We’ve covered Hyatt, Marriott, and Hilton’s cards, which are some of the most valuable hotel programs in the world. The next program of note is with IHG. IHG has a wide variety of hotels, including Holiday Inn and Kimpton. Holiday Inns aren’t exciting hotels, but Kimptons often are very nice. I’m not very familiar with IHG hotels, but I’m staying at a Kimpton in April that I booked through Amex Travel recently, so I figured I should include the cards to celebrate. I’ve previously covered the IHG Traveler Card, and the second card to cover is the IHG Rewards Premier Card, which has a $99 annual fee.
I provide the information here just to give readers a vague idea if the rewards offered by the card might make sense for them to consider the card. All information should be confirmed with the card company before applying.
Welcome Offer
At the time of posting, the IHG Premier credit card has a limited time welcome offer of 140 000 IHG points after you spend $3 000 on purchases within the first 3 months of account opening. The number of points is very high for a $99 annual fee card, but IHG points are not a particularly valuable currency. They have a value of around 0.5 ¢/pt, which is on par with Hilton points. The no annual fee Traveler Card currently has a welcome offer of 80 000 IHG points, so the extra 60 000 IHG points (worth around $300) I would argue justify the $99 annual fee for the first year.
Earnings
The IHG Premier card has a three-tiered structure with different categories than the Traveler Card: 10x points at IHG (5%); 5x points on travel, dining, and gas stations (2.5%); and 3x points on all other purchases (1.5%). The non-IHG earning rates are alright; though not quite as good as the Hilton Amex cards, they’re a bit stronger than the earnings on most Marriott Bonvoy cards (e.g. the Bonvoy Boundless).
Benefits
For a (relatively low) $99 annual fee, this card provides substantial perks over its no annual fee sibling. For starters, the card provides Platinum Elite Status with IHG, which is strictly better than anything offered by the no annual fee card. Platinum status offers the 4th night free on points redemptions, 60% bonus points, late checkout, and a welcome amenity. The card offers a free night award worth up to 40 000 points, which arguably more than justifies the annual fee assuming you stay at IHG hotels at least once per year. As a spending incentive, the card also offers 10 000 bonus points and a $100 statement credit after spending $20 000 on the card in a calendar year, which is an OK incentive. (It works out to be a 0.75% bonus return.)
How to use the points
The main use for IHG points is to redeem them for stays at IHG hotels. IHG has a large global footprint, but many of its brands are less aspirational and more functional than many of the Hilton/Hyatt/Marriott brands. I rarely stay at IHG properties, so I don’t have substantial insight to offer yet.
Examples of using the card
These examples assume you spend all your hotel budget at IHG.
| Example A | Example B | Example C | Example D | |||||
| Groceries (3x) | $300 | 900 | $200 | 600 | $600 | 1 800 | $400 | 1 200 |
| Gas (5x) | $0 | 0 | $100 | 500 | $200 | 1 000 | $100 | 1 500 |
| Airfare (5x) | $700 | 3 500 | $200 | 1 000 | $0 | 0 | $400 | 2 000 |
| Hotels (10x) | $1 000 | 10 000 | $200 | 2 000 | $0 | 0 | $300 | 3 000 |
| Gen Travel (3x) | $400 | 1 200 | $0 | 0 | $300 | 900 | $100 | 300 |
| Dining (5x) | $600 | 3 000 | $300 | 1 500 | $300 | 1 500 | $0 | 0 |
| General (3x) | $1 000 | 3 000 | $500 | 1 500 | $500 | 1 500 | $400 | 1 200 |
| Total | $4 000 | 21 600 | $1 500 | 7 100 | $1 700 | 6 700 | $1 700 | 9 200 |
| Average points/$ | 5.40 | 4.73 | 3.94 | 5.41 |
The IHG Premier card’s broad and rewarding bonus categories mean that the average points earned has a large range of 3.94 – 5.41 points/$, which is worth 1.97 – 2.70 ¢/$. This is a substantial improvement over the no annual fee card (0.5 – 1.25% better return per dollar spent), with the valuation of 0.5 ¢/point. The low value of IHG points means that although this card earns substantial numbers of points, there are likely to be better cards for most categories.
Specific examples
These examples include the bonus points earned from getting IHG Elite Platinum status from the card.
| Card | World Traveller ($750) (% return) | IHG Hotel night ($230/night) | Points values (WT/Hotel) |
| No rewards card | 2 728 (4.9%) | 2 200 IP (4.8%) | $37.10 / $11.00 |
| General 2% cashback card ($0) | 2 728 + $15.00 (6.9%) | 2 200 IP + $4.60 (6.8%) | $52.10 / $15.60 |
| Chase Sapphire Preferred ($95) | 2 728 Avios + 1 500 UR (7.9%) | 2 200 IP + 460 UR (7.8%) | $59.60 / $17.90 |
| Amex Green Card ($150) | 2 728 Avios + 2 250 MR (9.1%) | 2 200 IP + 690 MR (9.3%) | $68.60 / $21.35 |
| IHG Premier Card ($99) | 2 728 Avios + 1 500 IP (5.9%) | 5 720 IP (12.5%) | $42.60 / $28.85 |
Is this credit card right for you?
If you stay at IHG hotels with any frequency, this is a great card to pick. The free night award should cover the annual fee easily, and the Platinum Elite Status is a great perk. In addition, the bonus points should provide additional value over some simpler cards. I don’t often stay at IHG hotels, but if I did, I’d definitely pick up this card. I’d argue this card is one of the better mid-tier hotel credit cards. I definitely recommend this card strongly over the no annual fee card if you stay at IHG hotels at all. And I don’t recommend an IHG credit card if you don’t stay at IHG hotels.
2 thoughts on “IHG Premier Card”