This holiday season has revealed some incredible rock bottom bargain rates for hotels. The city of Denver has special Mile High Holidays promotional rates for over 40 Denver area hotels starting at $52.80 per night. Link to Mile High Holidays hotel list.

Participating hotels offer the low rates for the month of December and some hotels extend the rate discount into January.

The hotels shown here are just a sample of the hotels listed offering discount rates. These are hotels where I easily found the rate the first dates I searched and the rate was offered through the hotel chain’s own website for loyalty credit eligibility.

$52.80 rates

Marriott brands

Denver Marriott City Center $52.80

Marriott Courtyard Denver Stapleton (thru January 6)

Marriott Courtyard Denver Tech Center

Marriott Courtyard Denver Downtown

Ritz-Carlton Denver $152.80 Fridays and Saturdays

Starwood Hotels

Aloft Denver Airport (Starwood) $52.80 Thursday – Sunday stays December and January

Westin Tabor $105.60 (includes breakfast for two).

There are many other hotels listed for this special. Finding the discount rate was more challenging for other Hilton, Hyatt, and IHG properties I searched. All the major chains had some properties with rates under $99/night.

While Denver has a city-wide organized campaign for hotel rate discounts, there are also special super-discount hotel deals in other locations:

Sheraton Fisherman’s Wharf, San Francisco $49 room rates for San Francisco 49ers home game dates: December 14 and 27.

Have you seen super disount rates in other locations?

Marriott Denver Downtown

Marriott Denver Downtown

December is the month for securing elite status. People in the know, those frequent guests and fliers making mattress runs and mileage runs this month, know that a few unnecessary hotel room nights or a few thousand miles of unnecessary airline flights are truly necessary. Some loyalty travelers are frantically booking travel solely for the purpose of attaining the magic threshold of higher elite status in 2010.

And it is magic when after 10 minutes waiting in the elite security line at the crowded airport, you barely get on your plane just before it taxies out of the gate. You reflect on the frazzled family who walked up to the elite check-in airport counter just in front of you, each parent cradling a crying toddler, with a hands-free wandering preschooler lagging behind dragging a backpack, a babystroller under Dad’s arm, two suitcases, two backpacks, and a purse.  You watched as you moved closer to the elite member check-in counter while the parents were steered away from the Star Alliance Gold members check-in line to the hopelessly long economy class general members’ line extending halfway down the terminal. They were supposed to depart on the same flight as you, but they hadn’t even arrived at the security zone as you passed through the detectors and rushed off to the gate. They are still waiting in some non-elite fliers’ line while you are comfortably seated in First Class as the plane heads toward the runway.

Elite level status has practical implications in the frequent flier world beyond upgrades and airport lounges.

I haven’t been on a plane in the past few months. I watched scenarios like I described here over a number of years when I traveled as a United Airlines Mileage Plus elite member. I flew over 100,000 miles a year for several years primarily as a means of flying comfortably and having the privilege to hang out at airport lounges during international flights.

Joe Sharkey has a piece posted this week on his blog, Joe Sharkey At Large, “Continental Airlines is the Latest Airline to Diss Lower-Level Elite-Status Customers”. His piece is about how Continental Airlines offers enhancements to the most frequent fliers in the 100,000 flight miles per year category and new super-tier called Presidential Platinum elite for the cream of the Platinum fliers.

Flying 100,000 miles is expensive for a leisure traveler. I held United 1K for a couple of years with less than $2,500 in spending on flights annually, but then there was another $1,500 or so for my wife’s flights. And then add another $4,000 to $5,000 for lodging, and then add daily expenses when traveling. 

$4,000 to $5,000 in airfare was one expense I had to cut back, about 30% of my annual travel budget, to have some money available to put into Loyalty Traveler business expenses. Loyalty Traveler was founded as a business for explaining the value of elite status with travel loyalty programs and ironically I had to give up elite status air travel to conserve resources for the business. I hope to get back to a much higher level of air travel in the next year or two.

Right now my focus is maintaining high elite status in a couple of hotel programs – Hyatt Gold Passport and Starwood Preferred Guest – for my hotel travel. I just suffer like the masses when I have to get on a plane.

Ed Perkins wrote a piece on SmarterTravel.com, “Dollars Trump Miles as a Measure of Airline Loyalty”. Ed had an issue with upgrading a United flight using miles. He could not get an advance confirmation of the upgrade.

My experience of traveling around the world as a United 1K was a blast when I could buy a $600 ticket from California to Singapore, upgrade my ticket to a business class seat with a systemwide certificate (SWU), hang out at the international lounge in SFO before the flight, and then pop into the United Red Carpet Club at Narita Airport Tokyo for a free shower and a couple of glasses from the automatic beer dispenser. My cheap economy ticket also allowed me to earn 40,000 to 50,000 redeemable miles and 18,000 to 36,000 elite qualifying miles depending on promotions.

The problem with all that lovely treatment as a United 1K is that travel with my wife Kelley wasn’t always as fun. I’m not talking about a need for Tiger Woods entertainment without the wifey. I am talking about the fact that my United Airlines Mileage Plus elite status regularly provided upgrades for me, domestic and international. However, Kelley’s low level elite status, and sometimes even as a Premier Executive, frequently did not allow her to clear the upgrade list. We often traveled separately on the same plane to Europe with me in her assigned economy class seat and her in my upgraded Business Class seat.

Mom & Dad’s Florida Vacation

My parents have learned the value of Starwood Preferred Guest elite status – especially since they do not have it. This morning I received a call from my mom vacationing in Florida. Their hotel travel tally so far is three Starwoods and a Hilton in Florida. I asked them to take pictures of the view from each bedroom window at their hotels.

