âď¸ TRENDING TRAVEL NEWS âď¸
⢠Lounge Luxury: West Coast travelers have two brand-new layover spots to check out in SFO and PDX.
⢠Elbow Room: Use these tricks to find out whether your flight will be full before you board.
⢠Match Made: Find the ideal lake destination for your preferred summer travel vibes.
⢠Ending Soon: The elevated offer on a certain premium card is on its way out â donât miss the chance to earn 150,000 juicy points after meeting spending requirements.

đ¤ Howdy, partners, and welcome back to Daily Drop!
Today is going to be fun⌠and honestly, Iâll just leave it at that:
âď¸/đ¨ Turn hotel points into airline miles

đł One card, 92 hotel nights
With all the crazy devaluations, transfer partner executions, and drama in the points world, you might think itâs harder than ever to get value from a credit card.
Most hotel programs charge such extreme rates for hotels that you often need an entire credit card welcome offer to book one or two nights.
But thatâs not always the case. In fact, today, I want to tell you how you can use this one credit card welcome offer to book 92 hotel nights.
And no, this is not a joke or an exaggeration.
The card and offer
As you know, this premium card is offering 150,000 UR points after spending $6,000 in the first three months of having the card (an offer thatâs ending soon, by the way).
Anyway, this means that at a MINIMUM, youâll end up with 156,000 UR points from the welcome offer and spend.
To illustrate the extreme end of just how many hotel nights you could get with these points, look no further than Hyattâs new award chart â which offers some hotels for just 3,000 points per night:

If you used your UR points for hotels like this, youâd be looking at 52 nights, which is crazy.
And itâs not just airport hotels like that one that cost this little⌠even cities like Frankfurt, Germany, have multiple Category 1 hotels that price at 3,000 points during the summer travel season:

Obviously, itâs not realistic to assume EVERY night you book will cost 3,000 pointsâŚ
But look â if you got 40 nights, wouldnât that still be crazy? Even 30 nights? From ONE card?
Itâs not just Hyatt
Remember earlier this year when there was a 70% transfer bonus from UR points to IHG?
If you transferred 156,000 UR points during that bonus (which comes around a few times a year), youâd end up with 265,000 IHG points.
Considering IHG sells rooms for 4,000-5,000 points per night at some budget-friendly Holiday Inns, that means the same welcome offer could book you a whopping 59 nights at IHG hotels like this one:

Again⌠thatâs the extreme end of the spectrum. But itâs possible.
Are you more of a Marriott gal? Well, we literally JUST saw a 65% transfer bonus from UR points to Marriott.
So, again, those 156,000 UR points from this card offer would become 257,000 Marriott points under such a bonus.
I just booked a few nights at this hotel in Luanda, Angola. Accounting for the cash cost with taxes, this stay yielded 2.3 cents per Marriott point. đ

If you used your Marriott points for stays like this one, that single welcome offer would get you around $6,000 worth of Marriott stays. đ¤Żđ¤Żđ¤Ż
Oh, and thatâs just the points⌠that doesnât even account for the card perks â some of which can book you even MORE free nights.
$500 of annual luxury hotel credits
As you know, the card comes with two $250 credits to use at The Edit, the bankâs luxury collection of hotels, bookable through its portal.
You could book two nights at a hotel like this one in Auckland, New Zealand. It costs $160 per night, or $320 for two nights.

After the $250 credit, youâll pay $70 out of pocket⌠but youâll also get a $100 property credit, free breakfast, and other benefits.
So in this case, letâs say it balances out.
Do that twice, and thatâs four more nights.
There are still two other easy credits
The same card also comes with a $300 travel credit.
While you could use this toward airfare, buses, trains, Uber rides, and more, you could also just use it for⌠more hotels.
For example, if youâre traveling in a place like Krakow, Poland (which you should), you could book a stay at a budget hotel like this one for $16 per night.

That $300 travel credit now becomes another 18 nights in hotels at places like this, which you can find all over Europe.
The most underrated credit of all
In 2026 ONLY, the same card is offering a one-time $250 credit to use at specific hotel chains, including NH hotels, IHG, and Pan Pacific.
That means you could book 11 nights at a cheap Holiday Inn like this one â which just opened up down the street from my apartment:

Plus, if you stay there, we can hang out for a couple of weeks. đ¤ˇđźââď¸
The bottom line
Between the huge welcome offer, luxury hotel credits, annual travel credit, and one-time, brand-specific hotel credit, you could book the following with this card:
59 nights at IHG hotels with the points
4 nights at luxury hotels with The Edit credits
18 nights at budget hotels in Europe with the $300 travel credit
Another 11 IHG nights with the 2026 $250 hotel credit
Thatâs a potential maximum value of 92 hotel nights from one. single. credit card.
I get it⌠this is extreme.
Even if your travel plans take you to places with cheap hotels, itâs unlikely youâd end up booking every night at the cheapest possible price point.
But all of this is to illustrate that between this extreme end of the spectrum and the âbook two expensive nightsâ end of the spectrum, thereâs a LOT of potential middle ground.

âď¸ đ¨ Turn hotel points into airline miles
Yes, you can convert hotel points to airline miles. No, itâs usually not worth it.
But every rule has its exception â and for Marriott Bonvoy members, that exception is United MileagePlus.

Normally, Marriott points convert to airline miles at a 3:1 ratio â so 60,000 points would get you just 20,000 miles.
But with United, thereâs a twist: When you transfer 60,000 Marriott points or more to United, youâll get 10,000 bonus United miles added on top.
That means 60k Bonvoy points yield 30k United miles, which is a much friendlier 2:1 ratio.
Itâs still not a move to make every day, but if youâre topping up your United balance for a dream redemption, this can be a clutch move.
Thereâs also a transfer bonus this month
Until June 30th, United is offering a 25% bonus when converting hotel points to United miles.

There are some things to keep in mind:
The 25% bonus only applies to the base amount, not the special United bonus
You must register for the offer through United before transferring points
The bonus is offered after the fact by United, so you wonât see this bonus reflected on the Marriott website
So letâs crunch some numbers:
Letâs say you register for this promo and transfer 60,000 Marriott points to United.
First off, those 60,000 points become 20,000 United miles.
With this 25% bonus (which only applies to those 20k United miles), youâll have 25,000 miles.
With the additional 10k bonus miles you get for every 60k points transferred from Marriott, your final ratio is now 60,000 Marriott points = 35,000 United miles.
And honestly? Thatâs not even half bad.
So if you have a fat stash of hotel points sitting around and have some good potential United redemptions in mind, this is a not-so-bad way to put them to use.

Thatâs it for today! I hope you enjoyed this experiment into extreme credit card maximization, along with a niche (but useful) trick for converting points.
See you tomorrow,
With contributions by Sam Anthony and Katie Begnoche.




