Accor Fast Track to Silver/Gold/Platinum

? Do you instantly get upgraded to the higher status level the moment you cross the relevant threshold or do you have to wait for the following calendar year for you to be awarded the new status?

All of current year and whole next calendar year.

I ask as I'm presently a Silver member but will have stayed >30 nights towards the end of the year. Hence, if Gold status is awarded as I hit the relevant threshold, I may want to wait for me to reach Gold before pulling the trigger on this offer. That way I earn 15 bonus nights instead of 10.

You should be able to double-dip on the same fast track promo as your status changes. Meet requirements as Silver, get 10 nights, meet requirements again as Gold, get 15 nights. I did exactly this with another Accor Fast Track last year.

One other question, and again, apologies if it's silly, but do stays at Ibis Budget hotels count as stay nights towards elite status? I know Ibis Budgets in most of the world aren't part of ALL so obviously no benefits there but would be curious if the stay would at least count.

Most Ibis Budgets in Australia are now part of ALL. If you browse to the hotel listing page while logged in you'll see some ticks indicating whether you can earn points for the stay. Properties which earn points will also earn status nights - again experience, I did a 2nt mattress run at Ibis Budget Enfield in December to hit Platinum.
 
All of current year and whole next calendar year.



You should be able to double-dip on the same fast track promo as your status changes. Meet requirements as Silver, get 10 nights, meet requirements again as Gold, get 15 nights. I did exactly this with another Accor Fast Track last year.



Most Ibis Budgets in Australia are now part of ALL. If you browse to the hotel listing page while logged in you'll see some ticks indicating whether you can earn points for the stay. Properties which earn points will also earn status nights - again experience, I did a 2nt mattress run at Ibis Budget Enfield in December to hit Platinum.

Thanks sudoer for the advice. I managed to subscribe to the offer using the Silver/Gold/Platinum link found on Google for Accor+ members:

Screen Shot 2022-05-02 at 21.14.55.png
In case anyone is having trouble registering, I thought I'd point out that this didn't work for me initially using Safari. However, when I booted up the Chrome browser I was able to register for the offer using the link.

One other question to ask, if I may, does the stay need to be booked after registering for the promotion? I've got a ton of Accor stays already booked throughout the year and would hate to have to book another one (even if it resulted in an exciting mattress run).

Also I just realized the Ibis Budget I'm staying at for the AFF event is apparently part of ALL:
Screen Shot 2022-05-02 at 21.25.51.png

-RooFlyer88
 
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One other question to ask, if I may, does the stay need to be booked after registering for the promotion? I've got a ton of Accor stays already booked throughout the year and would hate to have to book another one (even if it resulted in an exciting mattress run).

I believe so, but don't know whether it's actually necessary.

Do you have any flexible stays where the property is still offering the same rate? You could cancel and rebook to ensure you'll get the Fast Track.
 
I believe so, but don't know whether it's actually necessary.

Do you have any flexible stays where the property is still offering the same rate? You could cancel and rebook to ensure you'll get the Fast Track.
I do. I'm staying at the Ibis SYD towards end of month booked in for $84/night as an Accor+ Flex rate. I guess I'll cancel that out and rebook just to be sure.

One other question: how long does it take for the bonus stays to credit? Also, how exactly does the double dipping work? Right now I'm at 18 nights, after my stay at the Ibis I should be at 29 nights and then I've got one night at the Pullman SYD booked in late June which would put me at 30 nights which if I'm not mistaken would get me to Gold. At that point, do I just revisit the site as Gold and re-register?

-RooFlyer88
 
One other question: how long does it take for the bonus stays to credit? Also, how exactly does the double dipping work? Right now I'm at 18 nights, after my stay at the Ibis I should be at 29 nights and then I've got one night at the Pullman SYD booked in late June which would put me at 30 nights which if I'm not mistaken would get me to Gold. At that point, do I just revisit the site as Gold and re-register?

For me, the Fast Track +10 / +15 both posted on the same day the points & status nights for the stay arrived. This varies by property but is usually 2-4 days after checkout.

You don't need to re-register for the Fast Track after making Gold, but I would suggest cancelling & rebooking another stay (or making a fresh booking) to ensure the Gold nights post.
 
Hopefully not a dumb question but thought I'd ask, how does accruing Accor status work? Do you instantly get upgraded to the higher status level the moment you cross the relevant threshold or do you have to wait for the following calendar year for you to be awarded the new status? I ask as I'm presently a Silver member but will have stayed >30 nights towards the end of the year. Hence, if Gold status is awarded as I hit the relevant threshold, I may want to wait for me to reach Gold before pulling the trigger on this offer. That way I earn 15 bonus nights instead of 10.

One other question, and again, apologies if it's silly, but do stays at Ibis Budget hotels count as stay nights towards elite status? I know Ibis Budgets in most of the world aren't part of ALL so obviously no benefits there but would be curious if the stay would at least count.