Hotel websites are generally good about photos of the hotel entrance, the lobby, restaurants, and pool.

Hotel websites rarely show a prospective guest the view from the less desirable side of the hotel. I am struck by the number of times I stay at a hotel and receive the preferred view and think this was a good deal. And I consider all those people I see coming out of their room located on the other side of the hallway and I wonder, “Do you feel like you’ve been cheated with this hotel stay?”

So my mom tells me they had a nice size room at a Sheraton in Fort Lauderdale, but faced the parking lot for the multi-night stay. Then, it was the Sheraton in Key West at a resort property on the beach, but their room was not facing the beach side of the hotel. Then, her description of the room in Coral Gables was “nicely furnished, but the room was miniscule.” She said the rooms are nothing like I get when I stay at Starwood Hotels.

“Elite Status” is my Two Word Response

Earning elite status with a hotel chain is really a much easier affair than airline frequent flier programs. Playing the 100,000 mile game with airlines is a matter of either several long-haul international trips or a whole lot of domestic flying. Hotel loyalty high-level elite-status is something many travelers can earn without even leaving town. You will appreciate your effort when you take that $3,000 beach resort vacation and spend the week looking at the beach from your hotel room window and balcony.

Here is the view from my room when I stayed at the Westin Mission Hills near Palm Springs, California.

Westin Mission Hills - Room with a View

Westin Mission Hills - Room with a View

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I received an upgrade on my Cash & Points stay to a golf course view preferred room. A general member of SPG on the same rate would be more likely to have received a room with this type of view across the parking lot.

Westin Mission Hills Resort - the other side of the hotel
Westin Mission Hills Resort – the other side of the hotel

 

Stays Count Double through January 31, 2010 with Hyatt Gold Passport

 

 

 

(The Next Big Thing registration required)

Hyatt Gold Passport is offering double stay credit for elite status through January 31, 2010. Elite status is based on paid stays completed in a calendar year. This means you can earn Hyatt Gold Passport Platinum level elite membership with just 3 stays in January or Diamond elite with 13 stays. The elite status you earn with Hyatt Gold Passport in January 2010 during stays count double will remain valid for over two years through February 2012.

Between fast-track elite status and Costco Hyatt Check Certificates at a 20% discount, the cost to earn high elite Diamond status with Hyatt can readily be accomplished for under $1,000 in many places while earning free nights for a fantastic February or March 2010 resort vacation. Check out your local Hyatt Place hotel rates. You can even go upscale Hyatt at a bargain with low January rates in many locations. The Hyatt Regency San Francisco was over $250 per night for most of summer 2009 and is less than half that rate for most weekends in January 2010. San Diego hotels are an incredible bargain right now.

Starwood Preferred Guest instant SPG Gold elite for New Members

Starwood Preferred Guest has offered a “stays count double” promotion every year for the past several years. Take advantage of the offer if it comes around next year and you can set yourself up with high-level elite-status.

Seriously, when you are spending a couple of thousand dollars for a vacation, a little bit of annual hotel planning can put you in that beach resort hotel on the beach side of the hotel rather than the resort view of the parking lot.

If you are new to Starwood Preferred Guest and you would like to receive instant SPG Gold elite membership, valid through February 2011, then just send me an email ricgarridolt@gmail.com. With my SPG Platinum member referral, you can be registered for 1,000 bonus points per night ($35 value) at Starwood Hotels through March 31, 2010 and you will receive an instant upgrade to SPG Gold Elite membership. And I get 1,000 points if you actually stay in a Starwood Hotel by March 31. A win-win-win deal for you, me, and Starwood.

Hotel Loyalty Program Links:

Hyatt Gold Passport “The Next Big Thing” Promotion

Hyatt Gold Passport Platinum elite benefits (lower-tier elite)

Hyatt Gold Passport Diamond elite benefits (higher-tier)

Starwood Preferred Guest Gold elite benefits

Starwood Preferred Guest Platinum elite benefits

Loyalty Traveler posts:

Passports with Purpose Win 50,000 Hyatt Gold Passport points

Earn 2,500 airline miles with every two nights at Hyatt brand hotels (Oct. 5, 2009)

Hyatt Faster Free Nights + Stays Count Double promotion analysis Oct.1 – Jan 31, 2010 (Sep 19, 2009)

Hyatt Gold Passport Enhancements – And they really are enhancements (April 2, 2009)

 

Earn 10,000 points using Promo Code 10KSTAR2. Westin at Home store link.

This promotion is being advertised on the SPG homepage. The value of 10,000 points, currently $280, is a little more than the $225 shipping charges. Good deal if you are in the market for a Westin bed.

I think the periodic 20% discount is a better deal, especially if you are making a $2,000+ purchase for the King size mattress and box spring. The mattress is really only half the Heavenly Bed experience. The bedding pieces – mattress pad, linens, pillows, blanket, and duvet - are essential for the real feel of a Westin Heavenly bed and that runs another $1,200 to $2,000.

10,000 bonus points is still a good offer from SPG if you want a new bed now.

Westin Heavenly Bed - Denver Westin Tabor

Westin Heavenly Bed - Denver Westin Tabor

 

Choice Hotels has launched their winter promotion for triple points or miles beginning with your second stay for stays with arrival date from December 10, 2009 to February 28, 2010. The promotion gives members 30 points per US$1 on hotel room rate spending. My analysis shows there is good value in using this promotion to earn Southwest Airlines Rapid Rewards credits.

 

You must maintain a U.S. (including U.S. territories) address to earn Choice Privileges® points with this promotion.

