Accor has a couple of subscription services called ALL PLUS ibis and ALL PLUS Voyageur that give a discount on paid stays. They’re currently targeting some Accor Live Limitless (ALL) members with an offer giving a 20% discount on the ALL PLUS Voyageur plan.
The Deal
- Save 20% on an Accor ALL PLUS Voyageur membership with a targeted promo code.
- Direct link to offer.
Key Terms
- Expires July 20, 2025 at 11:59pm (UTC+2 – France time).
- Must use promo code sent via email to targeted members.
- This offer cannot be combined with other promotions, discounts, or renewal benefits for the ALL PLUS Voyageur, and does not apply to group card purchases. The discount is valid only once per customer.
- This offer is valid for customers residing in the Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, Canada, the United States, and Puerto Rico.
Quick Thoughts
I’d been aware of Accor’s paid subscription service where you can buy points on a monthly, quarterly or annual basis, as well as receiving monthly status points. Until receiving an email from Accor yesterday though, I hadn’t been aware of a separate subscription service called ALL PLUS.
Rather than being a subscription where you buy points, an ALL PLUS membership gets you a discount on paid stays. There are two types of ALL PLUS memberships – ALL PLUS ibis and ALL PLUS Voyageur. The former gives you a 15% discount on paid stays at Accor’s ibis budget, ibis and ibis Styles brands. The latter gives you a 20% discount at the following Accor brands:
- Luxury:Â Sofitel LEGEND, SO/, Sofitel, MGallery
- Premium: 21C Museum Hotels, Mondrian, Pullman, Swissôtel, Mövenpick, Grand Mercure, The Sebel, Adagio Premium
- Midscale:Â Handwritten Collection, Novotel, Mercure, Tribe, Adagio Original
- Economy: ibis, ibis Styles, Adagio Access, greet, ibis budget
An ALL PLUS Voyageur membership normally costs €199 (~$235) per year, so a 20% discount by using a targeted promotion code will drop the cost to ~$188.
The Voyageur membership also comes with 20 Status Nights. That’s enough to automatically earn you Silver status which gets you a welcome drink, late check-out and a priority welcome, as well as a 24% bonus on base points earned on your stay. It’s also 2/3 of the way to the 30 nights you need for Gold status which gets you room upgrades, early check-in or late check-out, a 48% bonus on base points for paid stays and guaranteed room availability.
Ultimately though, this promotion will only be worth it if you anticipate spending a somewhat substantial amount on paid stays at Accor properties in the coming 12 months in order to recoup the ~$188 cost of the membership with the discount.
What’s harder to ascertain is how much this subscription would save you in reality. The 20% discount the membership gets you on paid stays comes off the best available rate. Simply being a standard ALL member gets you discounts of up to 10% on paid rates as it is. Accor has AAA/CAA rates, senior rates, advance purchase rates, etc. as well, all of which likely mean the discount you’ll get from an ALL PLUS Voyageur membership will likely be a fair bit less than 20%.
It’s also important to be aware that a Voyageur membership isn’t valid at all Accor properties. For starters, Accor has more than 50 brands, but only 22 participate in the Voyageur membership discount. That means that if you were hoping to get a substantial discount on stays at brands like Fairmont and Raffles, you’re out of luck.
Even among the 22 eligible brands, there’s a list of ~90 properties that don’t participate in this program. It’s therefore worth checking that list ahead of subscribing in case any of those excluded properties are ones you’re planning to visit.

I’ve used the Ibis subscription and the Voyageur subscription in the past. Regarding status, they stack and they immediately get you enough status credit for automatic Gold status. Accor gives you a reminder at the end of your subscription year telling you how much you saved with the discounts (unfortunately, the discounts don’t stack, but the extra 10% on Voyageur does add up fast). So I still came out several hundreds of dollars ahead with several Accor stays in Europe. I visited about a dozen countries in two trips of a few weeks each and stayed in Accor, Bonvoy, Hyatt, Minor, and Radisson. So, by no means was I exclusive to Accor. The Gold status at Accor didn’t really get me what I was looking for. Something more along the lines of what I get with IHG Platinum or Diamond should do it. So, after last year I let the Ibis and Voyageur subscriptions lapse. I went with a Signature Absolute subscription which is enough to get you Gold fairly quickly, but I got this new subscription with an intent to spend about a further $1K on cash stays this year to end up with Accor Platinum at the end of the year. If this works, then I should be Platinum for under $2.5K spend. If I anticipate significant cash spend on non-heavily discounted cash rates, then I would definitely stack Voyageur on this in advance of any travels. I don’t stay in Ibis much at all, so for my usage case and the scenario I just outlined (Signature Absolute + Voyageur), I wouldn’t get the Ibis subscription too, as there is nothing to be gained. I am heavily IHG-centric now and am currently sitting in Africa overlooking a stunning beach in a massive marble and fine wood trimmed $650/nt 1-bedroom townhouse (with gorgeous traditional bar with standup fridge, lacking only stove and oven, hence P2’s Japanese rice cooker sitting on the bar). I’m paying $160/nt with points combined with 4th nt free via Chase card, Diamond gets me and the wife extensive breakfast buffet seaside, and that combined with Ambassador got us a 5-level upgrade to the largest “room.” But, we will still aim for Accor Platinum this year to broaden our worldwide status coverage a bit. Outside of the US and China (which is what we aim for) Accor is the largest (with 800K rooms to Bonvoy’s 700K). So we are interested to see if we can get any value out of Accor Platinum while expanding our ability to cover locations that aren’t well-covered by IHG. A word of caution though, I wouldn’t be surprised if Accor is less generous with recognition and benefits, and they don’t credit points stays for status, whereas IHG does. When traveling with Accor in Asia-Pacific, if we plan on dining in the hotel restaurants a lot, we may add an Accor Plus subscription (an Asia-Pacific specific subscription) to get the 2-for-1 dining benefit (yes, that is yet another Accor subscription option, which I think makes 4 of them, so far). Accor states that this one doesn’t stack (I think they give that one a different membership number and some of the benefits might overlap). But, as long as they honor the 2-for-1 dining discount and you can optimize around that, then it should be worthwhile to add that to the stack anyway (so that would be Signature Absolute + Voyageur + Accor Plus [Asia Pacific]). Accor is a bit of work getting your head around it all, but maybe the benefits will be there when we could use them the most. Time will tell.
Just a clarification: when I say the discounts don’t stack, I mean the Ibis subscription 5% discount doesn’t stack with the Voyageur subscription 10% discount. Other aspects do stack. Either the Ibis subscription or the Voyageur subscription discounts (5% or 10% respectively) do stack with the basic member 10% discount. And, as I stated, the Ibis and Voyageur status benefits stack for getting instant Gold status. Accor weaves a complex web, but they do seem to explain it properly. So far, it seems to work the way that they said it would.