Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Which sort of IHG One Rewards points count towards elite status, and which don’t?

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

IHG One Rewards is the only hotel scheme which offers multiple ways of earning STATUS points without staying in their hotels.

With IHG One Rewards seeing major improvements as part of its relaunch in 2022 – see here – elite status is now more worthwhile than it was.

Before we go into this, remember that the Ambassador loyalty programme, which covers InterContinental hotels, also gives Platinum status in IHG One Rewards.  See this HfP article for details.  There is a $200 annual fee ($225 from October 2024) for Ambassador. You may be happy to pay the $200 and be content with Platinum status.

How to earn IHG One Rewards status without staying

If you want Diamond Elite status in IHG One Rewards, you need to earn it

If you want top tier Diamond Elite status, however, you need to earn it.  Diamond Elite will require you to earn 120,000 base points or stay 70 nights in a calendar year.

Diamond Elite now comes with free breakfast and (theoretically) a better chance of a good upgrade. This means that it does now offer something of real value.  You will also get a 100% points bonus on every stay compared to a 60% bonus as a Platinum member.

IHG has been making various changes over the last few years as to what counts as a ‘base point’.  The most frustrating change was stopping transfers of Virgin Flying Club miles from counting.  I once got myself top tier IHG status with a single Virgin Points transfer.

Let’s look at the various scenarios you have for earning points, and see if they do or do not count as ‘base points’ towards the 120,000 you need.

Don’t forget that if you earn status via base points, you will not earn ‘milestone bonuses’ on the way, such as a suite upgrade at 20 nights or an annual lounge pass at 40 nights. For this reason, it is now more attractive to earn IHG status via nights rather than base points.

IHG One Rewards transactions which DO count towards status

Room spend

You earn 10 base points per $1 on your bill at most IHG hotels, as long as your room was booked directly (not via Expedia etc) and was not heavily discounted (a rule of thumb is more than 30% from the Best Available Rate).

Points from a ‘bonus points’ package

Some hotels offer room rates which offer bonus points if you are prepared to spend more.  These bonuses can be as high as 5,000 points per night. Sometimes it works out cheaper than buying points directly, sometimes it doesn’t.  However, as these points DO count as base points, these rates are now more attractive if you are chasing status. Note that this must be advertised on ihg.com as a ‘Bonus Points’ package.  If you book any other package which just happens to come with additional points, these will not count for status. They are usually only offered when booking flexible rates.

How to earn IHG One Rewards status without staying

Car rentals

IHG Trip Extras lets you book Hertz car rentals.  The points from these count towards status.

Restaurant bookings

IHG has a partnership with OpenTable for restaurant bookings which I wrote about here.  In the majority of cases, you earn 150 points per booking, boosted to 500 on your first booking.  These points count for elite status.  Note that, in my experience, the IHG booking page has less availability than the main OpenTable site – restaurants which require a credit card guarantee do not show up. I have used this a number of times and the points have always posted within 24 hours of the meal.

Day to day credit card spend

The UK does not currently have an IHG One Rewards credit card. For the benefit of readers outside the UK, points earned from day-to-day spending on the card (NOT the sign up bonus) count towards elite status.

IHG One Rewards transactions which DO NOT count towards status

Status bonuses

Gold members receive a 20% bonus on base points when they stay in a hotel.  Platinum members receive a 60% bonus.  Top tier Diamond Elite members receive a 100% bonus.  These are not treated as base points.

Credit card sign-up bonuses

This is a moot point in the UK as there is not currently an open IHG One Rewards credit card. For the benefit of non-UK readers, any bonus you get for signing up to an IHG One Rewards credit card is not treated as base points. Your points from day-to-spending DO count.

How to earn IHG One Rewards status without staying

Bonus points from IHG promotions

If IHG sends you a code for 1,000 bonus points on your next stay, or if they offer a global points promotion, those points are not treated as base points.

Buying points

These definitely don’t count towards status.  That would be too easy!

Transfers from Virgin Atlantic

As you can see from this page of the Virgin Atlantic website, you can transfer your Virgin Points – minimum 10,000 – into IHG One Rewards on a 1:1 basis.   Now that the points no longer count towards status, this is a bad deal as I only value an IHG point at 0.4p.

Transfers from Finnair

You can also transfer points from Finnair into IHG One Rewards – see here.  There are very few reports from people who have done this, but the last one I saw said that it did not count for status.

Transfers from HSBC Premier credit cards

No, they don’t count either! Here is our view of the best HSBC Premier credit card partners.