 

Triple Points or Miles promotion registration also enters you into a Hawaii sweepstakes for a 6 night Choice Hotels vacation and $2,000 cash to buy your airfare ($3,800 prize value).

 

Choice Privileges Triple Points or Miles Registration page link.

 

Choice Hotels is the second largest hotel chain in the world with over 5,000 properties globally. (Wyndham Hotel Group is #1). Choice Hotels is a franchise hotel organization.

 

Earning points is possible in these locations:

  • U.S.,

  • Canada

  • Mexico

  • Caribbean

  • Europe (excluding Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway and Sweden)

  • Australasia (including Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Papua New Guinea and Fiji).

 

A quick check of new hotel openings reveals new properties in Japan, India, and Brazil. According to the earning terms these hotels appear to be nonparticipants for earning points.

 

Earning Points in Choice Privileges

 

Choice Hotels Privileges members earn 10 points per $US1 for room rate charge only at these Choice Hotels brands.

 

  • Comfort Inn

  • Comfort Suites

  • Quality

  • Sleep Inn

  • Clarion

  • Ascend Collection

  • Cambria Suites

In Australasia (including Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Fiji), you earn 10 points for each whole U.S. dollar. Eligible charges include: accommodation, tax, restaurant, bar charges, laundry and phone calls.

 

Choice Hotels Privileges members in U.S. and Canada earn 5 points per $US1 for room rate charges, excluding tax, restaurant, and other incidental charges at these Choice Hotels brands:

  • MainStay Suites

  • Suburban Extended Stay Hotel,

  • Econo Lodge 

  • Rodeway Inn

You must choose either Choice Privileges points or Airline Rewards for this triple points or triple miles promotion offer and notify the hotel of your preference upon check-in.

 

Earning Miles with Triple Airline Miles Promotion is Valid with these Airline Partners

250 miles per stay (750 miles with triple miles promotion)

  • Air Canada Aeroplan,

  • Alaska Airlines Mileage Plan,

  • American Airlines AAdvantage,

  • Continental Airlines OnePass,

  • Czech Airlines OK Plus,

  • Delta SkyMiles,

  • MexicanaGO,

  • Spirit Airlines FREE SPIRIT,

  • United Mileage Plus or

  • US Airways Dividend Miles

Southwest Airlines Rapid Rewards is the best earning value during this promotion

Choice Privileges members normally earn 0.5 credits with Southwest Airlines per stay, but will receive 1.5 credits with triple miles promotion.

A free flight on Southwest requires 16 credits (11 Choice brand hotel stays by February 28, 2010 with 3x miles promotion).

Consider that a $55 per night average room rate or $605 in hotel stays can result in a free $250 Southwest airline ticket. Southwest Airlines frequent flier credit is clearly a good value for return on your investment in Choice Hotels.

Comparison of Choice Privileges Points Earning to Southwest Airlines credits

$600 in hotel spending will earn 18,000 points with the 3x points earning preference. Free hotel nights range from 6,000 points to 35,000 points with Choice Privileges. 18,000 points will likely earn a free night at a mid-level hotel for perhaps a $100 value. A free cross-country Southwest airline ticket can have a $200 to $300 value.

Choice offers points-to-miles exchange with Southwest at the ratio of 6,000 points = 1.5 credits. This is only 4.5 Southwest credits with a points-to-miles exchange of 18,000 points.

The 3x miles promotion earns 16.5 Southwest flight credits on 11 stays costing around $600 for economy brand hotels. A member with numerous low cost stays will probably get higher value from earning Southwest Airlines Rapid Rewards credit compared to points.

Choice Privileges is the best program during this promotion for earning Southwest credits in comparison to other hotel loyalty programs after Hyatt Gold Passport’s promotion ends December 31, 2009.

16 Southwest credits from 11 Choice Hotel stays is equivalent to:

Hyatt Gold Passport = Earn: 0.5 credit per stay normally, but currently can earn 2.5 additional bonus credits after every two nights, up to 25 bonus credits through December 31, 2009. 12 nights at Hyatt Hotel brands by December 31 will earn 18 Southwest credits. Burn: 40,000 points = 16 credits.

Marriott Rewards = Earn: 0.5 credit per stay; Burn: 70,000 points for 16 credits

IHG Priority Club = Earn: 0.5 credit per stay; Burn: 80,000 points for 16 credits

Hilton HHonors = Earn: 0.5 credit per stay; Burn: 160,000 points for 16 credits

Choice Hotels Triple Miles Promotion is a good value for Southwest Airlines flyers.

Last week I was driving around downtown San Francisco. My wife had one request for me to fulfill on my day away. The task was simply to stop by Saks Fifth Avenue on Union Square and buy some Chanel makeup. I dutifully set off on the task, taking the bus from outside the Marriott Hotel at Fisherman’s Wharf and getting off at Union Square. I arrived at Saks at 6:15pm.

The store closed at 6pm last Wednesday night; three weeks before Christmas. I was dismayed.

The next morning I drove around Union Square looking for a place where I could park 30 minutes for under $2.00. After burning $2 in gas I came to the conclusion that I could remove myself from a dangerous driving situation and return home, log on to the web, and buy the Chanel while shopping for points.

All was fine until four days had passed and my wife learned I never made the online order for the Chanel product. She demanded to know why I had a problem ordering her makeup. I confessed. It was the points that stood between me and her makeup. I hadn’t yet researched which hotel program offered the best points earning deal for a hotel web portal shopping bonus.

Now, ladies and gentlemen, I have to say that excuse didn’t fly with my wife.

