What Is CPP?
CPP stands for cents per point — a simple ratio that tells you how much value you're extracting from each loyalty point when you redeem it. It's the scoreboard that separates smart redemptions from wasteful ones.
How to Calculate It
The formula: (Cash Price ÷ Points Required) × 100. For example, an $850/night Andaz Maui at 35,000 points = 2.43 CPP. Always compare against the rate you'd actually pay, not inflated rack rates.
Valuations by Program
Each program has different CPP benchmarks: Hyatt leads at 1.8–2.2 CPP, Marriott sits at 0.7–1.0, while Hilton and IHG average ~0.5 CPP. Hyatt's May 2026 shift from 3 tiers to 5 tiers will reshape award pricing — lock in sweet spots before the change. These benchmarks should guide every Chase UR and Amex MR transfer decision.
Common Mistakes
Don't chase astronomical CPP on hotels you wouldn't actually book, ignore earning costs, or compare across programs without adjusting for earn rates. Remember that taxes and resort fees still apply on award stays and can affect your true value.
When to Ignore CPP Entirely
Sometimes CPP doesn't matter: expiring points, last-minute availability crunches, or bucket-list redemptions where joy outweighs optimization. Points are a tool — don't let the tool use you.
Bottom Line
CPP is the single most useful metric for evaluating points redemptions. Know the benchmarks (Hyatt 1.8–2.2, Marriott 0.7–1.0, Hilton/IHG ~0.5), use them to guide transfer decisions, and you'll never overpay with points again.
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Travel.free Team
The Travel.free editorial team covers points strategy, destination guides, and deal alerts to help you travel better for less.
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