Some people get frustrated by how complicated it can be to redeem airline miles, given blackout dates and capacity controls. By comparison, this is something that’s awesome about hotel points, at least on the surface.
Most hotel loyalty programs don’t have blackout dates on award redemptions. However, not all policies are created equal, so in this post I wanted to compare the blackout dates policies of the four most popular hotel loyalty programs among OMAAT readers.
In this post:
Which hotel programs have no blackout dates?
Among the four biggest hotel loyalty programs in the Americas, there are very different policies when it comes to blackout dates on award stays. Some programs let you redeem points as long as a standard room is available for sale, while other programs let you redeem points only for a subset of standard rooms. So let’s go over the policies of Hilton Honors, IHG One Rewards, Marriott Bonvoy, and World of Hyatt, and see how they compare.
Hilton Honors blackout dates policy
Hilton Honors has no blackout dates or capacity controls on award redemptions — this includes if you’re redeeming for a standard room (typically the best value), or if you’re using Points & Money awards for a premium room. Of the major hotel groups, Hilton Honors has the most straightforward policy.
IHG One Rewards blackout dates policy
IHG One Rewards has no blackout dates on reward nights, but does have capacity controls. What this means is that some number of standard rooms will be made available for award redemptions every night, but that doesn’t mean that all standard rooms are available for award redemptions (as is the policy with Hilton Honors and World of Hyatt). In other words, if a hotel has 100 standard rooms, it could choose to make just 10 of them available for reward nights.
Note however that there are capacity controls and/or blackout dates for Six Senses properties, as these hotels don’t consistently participate in IHG One Rewards in the same way as other brands.
Marriott Bonvoy blackout dates policy
Marriott Bonvoy has a “limited blackout dates” policy, which I’d basically view as meaning there are no blackout dates, but there are some limited capacity controls. On most days most Marriott properties will make all standard rooms available for awards, though “on a limited number of days,” hotels can limit the number of standard rooms available for awards.
In other words, for some number of dates over peak season, hotels can choose to make only a subset of standard rooms available for points. On paper this isn’t as generous as the policies of Hilton Honors or World of Hyatt, but compares favorably to IHG One Rewards, which allows hotels to always only make a subset of standard rooms available for awards.
In the interest of being thorough, also note that the following properties don’t fully participate in Marriott Bonvoy when it comes to redeeming points:
- JW Marriott Scottsdale Camelback Inn Resort & Spa, Scottsdale, AZ
- Vistana Signature Network and Vistana Residence Network – all properties
- Marriott Vacation Club and Marriott Grand Residence Club – all properties
- Rome Marriott Grand Hotel Flora, Rome, Italy
- Waikoloa Beach Marriott Resort & Spa, Hawaii
- Wailea Beach Resort – Marriott – Maui, Hawaii
- Hotel Cala di Volpe, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Costa Smeralda, Italy
- Hotel Pitrizza, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Costa Smeralda, Italy
- Hotel Romazzino, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Costa Smeralda, Italy
- Homes & Villas by Marriott International
- North Island, a Luxury Collection Resort, Seychelles
World of Hyatt blackout dates policy
World of Hyatt has no blackout dates on free night points redemptions, as long as a standard room is available for sale, with the standard rate also bookable. While World of Hyatt also lets you redeem points outright for suites, there are capacity controls on those redemptions.
Furthermore, note that Destination Residences, along with the following properties, don’t typically have standard room redemptions available (due to the types of accommodations these properties offer):
- Hyatt Beach House
- Hyatt Sierra Lodge
- Hyatt Siesta Key Beach
- Hyatt Windward Pointe
- Residences at Park Hyatt Beaver Creek
- The Chatwal Lodge
- Ventana Campground
How do hotels get paid for award stays?
To understand these varying policies, it’s worth being aware of the general business model behind award stays. Individual hotels are typically owned by investment firms, and are simply managed by the major hotel groups. Hotels get reimbursed by the loyalty programs when members redeem their points for a stay. The reimbursement rate is typically based on how full the hotel ends up being. Very generally speaking:
- If a hotel isn’t close to being full (less than 90% full, give or take), the hotel receives fairly low reimbursement, that covers the costs the hotel incurs for having a guest, but doesn’t cover any revenue loss from an award guest displacing a cash guest
- If a hotel is full (more than 90% full, give or take), the hotel is reimbursed significantly more, typically close to the average daily rate, to account for the possible revenue loss
As you might imagine, loyalty programs love when people redeem points at hotels that are empty, while hotels like when guests redeem points at hotels that are full (especially when award bookings contribute to such high occupancy).