Conclusion

I hope you found this useful.  In summary, for UK residents:

  • for easy status, I would ignore everything I’ve written above and focus on buying Ambassador status for $200 ($225 from October) which gets you free Platinum status – you won’t get free breakfast but you should benefit from upgrades and you get a 60% bonus on base points
  • if you want top tier Diamond status, look at booking ‘Bonus Point’ packages when you stay – picking up an extra 3,000 to 5,000 points per night will be a big help

My personal strategy for IHG One Rewards is not to chase status via stays or base points but, in years where I know I will have an InterContinental stay, purchase Ambassador and get the immediate upgrade to Platinum Elite as an extra bonus.


IHG One Rewards news

IHG One Rewards update – April 2025:

Get bonus points: IHG is not currently running a global promotion.

New to IHG One Rewards?  Read our overview of IHG One Rewards here and our article on points expiry rules here. Our article on ‘What are IHG One Rewards points worth?’ is here.

Buy points: If you need additional IHG One Rewards points, you can buy them here.

Want to earn more hotel points?  Click here to see our complete list of promotions from IHG and the other major hotel chains or use the ‘Hotel Offers’ link in the menu bar at the top of the page.

Comments (36)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Big Al says:

    I joined the ambassador program in Oct last year so we could get an upgrade on a January holiday to Doha. Booked a club room and got upgraded to a diplomat suite which was double the size and double the price. A worth while investment. Still to decide where to go with my BOGOF weekend voucher.

  • Dave says:

    Diamond is the only IHG status worth having.
    I wonder if any people will actually have diamond in 2025 now that ambassador no longer retains IHG status. If you’re going to stay 70 nights next year surely you’d go for Hilton or Marriott that both require less nights for better perks.

    I’d expect IHG will soon introduce a promotion/ status match or co branded credit card to try to retain some elite members. If they don’t they’ll certainly lose a lot of UK loyalty customers next year.

    • John says:

      You don’t need to stay 70 nights

      This year I hope to retain diamond for 2025 with 40 nights and bonus points (got it from creationgate).

      With lounge access until end 2026 it may not be necessary to be diamond in 2026. If the programme stays as is I can attempt to become diamond again for 2027.

      I agree there is a reasonable chance of some fast-track promo to retain/gain diamond

    • Dace says:

      Hilton does not provide better perks. Their lounges are of poor quality and overrun when they do have one. Breakfast in the US does not exist anymore and their hotels generally are very hit and miss with age of the product.

      Marriott on the other hand requires a PhD in knowledge of their brands to know if you’re going to get breakfast or lounge access or not. Additionally, I find them move expensive like-for-like, however they do have more footprint at the upper end of the market and a better geographical spread.

      For me, the IHG programme is actually the best if you stay enough to actually earn the status and you stay in hotels with lounges. With them I always have a upgrade (usually 2+ cats but always 1+), I have Breakfast wherever I go (or 2 drinks if included), I get lounge access that isn’t rammed with American’s that descends into a Lord of the Files type situation whenever the food and drinks come out and lastly I get a lot of vouchers with them through milestones that allows me to get numerous meals per year for free.

      I personally like that IHG are limiting the ability to renew Diamond via the AMB route as the last thing it wants in the new ‘dynamic pricing’ world is for everyman and their dog to have the status which in turn lead to a Hiltonfication of benefits on the property.

      • David says:

        I am hoping to renew Diamond this year.

        Currently at 43 nights and 86,000 elite qualifying points.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      I will earn it based on staying 70 nights

      IHG works for me. I could possible earn a status for fewer nights with another chain but e.g. Hilton’s are less convenient for where I want to be,.

      And the fewer peop,e that have it the better it’ll be for those that do!

      • ba says:

        Agreed – I prefer IHG to the others ! ~42 nights for me to retain diamond this year based on points . Will hit 70 in any event.

        I didn’t renew my ambassador membership this year though…

  • Phillip says:

    I’ve clearly jinxed it – checked in at the Halyard (Vignette) in Liverpool. Great hotel but zero recognition; I’m not bothered about the lack of upgrade but was asked if I wanted to add breakfast to my “room only” rate, so I had to ask if breakfast was offered as a Diamond welcome amenity.

  • QFFlyer says:

    Ambassador plus 40 nights (for the lounge pass, to which Diamond doesn’t give access anyway) will likely be my strategy going forward. Lounge access, where available, will at least cover breakfast (which I’m always 50/50 on getting up for anyway).

    I unexpectedly requalified on points last year, expecting to lose Diamond after many consecutive years of Spire/Diamond (merci BNP), so got a one year reprieve, but I’m almost certain I won’t requalify again this year beyond Platinum.

  • QFFlyer says:

    Also, is AY-IHG even an option now that they use Avios – even if it would be a huge waste, the website says “We are still updating the details for this partner for you to be able to earn and use Avios.” which suggests it may return.

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.