value, although this got a little harder since IHG moved towards revenue-based redemption pricing.

You can buy points via this link. You have until 2nd February to jump in.

Our full review of IHG One Rewards is here if you want to know more about how it works.

Get a 100% bonus buying IHG One Rewards points

Hilton Nottingham joins the list of hotels charging for pool use

A recurring theme on Head for Points over the last couple of years has been hotels which try to sneak though a charge for using their swimming pool.

Hilton appears to be the biggest culprit, and it is getting to the point where you need to be actively on the look out for small print when booking a UK Hilton with a pool.

Hilton Nottingham is the latest to jump on the bandwagon.

From 1st February, you will need to pay £10 per adult and £5 per child, although there is a £20 cap per family. This is confirmed on the hotel website here.

This gets you a 90-minute session for the hotel pool, sauna and steam room.

The hotel has confirmed that there will be no discount for Hilton Honors elite members.

The hotel is blaming ‘rising energy costs’, although this makes little sense as the health club is run as a standalone Livingwell facility with the majority of its users presumably being external paying members.

Comments (75)

  • RussellH says:

    Not sure if this is the case for everyone, but I am offered no bonus points unless I were to buy (11 000 x 2) points.
    And the ½¢ price only applies once I reach the (26 000 x 2) mark.

    • Skywalker says:

      It’s different for everyone.

      Mine starts at 5k x 2, however the ½¢ point is exactly the same at 26k mark.

    • CamFlyer says:

      Same for me. However, at 26,000 miles it is tempting, given that I got $0.0075/point on my last redemption.

  • Chrisasaurus says:

    The industry needs a way to standardise the data for this.

    If for example with our corporate TA or personally using an OTA, let’s say when searching for a hotel I select ‘Pool’ as a filter then it should be possible to include any surcharge for that amenity in the quoted rate.

    Otherwise I’m presented with a price I cannot possibly achieve for the service bundle I have searched for which makes informed choices very difficult for the consumer.

    The price is being carved out of the room rate presumably specifically to enable the headline rate to remain low on Expedia etc, which is really only fair IMO if there is a mechanism for pricing packages correctly

  • TGLoyalty says:

    Genuinely £20 for a family is a complete joke for 90 mins access.

    If you asked me do I want to spend £20 for each night of my stay to access the facilities at my leisure I’d consider if it was worth that to me and probably think the hotel was purely “upselling” to those who need it.

    This just smells of nickel and diming

  • MKB says:

    Having a few flexible bookings at hotels that pull these cheap tricks, and then calling up to cancel them explaining why, is probably the best way to focus their minds.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      You’ll get some bored receptionist who really doesn’t care and is annoyed you called when you could have cancelled on line.

  • Mutley says:

    Don’t bother paying, just tailgate, or wait for someone coming out of the pool area, or tell the staff you’ve left something in the sauna/ steam room or…. You get the idea.

  • Duncan says:

    Only way to deal with Hilton is with your feet…do NOT book ANY hotel that charges for ‘extras like pool access’ and they will soon back off.
    Glad I am an Accor Diamond Member!

  • AL says:

    I was a long-time Nuffield Health sufferer, until they told me that they had increased my monthly fee and had closed all non-pool offerings due to ‘rising energy costs’. They then tried to charge me missed payment fees, despite having submitted cancellation in writing months beforehand, because the club manager was hopeless at their job. Absolutely useless organisation. I am enjoying Virgin Active and was interested, this morning, to see a Virgin Voyages tie-up occurring.

    I have long wondered how well Livingwell-branded gyms do. Competition in the market is fierce, and it isn’t as if half of the Livingwell gyms are particularly great.

    • TGLoyalty says:

      Isn’t livingwell just the name they’ve given all the Hilton gyms in the U.K.?

      • AL says:

        Yes, but they offer separate memberships – that was the bit I was referring to, I suppose. I wonder how well they do given the number of players in the market at both ends of the spectrum.

  • dan_a_man says:

    Noted such a pool charge at Westin Leipzig. Imagine a brand with a wellness focus and then charging for the pool. We werent aware until it hit the bill. Very disappointing.

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