Fortunately, I already had a list of links to major hotel program shopping portals and it only took a few minutes to figure out IHG Priority Club Rewards and Marriott Rewards offered the best value for me with 8 points per $1 in purchases with a Nordstrom’s bonus points offer. Choice Privileges offers 16 points per $1 with Nordstrom’s, but I went with Priority Club.

I must comment on one aspect of the shopping experience. After selecting the item and seeing an $8 shipping charge, I decided to just buy 2 of the item and the purchase would qualify for free shipping. There was no way I could find to change the quantity from 1 to 2 on the order review page. Now, is that poorly designed craziness for an online shopping store or what?

I ended up closing out the order and starting all over again. When I went through the process the second time the website remembered my previous shopping cart and the quantity was now 2 items. Lucky for me that I wanted two items or I may have had a really difficult time getting back to a shopping cart with just one item.

Final order earned $108 x 8 points for 864 Priority Club points in my account. The value of the hotel points is about equivalent to the tax I paid for the make-up. Shipping was free.

If I had been on the ball I could have made the purchase on November 30 CyberMonday and received a 1,000 points online shopping bonus from Priority Club Rewards.

5 Tips to loyalty program shopping portals and shopping for points

1.       Sign in to hotel or airline program website

2.       Go to shopping portal and look for items from stores offering a combination of best price and best bonus.

3.       Carefully follow links clear through from hotel shopping entry web portal to store checkout. Using the back button or opening multiple browser windows can result in you losing credit as a hotel loyalty shopping portal buyer.

4.       Typically, I go through the hotel shopping portal and select my items for purchase, then start over again, re-enter the hotel loyalty program shopping portal and directly navigate my way to the product purchase check-out. This might be unnecessary, but I have missed out on a lot of points over the years when shopping.

5.       Keep tabs of estimated points earned and be prepared to follow-up on missing points.

Hotel Loyalty Program Shopping links

Choice Privileges Mall

Hilton HHonors Mall

Marriott Rewards Mall

Priority Club Rewards Shopping

Costco is selling Hyatt Check Certificates. The price is $79.99 (no tax) for two US$50 Hyatt Check Certificates. I purchased some yesterday.

Hyatt Check Certificate fine print

The primary restriction with Hyatt Check Certificates is you can only redeem check certificates for payment in excess of the face value of the certificate.

Hyatt Check Certificates are combinable.

Example: You book the Hyatt Regency San Francisco for $120. After tax, the bill at check-out is $139.

You can only redeem two $50 certificates for a $100 payment credit using Hyatt Check Certificates. You need to pay cash or credit for the remaining $39.

So, you do not actually get 20% off this room since you paid $79.99 ($100 Check certificates) + $39 at checkout for the amount above the certificate value. You actually pay $119 for a $139 bill and save 14% on the total bill.

Maximizing the value of the Hyatt Check Certificates is a matter of getting your final room bill to a “Price is Right” level with a twist.

Your goal with Hyatt Check Certificates is to come as close to an increment of $50 without going under. Get your checkout bill to $100.20 or $151.05 and your total savings will approach 20% using Hyatt Check Certificates for your stays.

Expiration Date: None shown on my certificates.

Loyalty Traveler’s Winter in California Travel Plan with Hyatt Hotels

I am planning a hotel hop through Hyatts in California and perhaps some other states next month to maximize the current promotion offer for a free night at any Hyatt after two stays at any Hyatt brand hotel. The promotion runs through January 31, 2009.

Combined with the free night offer, Hyatt is giving “stays count double” fast-track to elite status.

There are so many combinable promotions that I should bullet them in a recap.

  • Earn a free night after every two stays.

  • Stays count double for elite status. Platinum elite requires 5 stays in a calendar year and Diamond elite requires 25 stays in a calendar year. This promotion reduces that to 3 stays and 13 stays.

  • Save up to 20% on your Hyatt stays by purchasing Hyatt Check Certificates at Costco.

My plan is a simple one and similar to my Hyatt Diamond qualifying hotel hops in March 2008 when Gold Passport also ran a “Stays Count Double” promotion. I will use the month of January in a blitz of Hyatt Hotel stays to maximize my earning of free nights, requalify for Hyatt Diamond elite status through February 2012 with 13 hotel stays in January 2010, and save money through the purchase of Hyatt Check certificates I plan to redeem during my January Hyatt hotel stays.

January is typically the month with the lowest hotel rates and hotel occupancy of the year in many locations.

Assume my average rate is $100 per night. 14 hotel stays is $1,400. I plan to have a stay in December to qualify for 7 free nights with my 13 January stays. I will requalify for Hyatt Gold Passport Diamond through February 2012. I will probably earn around 25,000 Gold passport points with G bonus offers and elite bonuses.

Estimated Spend: $1,100 (after up to 20% savings from Costco Hyatt check certificates)

Estimated Added Value to paid hotel stays: $2,500 to $3,500

1.       7 free nights ($2,000 to $3,000 at a resort property or international urban hotel)

2.       25,000 Gold Passport points ($500)

3.       Regency Club lounge and suite upgrades during paid stays (?)

4.       Travel experience (priceless)

 

What is the value of hotel loyalty program elite status?

Hyatt Gold Passport made major loyalty program enhancements in 2009.

1.       No blackout dates for free nights using hotel points.

2.       Free internet for elite members.

3.       Diamond members receive complimentary Regency Club access, or in lieu of Regency Club, the member receives restaurant certificates + 2,500 Gold passport points.

4.       Diamond members receive four confirmed suite upgrades per membership year.

I currently have two free nights to use before the end of the month with two different hotel chains. These free nights were given to me solely as an elite member benefit.

