Accor is running a limited-time promotion offering a 30% bonus when you convert airline miles to ALL Reward points. The offer runs from December 1-20, 2025 and is available to members of both ALL Accor and participating airline loyalty programs.
This promotion targets members sitting on airline miles who want to use them for hotel stays instead of flights. While the bonus sounds attractive, the underlying conversion rates between airline miles and hotel points typically aren’t favorable, even with the promotional kicker.
The Offer
- Promotion Period: December 1-20, 2025
- Bonus: 30% extra Reward points on all airline mile conversions
- Eligibility: Must be a member of both ALL Accor and a participating airline loyalty program
- How to Participate:
- Log in to your airline partner’s loyalty program account
- Convert your miles to ALL Reward points during the promotion window
- Receive the 30% bonus automatically
- Participating Airlines: Qatar Airways, Emirates, Juneyao Air, Singapore Airlines, Japan Airlines
Conversion Ratios
Here’s how the math works out with each participating airline:
| Airline | Airline Miles | Regular Accor Points | With 30% Bonus |
|---|---|---|---|
| Qatar Airways (Linked accounts) | 3,500 Avios | 1,000 points | 1,300 points |
| Qatar Airways (Non-linked) | 3,500 Avios | 1,000 points | 1,300 points |
| Emirates Skywards | 4,000 Miles | 1,000 points | 1,300 points |
| Juneyao Air | 200 Points | 800 points | 1,040 points |
| Singapore Airlines (KrisFlyer) | 4,500 Miles | 1,000 points | 1,300 points |
| Japan Airlines (JAL Mileage Bank) | 5,000 Miles | 1,000 points | 1,300 points |
Good to Know
- Conversions must be initiated through your airline’s loyalty program portal, not Accor’s website
- The 30% bonus is applied automatically after conversion—no separate registration required
- Converted points can be used for stays, dining, and experiences at 1,000+ Accor properties worldwide
- Terms and conditions from both Accor and your airline partner will apply
Is It Worth It?
This offer has a very narrow use case. The conversion ratios make the math painful even with the 30% bonus.
Let’s look at the value destruction: If you convert 5,000 JAL miles (worth roughly $75-100 for premium cabin redemptions at 1.5-2 cents per mile), you’ll get 1,300 Accor points with the bonus. Those Accor points are worth around $13-26 (at 0.5-2 cents per point depending on redemption). You’re effectively trading $75-100 in value for $13-26.
The best ratio in this promotion is Juneyao Air at 200 miles for 1,040 Accor points, but that’s still a losing proposition unless those miles are expiring or you have no other use for them.
When it might make sense: If you have a small balance of airline miles about to expire with no realistic path to earning enough for an award flight, converting them with this bonus is better than losing them entirely. It’s also worth considering if you have an immediate Accor booking planned and need just a few more points to cover it—essentially treating this as a “points purchase” option.
Otherwise, you’re usually better off keeping your airline miles for actual flights or looking for targeted airline promotions instead of converting at these rates.
Bottom Line
The 30% bonus on airline mile conversions is a niche offer that works best as a last resort for expiring miles or topping off an account. The underlying conversion rates remain poor, so most travelers should save their airline miles for flight redemptions where they deliver significantly better value.