Choice Privileges Points Sale: 50% Bonus Worth It From India?
dealuni_styles.css to Appearance → Customize → Additional CSS, or change css_mode to “inline” in config/generator_settings.yaml.Lekin fine print bhi zaroor hai.
I was halfway through my morning filter coffee when the Choice Privileges sale notification landed in my inbox. 50% bonus on purchased points, valid until May 24, 2026. My spreadsheet opened itself. The math looked interesting for about three minutes — and then I remembered that Choice Privileges barely exists as a brand in India, and the whole thing got complicated fast.
TL;DR
- Choice Privileges is selling points at ~0.69 cents each (roughly ₹0.66 per point) with a 50% bonus on purchases of 4,000+ points, valid May 18–24, 2026.
- Maximum purchase is 180,000 points per year (plus 90,000 bonus), costing $1,854 (~₹1,77,595) for 270,000 points total.
- There is no direct transfer path from any major Indian credit card to Choice Privileges — this deal is almost entirely irrelevant unless you already hold points or plan to stay at a Choice property abroad, especially in Japan.
What’s the Deal?
Choice Privileges is running a 50% bonus on purchased points from May 18 to May 24, 2026. Buy at least 4,000 points in one transaction and you unlock the full 50% bonus. The per-point cost works out to approximately 0.69 US cents per point (~₹0.66 per point at today’s rate of ₹95.79/USD) if you max out the purchase at 180,000 base points.
To be precise: 270,000 total points (180,000 purchased + 90,000 bonus) will cost you $1,854, which is ₹1,77,595. That’s a lot of rupees for a hotel program most Indians have never swiped a key card for.
This is historically one of the better promotions Choice runs. For context, here’s what they’ve offered over the last year:
So yes, 50% is near the top of what Choice offers. But frequency matters too — they run these promotions roughly every 6–8 weeks. Iska kya scene hai? The urgency is manufactured.
What Is Choice Privileges, Actually?
Choice Hotels is a massive chain — over 7,000 properties across 40 countries, roughly 570,000 rooms. Brands include Comfort Inn, Clarion, Cambria, Quality Inn, Sleep Inn, Ascend Collection, and a few others. It’s a mid-market to upper-midscale portfolio. You’re not booking a Ritz-Carlton equivalent here.
Award pricing ranges from 6,000 to 45,000 points per night in most markets. Asia-Pacific properties can go up to 75,000 points per night for premium options.
The INR Math: One Worked Example
Let’s say you’re eyeing a Comfort Inn or Cambria in the US or Europe for a layover or road trip. A mid-tier property costs around 20,000–30,000 Choice points per night.
Scenario: 2 nights at a 25,000-point/night property
- Points needed: 50,000
- Cost at 0.69 cents/point: $345 = ₹33,047
- Cash rate for a comparable Comfort Inn in the US: typically $90–130/night = $180–260 for 2 nights = ₹17,242–₹24,905
Sach poochho toh — in most cases, you’re paying more by buying Choice points than just booking the cash rate directly. The math only works if you’re targeting a specific property where points redemptions beat the cash price, or if you’re topping up an existing balance for a specific booking you’ve already identified.
The Indian Cardholder Problem
Here’s the core issue: there is no direct transfer path from any major Indian credit card to Choice Privileges. None. I checked my card data carefully.
- HDFC Infinia, Diners Black: KrisFlyer, Avios, Air India, Aeroplan, Marriott, Accor. No Choice.
- ICICI Emeralde Private Metal: Avios, KrisFlyer, Marriott, Etihad, Air India. No Choice.
- Axis Magnus / Atlas / Reserve: Flying Blue, Aeroplan, Air India, Avios, Ethiopian. No Choice.
- Amex Platinum (Travel or Charge): Marriott, Hilton, Avios, Etihad, Qatar, Cathay. No Choice.
Every rupee you put on your Infinia or Magnus earns points that go somewhere useful. Choice Privileges is simply not in that ecosystem.
If you want to buy Choice points, you’d be paying cash via points.com — and the purchase doesn’t even code as a hotel transaction on most cards (only on co-branded Choice cards, which aren’t issued in India). So you’d earn generic spend rewards on your Indian card, which is fine but not exciting.
When Does This Actually Make Sense From India?
Three narrow scenarios:
- You’re already a Choice member with an existing balance and you’re 20,000–30,000 points short of a specific redemption you’ve already locked in. Topping up at ₹0.66/point is reasonable if the redemption value exceeds that.
- You’re planning a US or European road trip and there are Choice properties on your route where points beat the cash rate. This requires actual research, not wishful thinking.
- You hold a Choice Privileges credit card (US-issued, unlikely for most DealUni readers) and the purchase codes as hotel spend.
For everyone else — Bhai, ab toh kar daalo would be the wrong advice here. Skip it.
The Opportunity Cost Angle
If you have ₹1,77,595 burning a hole in your pocket and want to buy hotel points, Marriott Bonvoy is available through HDFC Regalia Gold (1:1 transfer), HDFC Infinia (1:0.5), and ICICI Emeralde (1:1). Marriott has 25+ properties in India and hundreds across Asia. That’s a far more useful ecosystem for Indian travelers.
Hilton Honors is reachable via Amex Platinum Travel and Platinum Charge at 1:0.9. Hilton has strong presence in India and Southeast Asia.
Choice Privileges simply cannot compete with either of those for Indian redemption value.
Interesting deal globally, almost useless for Indian cardholders.
Skip this one unless you already have a Choice Privileges balance and a specific redemption in mind. The 50% bonus sounds loud but the underlying program is mid-market, the per-point cost at ₹0.66 rarely beats cash rates in India or Asia, and — most critically — no major Indian credit card transfers to Choice Privileges.
Chalo, kya kar sakte hain. If you’re buying hotel points this week, look at Marriott Bonvoy via HDFC Infinia or ICICI Emeralde instead. That’s where Indian cardholders actually get leverage.
If you’ve found a specific Choice property in Asia-Pacific where the math works out, I’d genuinely love to hear about it in the comments — my spreadsheet has a tab reserved for exactly this kind of edge case.