Starwood Preferred Guest gave me a free night at any hotel, up to Category 5, as a gift for being SPG Platinum this year (25 stays or 50 nights in a calendar year). I earned my 2009 status in 2008 with a Stays Count Double promotion and a hotel hopping trip to Canada. You can get instant SPG Gold elite if you are new to Starwood Preferred Guest?

Hyatt Gold Passport gave me a free night at any Hyatt Place or Hyatt Summerfield Suites as a Hyatt Gold Passport Diamond member (25 stays or 50 nights in a calendar year). I earned my status for 2009 with two weeks of hotel stays in a March Madness 2008 stimulus tour during a ‘stays count double” promotion.

Loyalty traveler plans to jumpstart 2010 travel with multiple Hyatt experiences. I think it is going to be a good year of travel for this traveler. There is no better time to jump into the loyalty travel game if you can afford the admission fee.

Passports with Purpose – Win 50,000 Hyatt Gold passport points

Passports with Purpose raffle prizes include a chance to win 50,000 Hyatt Gold passport points. $10 will purchase a raffle ticket and help build a new school in Preah Vihear, Cambodia. We raised $13,000 already to build the school and now the goal is another $13,000 to provide health care, food, and clean water for the school. Small actions working together allow us to make a difference.

 

Hyatt Gold Passport answered Loyalty Traveler’s call for helping Passports with Purpose build a school in Cambodia by generously donating 50,000 points as a raffle prize donation. All you need is a single $10 raffle ticket to enter at the Passports with Purpose Donation page for a chance to win 50,000 Hyatt Gold Passport points.

You can actually enter the raffle for free, but I’m not promoting that option. Go to PassportswithPurpose.com and read all the fine print if you want to know the route to free entry. Building the school takes money and the money comes from the $10 raffle ticket donations.

As I read through travelbloggers’ prizes linked through Passports with Purpose I am struck by the number of travelers who have been to Cambodia. I have been to Bangkok, Singapore, and Bali in the past ten years. My connection to Cambodia is based on my graduate studies in child labor while at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. All the more reason why I feel a drive to support the building of a school as a route to better opportunity for children faced with many dangers growing up in Cambodia.

Thinking of better memories leads me to a story of a trip I made in 2003. During the long transPacific flight on United Airlines from the US to Tokyo, destination Singapore, a last minute decision took me to Bali instead. On a transit stop in Tokyo I checked in at the Red Carpet Club in Narita Airport and asked about booking an award on Singapore Airlines in Business Class to DPS airport in Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia.

During a one hour layover, I put together a free vacation in Bali flying Singapore Airlines in Business Class for 30,000 miles and using hotel points for free nights at Starwood’s  Luxury Collection Laguna Resort & Spa in Nusa Dua, Bali, for 4,000 points per night. The cost of these last minute bookings would have been over $1,000 for airfare and $150 per night if I had paid cash for the same reservations.

So why am I telling about my hotel stay in a Starwood property for a Bali vacation when I titled the piece Hyatt Hotels in Bali? Stick with me and I promise to get to the Hyatts in Bali.

The value of hotel points and airline miles is the ability to book nights and flights at will regardless of price. One of the highest returns on investment with a hotel loyalty program is the option to use points for a hotel stay at the last minute when rates are more than you want to pay.

Hotel Points Inflation

The problem with loyalty programs is inflation. The points you have today will almost certainly have less value at some point in the future.

The Starwood Laguna Resort & Spa was only 28,000 Starwood points for 7 nights when I stayed there in 2003. Today this hotel property is 60,000 points for a 7 night stay. A weekend night was only 3,000 points per night and 4,000 points for weekdays in 2003. Today the hotel is 10,000 points per night. That is some serious points inflation over 6 years. The room rates I checked at this hotel are around 20% higher than 6 years ago.

Hotel loyalty programs designate a hotel in a specific category level and the cost of a free night using hotel points is determined by that category level.  The points required for a free night in a specific hotel category rarely change. Starwood has charged 7,000 points for a Category 3 hotel for the past decade. Hilton has charged 35,000 points for Category 5 hotel for the past decade. The number of hotel categories in a loyalty program seldom change except when there is an addition of a new highest category level.  

All five loyalty programs of the major upscale hotel chains have added a new highest tier hotel in the past few years.

  • Hyatt up 20% in 2007 from Category 4 (15,000 points per night)  to Category 5 (18,000 points)

  • Starwood up 50% in 2007 from Category 6 (20,000 points) to Category 7 (30,000 points)

  • Marriott up 14% in 2009 from Category 7 (35,000 points) to Category 8 (40,000 points)

  • IHG up 33% when InterContinental went from 30,000 points to 40,000 points for select hotels.

  • Hilton up 25% in 2010 from Category 6 (40,000 points) to Category 7 (50,000 points).

For most frequent guest loyalty program members these changes to the top tier hotels really have little impact on their points. Most members do not redeem their points for the top category hotels in a hotel chain.

Intra-Category Movement of Hotels

The less obvious, but far more significant route to points devaluation affecting most members in hotel loyalty programs is the shuffling of hotels within the lower hotel reward categories as shown in my Bali example for the Starwood Laguna Nusa Dua Resort.  

The Luxury Collection Laguna Resort was a SPG category 2 hotel at 3,000 points for a weekend night in 2003. The hotel increased to 7,000 points as a category 3 award in 2006. The hotel was moved up to a category 4 hotel in 2008 and currently costs 10,000 points per night. A weekend night at this resort hotel has more than tripled in cost over the past six years when using points for a free night.  The room rate using cash has increased at a far lower rate than the increase for free nights using points.