Hotels have varying attitudes toward award guests, regardless of circumstances. Some hotels make a point of being welcoming to award guests, and even view them as an important part of their business model and revenue, while other hotels make award guests feel like an inconvenience.
How some hotels game “no blackout dates” rules
Unfortunately don’t expect to always be able to find a standard room available, even among hotel loyalty programs with no blackout dates and no capacity controls. Individual hotels have creative ways to restrict award availability, and that’s why the policy on paper is really only half of the equation when it comes to redeeming points for free nights.
While loyalty programs may require hotels to make all standard rooms available for awards, they don’t dictate how hotels define standard rooms. The most common practice we’ve seen is hotels essentially creating a small subset of rooms that are considered “standard.” Previously maybe 50 rooms at a particular hotel were considered standard, while now maybe five rooms are considered “standard,” perhaps because they have a slightly different view, are on a different floor, or something else.
For example, the Andaz Maui is notorious for this. Only “1 King Bed” and “2 Queen Beds” rooms are available for points. A vast majority of the hotel’s rooms are resort view, partial ocean view, or ocean view, so it seems that several years back some rooms were put in this subcategory so that award availability could be limited.
That’s just one example, but there are plenty of hotels that have done something similar.
Along the same lines, it’s not uncommon to see almost no standard room availability at many of Hilton Honors’ most premium properties, including the Waldorf Astoria Los Cabos Pedregal, Waldorf Astoria Maldives, Conrad Bora Bora, etc.
I’m not suggesting games are being played here, but clearly there are few standard rooms and they’re being snagged early on, so it can be tough to lock these in otherwise (except last minute, when many rooms are often made available). My point is simply to say that while a no blackout dates and no capacity controls policy is as good as it gets, that still doesn’t guarantee easy award availability.
Bottom line
Hotel loyalty programs have varying policies when it comes to blackout dates and capacity controls. As you can see, Hilton Honors and World of Hyatt have the best policies, followed by Marriott Bonvoy, followed by IHG One Rewards.
While no blackout dates policies are great, unfortunately some hotels still play games with award availability, by recategorizing rooms so that there aren’t many standard rooms. Hopefully with some persistence you can still snag the award room you want.
What has your experience been with hotel policies around award blackout dates?
To DCS:
I understood and as Ben has stated in his column if they are receiving something from the companies, ie; hotels, airlines, cars they are writing about, they will state it.
Its full disclosure. Maybe not every columnist is releasing that information.
Hopefully its just favorites and not commercialism. Thats why we follow these columns.
@Anthony -- You are confused. Individual bloggers' financial interests have nothing to do with bogus claims that they fabricate, turn into travel blogosphere dogma through repetition and then push to gaslight the masses into accepting the "superiority" of their preferred loyalty programs. It's those bogus claims about programs rather than the various products that they write about that are so deplorable, I am taking a sledge hammer to.
Sorry but I have regularly come across blacked out dates (or what they term “flexible dates”) on the IHG programme. As a Diamond Ambassador i am also told that i do not face blackout dates either! This is not just with Six Senses but with a number of their brands including Kimpton and Intercontinental.
So, how can they claim “no blackout dates”?
(This comment cleans up and consolidates my two comments below that I botched because posted them from handheld while in transit)
There are only two hotel loyalty programs that let you "redeem points as long as a standard room is available for sale": Accor Live...
(This comment cleans up and consolidates my two comments below that I botched because posted them from handheld while in transit)
There are only two hotel loyalty programs that let you "redeem points as long as a standard room is available for sale": Accor Live Limitless (ALL) and Hilton Honors.
For ALL, things are quite straightforward because ALL points are treated exactly like cash, with 2,000 ALL points being worth exactly 40 euros. Therefore, any room in an Accor property that is available for sale for, say, 200 euros/night can always be booked with
[200euros * (2,000 ALL points/40euros)] = 10,000 ALL points/night
because 200euros and 10,000 ALL points are worth exactly the same and are thus interchangeable.
