What Is CPP?
Cents per point (CPP) is the standard metric for evaluating whether a points redemption is a good deal. It tells you how much monetary value you are getting from each loyalty point you spend.
Think of it like this: if you use 25,000 hotel points to book a room that costs $500 in cash, each point was worth 2.0 cents. That is an excellent redemption. If you use 25,000 points for a $125 room, each point was worth only 0.5 cents -- and you should probably reconsider.
CPP gives you a universal yardstick to compare redemptions across different programs, hotels, and dates.
How to Calculate CPP
The formula is straightforward:
CPP = (Cash Price of Room / Number of Points Required) x 100
Examples:
- $500 room for 25,000 points: (500 / 25,000) x 100 = 2.0 CPP
- $1,200 room for 30,000 points: (1,200 / 30,000) x 100 = 4.0 CPP
- $150 room for 25,000 points: (150 / 25,000) x 100 = 0.6 CPP
Good vs. Great Values
Here is our general framework for evaluating CPP across hotel programs:
| CPP Value | Assessment |
|---|---|
| Below 0.5 | Poor -- consider paying cash instead |
| 0.5 - 1.0 | Fair -- acceptable but not exciting |
| 1.0 - 1.5 | Good -- solid everyday value |
| 1.5 - 2.0 | Great -- above-average redemption |
| 2.0 - 3.0 | Excellent -- aspirational-level value |
| 3.0+ | Outstanding -- you hit the jackpot |
Note: these ranges vary by program. A 1.0 CPP Hyatt redemption is below average for that program, while a 1.0 CPP Hilton redemption is above average.
CPP Benchmarks by Program
Based on our analysis of thousands of redemptions:
- World of Hyatt: Average 1.8 CPP, sweet spot 2.0-4.0 CPP
- Marriott Bonvoy: Average 0.8 CPP, sweet spot 1.0-1.5 CPP
- Hilton Honors: Average 0.5 CPP, sweet spot 0.6-1.0 CPP
- IHG One Rewards: Average 0.5 CPP, sweet spot 0.6-0.9 CPP
Common Mistakes
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Sarah Cole
Sarah covers destination guides, hotel reviews, and points strategy at Travel-free. She specializes in luxury travel and award redemptions.
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