Hyatt Gold Passport has held points inflation in check better than any other major hotel loyalty program over the past few years. Most hotels in the Hyatt chain have not changed category level over the past few years.

The biggest change with Hyatt Gold Passport was increasing the reward cost 20% three years ago with the addition of a category 5 level hotel at 18,000 points per night. Currently the highest category 5 level only includes about 6% of all properties in the 400 member Hyatt hotel chain. Hyatt has 60% of its hotels in the two lowest categories for free nights. Hyatt has among the lowest intra-category shifting of hotels among the major hotel loyalty programs and the highest proportion of hotels in the lower categories.

Hyatts in Bali

Hyatt Hotels has two properties in Bali – Grand Hyatt Nusa Dua and the Bali Hyatt.  These two hotels are a bargain using points. Both of the Hyatt properties in Bali are in the lowest hotel category for Hyatt Gold Passport and available for just 5,000 points per night. Category 1 does not mean these hotels are inferior in any way. The Grand Hyatt Nusa Dua is in the same Bali location of luxury resorts as the Hilton Conrad, Starwood ‘s Luxury Collection Laguna Resort, and the Westin Nusa Dua. The Hyatt properties receive overall high TripAdvisor.com ratings. Hyatt Bali is rated #3 of 51 hotels in Sanur, Bali. 270 out of 336 reviews rate the hotel as very good or excellent. Fewer than 10% were unfavorable and that is a pretty good indicator on TripAdvisor. Grand Hyatt Nusa Dua is rated as very good or excellent in 213 of 284 reviews on TripAdvisor and ranks #14 of 22 hotels in Nusa Dua. The competition in the luxury resort enclave of Nusa Dua is tough and this is quite a respectable showing.

Suite Beach Dreams

A Category 1 Gold Passport hotel resort offers the member an opportunity to book a confirmed suite using points for just 8,000 points per night. A 6-night stay in a hotel suite on the beach in Bali, Indonesia is possible for 48,000 Hyatt Gold passport points.

Right now you have the chance to win 50,000 Hyatt Gold Passport points in the Passports with Purpose raffle. For sample dates I checked in January, room rates for a suite at the Grand Hyatt Bali are over $400 per night. $10 for a chance to win a $2,400 vacation week in Bali.

What are your odds? The number of people who have used their $10 raffle ticket for a chance to win the 50,000 points is not information I know. A guestimate can be made based on the total fundraising amount on the PwP fundraiser scale.

I would like to think we could get 200 tickets entered into the 50,000 Hyatt Gold passport points prize. The odds on the back of a lottery ticket are nowhere near that good for a prize that can be turned into a $2,400 exotic beach vacation value.

 

Related Posts:

Passports with Purpose Raffle – Win 50,000 Hyatt Gold Passport Points

Hoteliers Needed! Help Passports with Purpose Build a School in Cambodia

Hyatt Hotels Redemption Category Distribution

Hyatt Gold Passport Enhancements – And they really are enhancements (April 2, 2009)

 

Links:

Passports with Purpose

Hyatt Gold Passport – Passports with Purpose Promotion Terms

Bali Hyatt

Grand Hyatt Nusa Dua, Bali

Beach at Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia

Beach at Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia

 

 

 

 

InterContinental Hotels Group started a December Tweet Away promotion with Priority Club points giveaways and special hotel rate deals at http://twitter.com/ihg_deals.  Each day in December at a random time during the workday an IHG_Deal tweet will direct the Priority Club member to retweet a phrase or answer a trivia question within a specified time frame of the original IHG deal tweet.

You must register as a Priority Club member to be eligible for the prize.

Trivia question prizes range from a eighth place prize of 17,000 Priority Club points ($170 value) to a Grand Prize of 73,000 points ($730 value).

ReTweet prizes range from seventh place prize of 30,000 points ($300 value) to the grand prize of 280,000 points ($2,800 value).

The Grand Prize of 280,000 points is sufficient for 7 nights at any InterContinental Hotel in the world.

Here is a list of prizes so far this week:

Tuesday, December 1,

9:00am Eastern time/6am Pacific

ReTweet “Kids Eat Free@Holiday Inn”

Prize 50,000 points

 

Wednesday, December 2

1:58pm Eastern/10:58 am Pacific

Name IHG’s boutique brand

Answer: Hotel Indigo

Prize 20,000 points

 

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Special Hotel Value-Added Offers Tweeted 2x today around 11am Eastern/8am Pacific and 5pm Eastern/2pm Pacific

1)      Tickets to Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and complimentary breakfast with a reservation at InterContinental  Cleveland.

2)      Spa treatment for 2 and free breakfast with reservation at Hotel Indigo, Fort Myers, FL

 

The chance to win 280,000 points should make it worth your while to follow IHG_deals if you are a regular Twitter user. ReTweeting is just a matter of seeing the original tweet during the specified time frame.

If you are not a user of Twitter yet, this might be a reason to figure out this social media tool offering easy deals for free rooms.

December Tweet Away 50,000 points giveaway ReTweet from December 1

December Tweet Away 50,000 points giveaway ReTweet from December 1

Global Traveler has published their 6th annual reader travel survey based on the responses of 25,000 participants. Published in the December 2009 issue, the survey results cover 60 travel categories of airline, hotels, and loyalty programs.

Here are some of the hotel category winners:

Hyatt Hotels Park Hyatt brand ranked #1 for Best International Hotel Chain.

Park Hyatt is the luxury market segment brand for Hyatt Hotels. There are currently 26 Park Hyatt hotels with 4 in North America in Chicago, Philadelphia, Toronto, and Washington, D.C., and a hotel scheduled to open in 2011 in Mexico City.