For Hilton Honors, any room that is designated as a "premium" room is always available for booking with points if it is available for booking with cash, and the reason is that, like Accor, Hilton sets up a direct proportionality or conversion factor at each hotel that enables their points to be treated exactly as cash. For example, a couple of years ago when I checked, the conversion factor at WA Maldives was $0.0021/HH point. Therefore, if a "premium" villa at WA Maldives was available for booking at $2000/night, then anyone could book that villa with
$2,000/($0.0021/HHpoint) = 952,381 HH points
without any questions asked.
No other program can make the claim that if "a standard room is available for booking with cash, it is also available for booking with points"...
Some programs let you redeem points as long as a standard room is available for sale, while other programs let you redeem points only for a subset of standard rooms.
There are only two hotel loyalty programs that let you " redeem points as long as a standard room is available for sale": Accor Live Limitless (ALL) and Hilton Honors.
For ALL, things are quite straightforward because ALL points are treated exactly like cash with...
Some programs let you redeem points as long as a standard room is available for sale, while other programs let you redeem points only for a subset of standard rooms.
There are only two hotel loyalty programs that let you " redeem points as long as a standard room is available for sale": Accor Live Limitless (ALL) and Hilton Honors.
For ALL, things are quite straightforward because ALL points are treated exactly like cash with 2,000 ALL points being worth exactly 40 euros. Therefore, any room in an Accor property that is available sale at, say, 200 euros/night can always be booked with
[200euros * (2,000 ALL points/40euros)] = 10,000 ALL points/night
because 200euros and 10,000 ALL points are exactly the same and are thus interchangeable.
For Hilton Honors, any room that is designated as a "premium" room is always available for booking with points it is available for booking with booking with cash, and the reason is that like Accor, Hilton sets up a direct proportionality or conversion factor factor at each hotel that enables their points to be treated exactly as cash. For example, a couple of years ago when I checked, the conversion factor at WA Maldives was $0.0021/HH point. Therefore, if a "premium" villa at WA Maldives was available for booking at $2000/night that anyone could book that villa with $2,000/0/
(Ooops! The preceding comment, still unproofed, posted before I was ready to post it!!!)
Continuing...
...Therefore, if a "premium" villa at WA Maldives was available for booking at $2000/night, anyone could book that villa with $2,000/($0.0021/HHpoint) = 952,381 HH points, without any question asked.
No other program can make the claim that if "a standard room is available for booking with cash, it is also available for booking without"...
"No blackout dates" is about as meaningful as Uber Eats and DoorDash advertising "No delivery fee."
Hotels play games just like UE and DD jack up service fees to astronomical levels.
Actually, you are dead wrong about that. The only reason all of travel blogosphere constantly and wrongly accuses hotels or loyalty programs of "playing games with awards" is that self-anointed "travel gurus", in their obsession to declare their preferred programs the...
Actually, you are dead wrong about that. The only reason all of travel blogosphere constantly and wrongly accuses hotels or loyalty programs of "playing games with awards" is that self-anointed "travel gurus", in their obsession to declare their preferred programs the "best", simply make up or misinterpret various terms and conditions of those programs in order to make them seem better than they are in reality. For instance. in this very post, @Ben claims that
. However, the claim is bogus because there nothing in the World of Hyatt T&C that supports it. It was simply made up. The truth, as I argue elsewhere in this space, is that, except for Accor ALL awards and Hilton Honors "premium awards", every hotel loyalty program allows members to redeem points only for a subset of standard rooms that its sets aside for that purpose, and no more. Therefore, rather than programs "playing games" with awards availability, the simple truth is that the reason standard awards cannot be booked even when the search engine shows standard rooms to still be availability is simply that a hotel ran out of standard rooms that it set aside for members to redeem with points, based on a statistical model that tries to predict how many standard rooms it can realistically sell for cash at a particular time...
You’re wrong about Hyatt of course, nothing abnormal there since you are a dogmatic douche, but keep fluffing yourself to feel good
Got a link to the World of Hyatt T&C that support the claim?
I didn't think so...
Find a single example for us of a standard room for sale not available on points. Take your time, we will wait.
Even your feeble brain can’t make that happen.
LOL. Where do you think the deluge of accusations that hotels or programs "play games with awards availability" come from? Out of Thin air? Talk to your friends over at FT and you'll be deluged with examples...
So cute you two.
@UA-NYC Impression Secrets Moxche….like always
@DCS since when do T&C’s matter to you? You always make the Hilton upgrade “if we have it it’s yours…” claim based on one spot of the website, but it’s in stark contrast to the T&C’s.