Cheers,

RooFlyer88
You are instantly upgraded (or within days) of the qualifying stay posting. You then keep that status till 31 Dec of the following year.

Re: Ibis budget see here: Most Australian Ibis Budget Hotels Now Participate in Accor ALL
 
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I believe so, but don't know whether it's actually necessary.

Do you have any flexible stays where the property is still offering the same rate? You could cancel and rebook to ensure you'll get the Fast Track.
Update: Apparently it's not necessary to make your Accor bookings after registering for the Promotion, as the Ibis Sydney Airport hotel booking I made prior to registering for the promotion has now posted, along with the bonus night stays:
Screen Shot 2022-05-24 at 02.36.17.png

With my stay late next month at the Pullman, I should be at exactly 30 nights which will get me to Gold and the next accelerator: 15 bonus nights on the following stay as a Gold!

-RooFlyer88
 
You should be able to double-dip on the same fast track promo as your status changes. Meet requirements as Silver, get 10 nights, meet requirements again as Gold, get 15 nights. I did exactly this with another Accor Fast Track last year.

Just thought I'd provide a quick update here. I checked my Accor account today and noticed that indeed I received the Platinum status boost (in addition to the Gold status boost) meaning I've received 25 status nights on essentially 2 stays at an Accor property:
Screen Shot 2022-09-06 at 19.41.23.png
I've got 18 more nights booked this year so will easily hit Platinum status!

-RooFlyer88
 
I managed to get two Fast Track also, total of +35 nights which has pushed me to Platinum and close to Diamond now which is great!
 
Diamond is only achievable by spend, not nights?
Diamond is spend only not nights.
Need to spend about $15k per year to get the 26000 status points required for Diamond
The real question no one is asking is whether Diamond is ever worth it? For me spending $15,000/year on hotels is a hard ask, especially since most of my travel isn't on OPM. At the same time, I've learned that every hotel chain has serious gaps. Marriott and Hilton have excellent coverage in the Americas but not so great coverage here in Australia. However, Accor has excellent coverage at different price points too here. However, in North America your Accor status is useless unless you are staying in a major city and want to stay at a Fairmont.

I think at $15,000/year spend you can get Marriott Platinum, Hilton Platinum, IHG Platinum and Accor Platinum for good measure (that works out to 4 chains so $3,750 in spend per year per chain which is doable depending on where you stay at and what promotions you use).

-RooFlyer88
 
The real question no one is asking is whether Diamond is ever worth it? For me spending $15,000/year on hotels is a hard ask, especially since most of my travel isn't on OPM. At the same time, I've learned that every hotel chain has serious gaps. Marriott and Hilton have excellent coverage in the Americas but not so great coverage here in Australia. However, Accor has excellent coverage at different price points too here. However, in North America your Accor status is useless unless you are staying in a major city and want to stay at a Fairmont.

I think at $15,000/year spend you can get Marriott Platinum, Hilton Platinum, IHG Platinum and Accor Platinum for good measure (that works out to 4 chains so $3,750 in spend per year per chain which is doable depending on where you stay at and what promotions you use).

-RooFlyer88

DIamond has benefits over platinum, but I certainly would not go out of my way to meet the spend requirements (unless I was quite close)
 
The real question no one is asking is whether Diamond is ever worth it? For me spending $15,000/year on hotels is a hard ask, especially since most of my travel isn't on OPM. At the same time, I've learned that every hotel chain has serious gaps. Marriott and Hilton have excellent coverage in the Americas but not so great coverage here in Australia. However, Accor has excellent coverage at different price points too here. However, in North America your Accor status is useless unless you are staying in a major city and want to stay at a Fairmont.

Generally no spend-based top tier status is "worth it" if you are looking for value/considering status runs - that applies to both airlines and hotels. It's just a sweetener for those who are going to spend that much anyway (and in many cases are already booking exec rooms or suites so stand to benefit less from the status benefits anyway)

I think at $15,000/year spend you can get Marriott Platinum, Hilton Platinum, IHG Platinum and Accor Platinum for good measure (that works out to 4 chains so $3,750 in spend per year per chain which is doable depending on where you stay at and what promotions you use).

Maintaining all those status levels for $3750/year is virtually impossible unless based in some SE Asia countries and staying at low-end properties where the status benefits are probably quite poor. It would also require spending 192 nights per year in hotels - don't assume these Fast Tracks, double elite nights, and lowered targets are going to stick around next year.

If you really wanted all four of them, you'd be better off opening an Aspire Amex (US$450) for Hilton Diamond, a Bonvoy Brilliant Amex for Bonvoy Platinum (US$650), Intercontinental Ambassador (US$200) for IHG One Platinum, and go for Accor Plat on spend or cheap Accor Plus nights. In my opinion - and probably the opinion of 99% of AFF - going for all four programs is unnecessary and excessive.