Between the current promotion for a free night after every two stays and stays count double for elite credit, there is no reason a frequent guest can’t check out a Park Hyatt property on the cheap.

Sophia Coppola’s 2003 movie “Lost in Translation” with Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson featured the Park Hyatt Tokyo hotel. A quick look at the Park Hyatt Tokyo rates at $475 per night in February places this hotel out of my economic bracket, and perhaps yours too, but a loyalty traveler can take advantage of Hyatt Gold Passport’s promotion over the next two months to earn free nights that you can redeem at the Park Hyatt Tokyo or any of the other Park Hyatt hotels worldwide.

And if flying international is not in your near future, the award winners will be feted at a cocktail reception at Hyatt’s newest luxury hotel, Andaz Wall Street in New York City on January 21. Along with Park Hyatt hotels, Andaz is another luxury brand of the Hyatt Hotels chain with just two properties currently open in London and Hollywood. The Andaz Wall Street is taking room reservations beginning February 15. I assume the bar will be completed in time for the party. Andaz  5th Avenue will be the fourth hotel property to open in the Andaz brand sometime in spring 2010.

Best Hotel Chain in Asia – Grand Hyatt

While there are 7 Park Hyatt hotels in Asia, the Global Traveler readers pick for Best Hotel Chain in Asia was another Hyatt Hotels brand, the Grand Hyatt with 16 properties in Asia.

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Grand Hyatt Singapore

Readers of Global Traveler shared the love across hotel chains. I am fond of saying that a top elite member in any hotel chain is generally pretty satisfied with the special treatment received at hotels from complimentary upgrades, meals, and elite member lounge access. And those bonus points and perks that come with elite-level status are sweet.

Best Hotel Chain in Europe – Conrad Hotels (Hilton Hotels brand)

With the recent departure of the Conrad Mt Juliet in Ireland, this is a rather short list of 3 properties in Europe with just the Conrad Brussels, Conrad Dublin, and Conrad Istanbul. A new Conrad hotel in Portugal’s Algarve will open in 2010.

Best Hotel Chain in Latin America – Sheraton (Starwood Hotels)

My last trip to South America in 2007 involved stays at the Sheraton in Colonia, Uruguay, and the Sheraton Libertador in Buenos Aires. I thoroughly loved my hotel stays.

Indoor-outdoor pool Sheraton Colonia, Uruguay June 2007

Indoor-outdoor pool Sheraton Colonia, Uruguay June 2007

Best Domestic Hotel Chain – Marriott Hotels

Marriott has a large number of hotels with nearly 3,000 properties in the US covering market segments from lower midscale with Fairfield Inn to the luxury with JW Marriott, Marriott Vacation Clubs, and the ability to use your points for free nights at Ritz-Carlton hotels. The size of Marriott rivals Hilton Hotels, its closest competitor, and provides more upscale hotels in the US with Renaissance and Marriott brands than the larger IHG chain with Crowne Plaza and InterContinental Hotels.

Marriott Santa Clara, California

Marriott Santa Clara, California

Best Hotel Rewards Program – InterContinental Hotels Group Priority Club Rewards

Priority Club meets the needs of the business traveler who wants a choice of properties and loads of hotel points. IHG is larger than Marriott or Hilton with over 4,000 hotels globally. The real bang for your buck with Priority Club is the ability to earn hotel points from a myriad of promotions. Sign up for everything and don’t even bother trying to match where all those points in your account came from which promotions. Priority Club has great loyalty traveler earn and burn potential.

InterContinental Bangkok - Best Individual Hotel in Asia

InterContinental Bangkok - Best Individual Hotel in Asia

Denver International Airport ranked Best Airport Dining.

I’ll be passing through this airport in a couple of weeks. Perhaps I should stick around for a meal.

As an aside, GlobalTraveler interviewed me as Loyalty Traveler in 2008. I finally came across the article months later last December when looking through magazines in the Club Floor lounge of the Grand Hyatt Denver.  There were some errors in the math of the article regarding my discussion of hotel loyalty program promotions, but I was thrilled to see my name in print in a travel magazine at a hotel.

Link to GlobalTravelerUSA.com 2009 Award Winners

Hyatt Gold Passport is sponsoring a 50,000 bonus points prize through Loyalty Traveler to help build a school in Cambodia via the Passports with Purpose fundraiser. The fundraising goal of $13,000 will provide money to an independent non-profit organization, American Assistance for Cambodia (AAfC), founded by American journalist Bernie Krisher. The Rural Schools Project is AAfC’s major effort and $13,000 in donations will receive matching funds from the World Bank and Asian Development Bank to build a school for needy rural children. The Rural Schools Project has built over 400 schools in Cambodia over the past decade.

 

Pulitzer Prize winning New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof described his family’s journey to Cambodia last year to participate in the school opening ceremony for a junior high school they raised donations to help build.

 

The route to raising $13,000 through Passports with Purpose, an organization founded by Seattle travelbloggers, is a travel-oriented prize raffle made possible by donations from sponsors through the community of travelbloggers across the globe.

 

Loyalty Traveler was late to the effort as I just learned of this 2nd annual travelbloggers fundraiser last week when I wrote about Passports with Purpose in this piece.  I did not have much to give except hotel points and advice, so I made a direct appeal through social media, Facebook, Twitter, and my Loyalty Traveler blog to solicit donations from hoteliers for the Passports with Purpose fundraiser. I certainly would have preferred to have taken a more personalized approach, but time was of the essence with the raffle starting November 30 and the holiday weekend approaching. The outreach of social media was successful in making contact with one of my favorite hotel chains.

