Today · Apr 5, 2026
Citi Just Cut Hotel Points Transfers by Up to 50%. Owners Should Care More Than They Think.

Citi Just Cut Hotel Points Transfers by Up to 50%. Owners Should Care More Than They Think.

Citi ThankYou's devaluation of transfers to Choice Privileges and I Prefer isn't just a credit card story... it's a brand distribution story, and the owners relying on loyalty contribution to justify their franchise fees are about to feel it in a place the FDD never warned them about.

Available Analysis

Let me tell you what this looks like from the brand side, because I spent years sitting in the meetings where these partnership deals get built... and I can tell you with absolute certainty that nobody in franchise development wants you thinking too hard about what happens when a banking partner quietly rewrites the economics of your loyalty funnel.

Here's what happened. Effective April 19, Citi ThankYou is slashing its points transfer ratios to Choice Privileges by 25% and to I Prefer Hotel Rewards by a genuinely brutal 50%. Premium cardholders who used to convert 1,000 ThankYou points into 2,000 Choice Privileges points will now get 1,500. And I Prefer? That ratio drops from 1:4 to 1:2. Half. Gone. If you're an independent luxury property in the Preferred Hotels collection that was counting on I Prefer redemption traffic driven by Citi card spend, you just lost half the incentive for those guests to book through the program instead of, say, anywhere else. The Choice cut is less dramatic but still meaningful... 25% fewer points per transfer means fewer cardholders bothering to transfer at all, which means fewer loyalty-driven bookings flowing into the system. This isn't hypothetical. Transfer ratios directly influence booking behavior. When the math stops working for the cardholder, they redirect spend. That's not loyalty theory. That's Tuesday.

And here's where it gets interesting for owners, because this is really a story about something I've been watching for years... the slow erosion of the value proposition that brands use to justify their fee structures. When a franchisor pitches you on loyalty contribution (and they ALL pitch you on loyalty contribution, because it's the single strongest argument for paying 12-20% of your revenue in total brand costs), part of that pitch rests on the ecosystem of credit card partnerships feeding points into the program. Those partnerships create a flywheel: cardholders earn points, transfer them in, book rooms, the brand gets to claim loyalty contribution, the owner pays for the privilege. When a major banking partner devalues that transfer by 25-50%, a piece of the flywheel gets removed. The brand's loyalty contribution number doesn't collapse overnight, but the trajectory changes. And nobody at headquarters is going to update their franchise sales deck to reflect the new reality. (They never do. That's what the filing cabinet is for.)

What makes this particularly worth watching is the timing. Choice just overhauled its loyalty program in early 2026... new elite tiers, a shiny "Titanium" status, restructured rewards. The messaging was all about enhancing member value. And now, barely months later, one of the most accessible on-ramps into that program (bank card point transfers) just got significantly less attractive. That's not a great look. It's not Choice's fault... Citi made the call... but the owner sitting in Topeka with a Comfort Inn doesn't care whose fault it is. The owner cares whether the loyalty program is delivering enough incremental revenue to justify what it costs. And "our banking partner just made it harder for guests to use our program" is not a line item that shows up on the brand's glossy performance review. It just shows up, eventually, in softer demand from a loyalty channel the owner was told would be robust. (There's that word I hate. But brands love it.)

For Preferred Hotels properties, this is arguably worse. I Prefer is a loyalty program for independent luxury hotels... properties that joined specifically because the program promised access to a high-value guest without requiring a traditional franchise relationship. A 50% cut in transfer value from one of the program's key credit card partners doesn't just reduce point flow. It raises a fundamental question: is the I Prefer value proposition strong enough to stand on its own, or was it quietly dependent on generous transfer ratios from banking partners to drive meaningful redemption volume? If it's the latter, owners paying into that program need to be asking some very pointed questions about what happens next. Because Citi isn't the only bank re-evaluating these partnerships. This is an industry-wide trend of banks reducing points liability, and hotel loyalty programs are going to keep absorbing the impact. The question is who passes that impact down to the property level, and how long it takes for anyone to admit it's happening.

Operator's Take

Here's what I'd tell you if we were sitting across from each other. If you're a Choice franchisee, pull your loyalty contribution numbers for the last 12 months and set a reminder to compare them against the same period starting May. You want to see if this Citi change creates any measurable dip in redemption bookings... because that's your baseline for the next franchise review conversation. If you're a Preferred Hotels member property paying into I Prefer, this is the moment to ask your regional contact for actual redemption data broken down by source. Not the portfolio average. YOUR property. How many I Prefer bookings came through credit card point transfers versus organic enrollment? If they can't tell you, that tells you something too. And for anyone being pitched on a new flag or loyalty program right now... ask the question nobody wants to answer: "What happens to your loyalty contribution projections when your banking partners devalue?" Watch their face. That's your due diligence.

— Mike Storm, Founder & Editor
Read full analysis → ← Show less
Source: Google News: Choice Hotels
End of Stories