To start, IHG One Platinum from Ambassador is the most useless of the bunch as it doesn't include breakfast, which needs Diamond / 70 stays, or lounge access which need 40 nights for that "reward". Even after the revamp IHG looks the least appealing unless you are very committed to them and go for Diamond.

Marriott Platinum has decent benefits at the moment, although apparently there are rumours of that diluting soon, and there are few properties in Australia making the status less valuable for local stays.

Accor Platinum is obviously a strong option in Australia given their unparalleled coverage both in cities and rural/remote areas, and breakfast/lounge access. Unless you're staying in Ibis Styles or on dirt cheap Accor Plus rates, most Aussies would probably hit Platinum on spend rather than nights by spending >$150 inc tax per night on average.

For me, the sweet spot for status is Hilton Diamond and Accor Plat. Fairly consistent benefits and each of their strengths in coverage complement each other. The redemption sides of the programs aren't the best, but that's less of a priority for me compared with the status benefits.
 
The real question no one is asking is whether Diamond is ever worth it? For me spending $15,000/year on hotels is a hard ask, especially since most of my travel isn't on OPM. At the same time, I've learned that every hotel chain has serious gaps. Marriott and Hilton have excellent coverage in the Americas but not so great coverage here in Australia. However, Accor has excellent coverage at different price points too here. However, in North America your Accor status is useless unless you are staying in a major city and want to stay at a Fairmont.

I think at $15,000/year spend you can get Marriott Platinum, Hilton Platinum, IHG Platinum and Accor Platinum for good measure (that works out to 4 chains so $3,750 in spend per year per chain which is doable depending on where you stay at and what promotions you use).

-RooFlyer88
For us it’s worth it and fairly easy it achieve. As well as Accor Diamond I have Hilton Diamond and soon to be GHA Titanium with the later being a piece of a cake.
We live up near the Barossa and both work long hours in town so it’s not unusual for us to stay 5-10 nights per month in town on weekdays and a couple nights per month on weekends for functions like weddings etc rather than drink and drive. Couple that with both of us being sports fanatics and going to interstate games 10-15 times a year and the nights rack up and that’s before we have our actual holidays.
We leave next Friday for 6 weeks in Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and the UAE with a couple of nights in Europe thrown in and all nights are booked with Accor, Hilton or GHA
 
Generally no spend-based top tier status is "worth it" if you are looking for value/considering status runs - that applies to both airlines and hotels. It's just a sweetener for those who are going to spend that much anyway (and in many cases are already booking exec rooms or suites so stand to benefit less from the status benefits anyway)



Maintaining all those status levels for $3750/year is virtually impossible unless based in some SE Asia countries and staying at low-end properties where the status benefits are probably quite poor. It would also require spending 192 nights per year in hotels - don't assume these Fast Tracks, double elite nights, and lowered targets are going to stick around next year.

If you really wanted all four of them, you'd be better off opening an Aspire Amex (US$450) for Hilton Diamond, a Bonvoy Brilliant Amex for Bonvoy Platinum (US$650), Intercontinental Ambassador (US$200) for IHG One Platinum, and go for Accor Plat on spend or cheap Accor Plus nights. In my opinion - and probably the opinion of 99% of AFF - going for all four programs is unnecessary and excessive.

To start, IHG One Platinum from Ambassador is the most useless of the bunch as it doesn't include breakfast, which needs Diamond / 70 stays, or lounge access which need 40 nights for that "reward". Even after the revamp IHG looks the least appealing unless you are very committed to them and go for Diamond.

Marriott Platinum has decent benefits at the moment, although apparently there are rumours of that diluting soon, and there are few properties in Australia making the status less valuable for local stays.

Accor Platinum is obviously a strong option in Australia given their unparalleled coverage both in cities and rural/remote areas, and breakfast/lounge access. Unless you're staying in Ibis Styles or on dirt cheap Accor Plus rates, most Aussies would probably hit Platinum on spend rather than nights by spending >$150 inc tax per night on average.

For me, the sweet spot for status is Hilton Diamond and Accor Plat. Fairly consistent benefits and each of their strengths in coverage complement each other. The redemption sides of the programs aren't the best, but that's less of a priority for me compared with the status benefits.
Great insight mate thanks for taking the time to put this in writing.
 
For us it’s worth it and fairly easy it achieve.

I'd be interested to know if you've spent much time as Accor Plat, and whether you noticed a significant boost in status benefits when moving up to Diamond?

It sounds like you're achieving it easily which is great, but would you say it's worth 'going for' over Plat if you were $1k short? Where would you draw the line?
 
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Hmm I remember in 2015, when I booked 2 rooms for the same stay. I would get status nights for both towards my status. Guess that no longer happens?

That was the last time I made it to Accor platinum
 
Hmm I remember in 2015, when I booked 2 rooms for the same stay. I would get status nights for both towards my status. Guess that no longer happens?

That was the last time I made it to Accor platinum

You get the points for both rooms, but status nights only for one room.


Few, if any, programs allow multiple rooms to count to status nights.
 

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