@Sel,D -- You must be walking around with your head in the sand to ask when T&Cs matter to me. They have always mattered to me, as I have repeatedly used them to expose self-anointed "travel gurus" lies, fabrications...
@Sel,D -- You must be walking around with your head in the sand to ask when T&Cs matter to me. They have always mattered to me, as I have repeatedly used them to expose self-anointed "travel gurus" lies, fabrications and gaslighting.
Hilton's statement that "If we have a better room it's yours, up to a 1-bedrom suite" is not at all inconsistent with their T&C that promise "a preferred room up to a suite", nor is it inconsistent with my actual real-life experience. Your problem is that you've drunk the "kool-aid" and believe self-anointed "travel gurus'" willful misinterpretation of Hinton's T&C that claims <falsely that "Hilton Honors makes no promises", despite the program's incontrovertibly clarifying promise that "If we have a better room it yours, up to a 1-bedrom suite".
Why isn't that "promise" in the T&Cs then?
Don't get me wrong, I'm all team Hilton, but the if we have it, it's yours up to a 1-bedroom suite doesn't reflect reality. I've pointed to it before and have been shut down......because it's not in the T&Cs.
@Sel, D. -- The promise is in the T&C, and it is as good a promise as any program gives it members, especially now with Hilton's globally automated upgrades that clear up to 3 days before check-in. Your problem is that you have drunk too much kool-aid about how "Hilton makes no promises", which is total B.S. that Hilton clarified unequivocally: "If we have a better room it is yours, up to a 1-bedrom suite"....
@Sel, D. -- The promise is in the T&C, and it is as good a promise as any program gives it members, especially now with Hilton's globally automated upgrades that clear up to 3 days before check-in. Your problem is that you have drunk too much kool-aid about how "Hilton makes no promises", which is total B.S. that Hilton clarified unequivocally: "If we have a better room it is yours, up to a 1-bedrom suite". That is not language that goes into a legal document containing a program's T&C, but it explains what the T&C promise.
You need to learn to think for yourself because I am done being a "nice guy". I will now take a sledge hammer to begin dismantling the many bogus claims that self-anointed "travel gurus" have been dispensed for years and have gaslighted their readers, like you, turning them into their sycophants.
Already, I have made sure that the Hyatt point is no longer "the most valuable points currency." Soon, the following gems will be a thing of the past as well: the Hyatt breakfast will no longer be the "best" offering of any program because it is not; in fact, it is one of the weakest; and, the claim with Hyatt "if a standard room is available for cash sale, it is also available for booking with points" will be established as totally bogus, because, as the deluge of accusations about how "Hyatt plays games with awards" attests, the claim is not a WoH T&C; it was simply made up!
Stay tuned, and watch out for the wrecking ball!
Impression Secrets Moxche standard room can be booked on points tonight. And a bunch of other random dates I put in.
Try harder.
Look, don't try to be too cute and half about this.
Do this:
1. Open your favorite web browser
2. Fire up your favorite search engine ('google.com' always works)
3. Do a search of the following phrase: Hyatt properties play games with award
See what...
Look, don't try to be too cute and half about this.
Do this:
1. Open your favorite web browser
2. Fire up your favorite search engine ('google.com' always works)
3. Do a search of the following phrase: Hyatt properties play games with award
See what is displayed? Here is a very small sampling...
- TPG blog post: "Hyatt Resorts That Play Games with Award Availability"
- FT Thread: "yet another hyatt playing games with award inventory
- Reddit thread: "Hyatt award night games"
...and so on and so on...
In case your apparent amnesia persists, here's a search result that is sure to jog your memory:
FT thread: "Unfortunately, this hotel is not accepting World of Hyatt points or award stays"
where a poster named "UA-NYC" locks horn with another poster named "WasKnown" with whom "UA-NYC" is apparent as obsessed over there as he is with "DCS" over here.
Here's the link. Check it out and have the good sense to spare us more inanities: https://bit.ly/3VTKSrr
You are clearly mental case...
@DCS -- "You are clearly mental case..."
Looking in the mirror again DCS. Is it vanity or insanity? Likely both.
@Don -- What exactly do you want from me? Is it not yet clear that you should take you garbage elsewhere to people who may actually care about what you spew? I will address people who can put together coherent and fact-based arguments responding to the substance of my comments. I have no use for puerile taunts and gibberish. Just get lost. Please.
You must not have looked a lot. Try may 14th. Or almost every other day. Cool you found one for same day.