 

Hyatt Gold Passport donates 50,000 Bonus Points for Passports with Purpose prize

 

Hyatt Gold Passport has provided a generous donation of 50,000 bonus points for the Passports with Purpose raffle. These points can be redeemed for free nights anywhere in the world so the winner can create any type of Hyatt travel experience he or she wishes. Hyatt Hotels & Resorts has 415 properties worldwide including the Park Hyatt, Andaz, Grand Hyatt, Hyatt Regency, Hyatt Place, Hyatt Summerfield Suites and Hyatt Vacation Club brands.

 

Total Prize Value: Approximately $1,500

To get more details about Hyatt Gold Passport, please visit the Hyatt Gold Passport site.

 

To Participate: To win this prize, simply donate $10 for each online raffle entry on the Passports with Purpose Donation page and select this Hyatt Gold Passport prize or any of the other prizes you want to win with your ticket(s). Winner must provide their First and Last Name and Hyatt Gold Passport account number to receive bonus points. To join Hyatt Gold Passport visit www.goldpassport.com.

 

 

Key Dates:
PwP drawing begins: Nov 30
PwP closes: Dec 21
Prize winners announced: Jan 5 

 

 

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Passports with Purpose Raffle Donation Terms:

One (1) winner will receive 50,000 Hyatt Gold Passport bonus points.  (Approximate retail value $1,500 USD) Winner must provide their First and Last Name and Hyatt Gold Passport account number to receive bonus points. To join Hyatt Gold Passport visit www.goldpassport.com.  This prize is subject to the terms and conditions of the Hyatt Gold Passport program. Please allow 6-8 weeks after member information is received for Hyatt Gold Passport bonus points to be credited to your account. Hyatt reserves the right to alter or withdraw this program at any time without notice. Hyatt Hotels & Resorts® encompasses hotels managed, franchised or leased by subsidiaries and affiliates of Hyatt Hotels Corporation. The trademarks Hyatt™, Hyatt Hotels & Resorts™, Park Hyatt™, Andaz™, Grand Hyatt™, Hyatt Regency™, Hyatt Place™, Hyatt Summerfield Suites™, Hyatt Gold Passport™, and related marks are trademarks of Hyatt Corporation. © 2009 Hyatt Corporation. All rights reserved.

Link to Hyatt Gold Passport Promotion Terms and Conditions for Passports with Purpose prize. 

 

Related Loyalty Traveler posts:

Hyatt Gold Passport is currently offering one of the best hotel loyalty programs in years. I study these promotions and this offer is truly exceptional. Earn a free night after every two stays at any Hyatt brand hotel and earn airline miles while receiving double credit for elite status through January 31, 2010. Also, Costco is selling $100 in Hyatt Gift certificates this holiday season for $79.99 to reduce the cost of your Hyatt stays by 20%. Rarely is loyalty travel this giving.

 

Earn 2,500 airline miles with every two nights at a Hyatt brand hotel through January 31 (Oct. 5, 2009)

Hyatt Faster Free Nights + Stays Count Double promotion analysis Oct.1 – Jan 31, 2010 (Sep 19, 2009)

Hoteliers Needed! Help Passports with Purpose Build a School in Cambodia (Nov 24, 2009)

Hyatt Hotels Redemption Category Distribution (Nov. 6, 2009)

Hyatt Gold Passport Enhancements – And they really are enhancements (April 2, 2009)

Passports with Purpose and Hyatt Hotels in Bali (Dec 5, 2009)

 

Passports with Purpose Links:

Passports with Purpose (homepage)

Passports with Purpose Raffle Prizes and Donation page

Hyatt Hotels and Hyatt Gold Passport links:

Hyatt Hotels homepage 

Hyatt Gold Passport

Hyatt Gold Passport Free Night Awards with Points

 

 

 

Starwood Hotels launched a cyberMonday 72-hour sale today for select resort properties in the US, Caribbean, and French Polynesia. Rooms must be booked by Wednesday, December 2 for stays from January 1 through April 30, 2010. These limited time offer rates are nonrefundable.

The best deals I saw was for  Le Meridien Bora Bora (property link) overwater bungalow with glass floor for about US$715 per night (57,000 XPF after 10% VAT). The cheapest room at the Le Meridien is around $500 per night with this sale. The St. Regis Bora Bora is a few hundred dollars more per night.

US resort locations revealed some discounts, however, given the nonrefundable terms and the forecast for rates to continue dropping, particularly for resorts in 2010, I would be reluctant to recommend this sale as a great bargain. The handful of hotels I checked in Arizona and California for some sample dates did reveal these rates to be the lower than AAA rates, but generally only about 20% lower.

If the South Pacific Bali Ha’i sirens are calling you, then this might be your cyber-Monday deal of the day for a Bora Bora resort vacation.

US Airways 1,000 Bonus Miles offer

This cyberMonday Starwood Resort special offer also comes with a US Airways 1,000 miles per stay bonus if you choose Airline Direct Deposit miles for your stay. Members choosing airline miles direct deposit have Starpoints earned from a hotel stay converted automatically into miles. You receive 1 mile for every Starpoint you earn for the stay. The 1,000 Dividend Miles are in addition to regular earning of miles. You will not earn Starpoints for your hotel stay if you choose Airline Direct Deposit of miles.

 

Starwood Preferred Guest (SPG) Instant Gold Elite Offer for new members

Upgrade your Starwood Hotel lifestyle with 1,000 bonus points per night and instant Gold elite-level membership. Just send me an email to ricgarridolt@gmail.com and I will refer you for SPG Gold elite membership. This offer is only available to new members of SPG.

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