Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Bits: Hotels.com’s One Key gets even worse, our China Airlines winner takes his trip

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

News in brief:

One Key gets even worse, amazingly

Hotels.com Rewards was a fantastic rewards programme which many HfP readers used to book all of their stays at non-chain hotels. In fact, many also used it for chain bookings because they preferred to spread their stays around – picking the best hotel for their needs – rather than go all in with one brand.

With each stay earning you 10% back on the ex-VAT cost, the rewards quickly added up for heavy stayers.

In 2024, Hotels.com Rewards was trashed. It was merged with Expedia Rewards to form One Key, which offers a return on hotel bookings of just 2%.

It was a total disaster. Hotels.com quickly abandoned the global roll-out of One Key, but it was too late for members in the UK and US.

The only tiny upside of One Key was that you could earn OneKeyCash with Vrbo, Expedia Group’s home rental business. This was promoted as a key selling point of the new scheme.

Except …. One Key has now announced that base level members of the programme will no longer receive any rewards, at all, when booking with vrbo.

Platinum and Gold members of One Key will continue to earn 2%. Silver members will earn at a reduced rate 1%.

Sadly, One Key has just become an even bigger mess than it was. It must surely be time now to put the UK and US back onto the ‘10% return’ scheme still enjoyed by the rest of the world.

Personally, I used my OneKeyCash (around $100) on one stay immediately after the scheme launched and I haven’t visited the Hotels.com website since. I suspect I am not alone.

Our China Airlines winner takes his trip!

Last October we ran a series of reviews focusing on Taiwan, and specifically on the service offered by China Airlines on their direct flights between London Heathrow and Taipei. (Read Rhys’s reviews of China Airlines Premium Business Class and premium economy service, as well as his introduction to Taiwan if you missed them).

As part of this series, China Airlines ran a competition for one lucky reader to win a pair of return business class flights to Taipei. In January we revealed that this was regular reader Alex T.

Alex has just sent us photographic evidence that he and a friend did indeed make it onboard Flight CI82.

China Airlines Competition Winner onboard

His trip report can be summed up as ‘Taiwan was amazing, and China Airlines’ service was incredible.’

Our thanks to China Airlines for providing this prize and we are delighted that you enjoyed the trip Alex! More fabulous HfP competitions (hopefully) coming soon.

Comments (42)

  • Nick says:

    I realised early on why they made the change (and then felt stupid for initially falling for it!) The default is to deduct your credit from the headline prices shown… making them look lower than they actually are, and artificially competitive vs other sites. I expect they think the gains from naive customers outweigh the losses from savvy ones. Obviously it assumes a large proportion of customers have booked at Expedia before.

  • Clive says:

    Virgin announce flight to Seoul

  • Mike says:

    Hotels.com has been kind of dead for a while. Expedia occasionally offers competitive pricing, but still, hard pass. Smaller sites are really eating into their market right now

  • Tom says:

    I regularly used hotels.com until they changed the rewards, and since then I have not made a single booking through it.

    How to ruin an attractive and effective loyalty program.

    • Gerry says:

      And from what I read, their commission is 30%, so a loyalty program where the customer gets 10% back in the form of a credit, should still be very profitable for expedia while building customers loyalty.

      I now use Expedia/hotels.com mostly when there’s an Amex or similar promo running. So not very often. Otherwise booking directly or through booking.com.

      Sad how they destroyed a good program.

  • jannis says:

    I ditched hotels.com completely this year.
    last year were total of 50 stays, this year 0.

  • tw33ty says:

    already ditched hotels.com here as soon as the terrible changes came.

Leave a Reply to Danny Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please click here to read our data protection policy before submitting your comment

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.