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Thanks to Marriott’s Platinum Challenge, I received my Marriott Platinum Elite membership card earlier this week. My Platinum status is valid through February 2014. Normally, to get to Marriott’s Platinum Elite status level it is necessary to stay 75 nights or hold 8 events at Marriott hotels within a single calendar year. Luckily, there’s a much easier way.
As I described in the post “Pursuing Platinum @ Marriott,” you can sign up for Marriott’s “Taste of Platinum Challenge” simply by calling and asking for it. If you make the call after the first of the month, you will then get temporary Platinum status for the rest of that month and throughout the three following months. In order to retain status past the challenge period, it is necessary to have 9 separate paid stays at Marriott properties. You can, alternatively, go for the Gold Challenge which requires only 6 stays.
Platinum Benefits
You can read about Marriott’s elite benefits here and here. I’ll list just the benefits I think are worth mentioning:
- Priority Late Checkout (available to all elites)
- Free Internet Access (Gold and Platinum)
- Room Upgrade (Gold and Platinum)
- Guaranteed Lounge Access / Free Breakfast (Gold and Platinum)
- 48-Hour Guaranteed Availability
- Guaranteed Platinum Arrival Gift
- 50% point bonus
Regarding free breakfast: If the hotel has a lounge, you get free access to it during your stay. If the hotel doesn’t have a lounge, then you’ll get free breakfast instead. There are many exclusions. For example, not all Marriott properties are included. Also, within the US and Canada, free breakfast is not guaranteed on weekends.
Regarding room upgrades: Usually this means getting a room on a higher floor. Suite upgrades are rare.
I’ll follow up soon with more details about my Marriott stays as a Platinum elite, but here’s my brief take on the benefits:
- Don’t expect suite upgrades.
- Lounge access is a great benefit. It means free (often hot) breakfast each morning, and free hot appetizers each evening. Some properties even include afternoon tea. The downside: lounges are often closed on the weekend in the US and Canada. In that case, you get nothing.
- Free internet is a great perk.
- The best benefit I received is not even listed as a benefit. Twice I showed up extremely early for check-in (once at 9 a.m.). Thanks to my Platinum status, they had my room ready immediately.
- At properties without an open lounge, I recommend taking the food and drink arrival gift instead of points if you’re hungry. At most properties, you can chose between 500 points or a food and drink option. In the past four months, my wife and I have often enjoyed getting a small bottle of wine along with a nice cheese and cracker tray at various Marriott hotels. I value 500 Marriott points at less than $5, so I felt that we got great value from the food and drink options.
Two Strategies
There are two reasonable approaches to taking advantage of these challenges. One is to sign up for the challenge and complete it in order to keep your status. The other approach is to sign up for the challenge before a planned Marriott stay in order to enjoy high level elite status even if you have no plans to complete the challenge. Let’s look at each of these options:
Option 1: Go for it
If you are planning a number of paid Marriott stays within a four month period, a Gold or Platinum challenge can be a great opportunity. This way, your planned stays will be more rewarding and you’ll keep your status well past the end of the challenge. It may even make sense for you to do a few “mattress runs” to complete the challenge. The idea behind a mattress run is to check into the cheapest Marriott property you can find just to get credit for a stay.
Timing this option correctly is critical. Clearly, you would want to start the challenge prior to a number of planned stays. Another important factor, though, is to start the challenge as soon in the new year as practical so that your earned status will last longer. Here’s an example: if you complete a challenge that was started in December 2012, your earned status will be good through February 2014. However, if you wait one month more and start the challenge in January 2013, your earned status will be good until February of 2015! By starting your challenge just once month later, you will get an extra 11 months of elite status.
Option 2: Enjoy it
If you have a big Marriott vacation planned, it can make sense to sign up for the Platinum Challenge just to enjoy that status during that trip even if you have no plans at all to complete the challenge. A year after the challenge is over, you are allowed to sign up for the challenge again! In fact, if you travel often with a partner, the two of you could alternate challenges so that at least one of you has Platinum status a lot of the time. Here’s an example:
- Jan 2: You sign up for challenge. Your status lasts until the end of April.
- July 2: Your partner signs up for the challenge. His/her status lasts until the end of October.
- May 2: You sign up for the challenge. Your status lasts until the end of September.
- etc.
Challenge Considerations
Regardless of which option you decide to go with (if either), here are some things to keep in mind:
- A “stay” is different from a “night.” If you stay 3 consecutive nights at a singe Marriott property, that will count as a single “stay” towards the challenge. If you hop around to a different Marriott each of the 3 nights, that will count as 3 stays.
- If you can help it, never start a challenge on the first of the month since that will reduce the length of your challenge to exactly 3 months instead of nearly 4 months.
- Once you call to start the challenge, assume it will take 48 hours to kick in. It will probably be faster than that, but that should be a safe interval to count on.
- You can save money on your stays by buying Marriott gift cards in advance. Many deals expire by the end of this year, though, so it may make sense to buy the gift cards now. For details, see “Marriott gift card triple dip.”
- You can save money on stays by booking with corporate codes, a government rate, AAA, etc. However, I don’t recommend doing this unless you have proof of eligibility. During my Platinum challenge, I was asked for proof at approximately 1 out of 3 stays.
[…] I completed Marriott Platinum Challenge late in 2012. That gave me status through February 2014. Since then, each year I’ve renewed status by buying it back. Marriott charges 40,000 points to buy back Platinum status. I find it well worth the points. Not only do I get perks when staying at Marriott hotels, but I also get free United Silver status, and now SPG Platinum status. […]
[…] years ago, I got Marriott Platinum status by enrolling in and completing their Taste of Platinum Challenge. I was given temporary Platinum status and then had to complete 9 stays in just over 3 months in […]
Tough to TRANSFER loyalty over to Marriot when you are top status with SPG and Hilton. It was worth doing when they gave you the status and then you got to keep it if you remain loyal. I am in hotel 170 nights a year business alone.
Need to rethink the transfer program, build new high use customers. Long term look after the old remain loyal customers. If the program offers good rewards they will stay if it does not they will move.
Is there a way to reverse the process? I am already a United Gold, can this somehow get my Marriott raised to Gold?
SD State Senator Stanford Adelstein
Yes, signup here: https://secure.unitedmileageplus.com/reg/rewards_plus/index.html?SID=0A04B1D26305497FA9960BEE31E0310F
[…] late 2012 I obtained Marriott Platinum status through a now discontinued program called the Taste of Platinum Challenge. Thanks to this status, I’ve enjoyed lounge access, welcome gifts, early check in and […]
Hey FM,
I was wondering, do executive apartments owned by marriott count? I’d assume so but I think someone mentioned that they were someehow treated differently?
Also, thanks for the advice, worked and I got the platinum challenge
Anna: Glad you got in on the Platinum challenge! I don’t know about executive apartments. Best bet is to call Marriott Rewards and ask
Anna: Pre-existing reservations are fine. You don’t have to do anything special to make them count. Reward nights do not count, nor do nights paid partially with points.
Thanks FM, just a follow up question;
If I’ve already booked with Marriott, can those stays still be counted towards the challenge provided I stay at them after I call up the hotel?
And also quite stupid, I know but do reward nights count to the challenge? Or if I pay partially with points, would those nights count to the challenge?
Anna: My understanding is that you would have to wait until January to start the challenge if you want the status to last through 2015. If you’ll be traveling a lot at the end of this year, it might make more sense to start the challenge earlier so that you can enjoy Gold or Platinum status this year even though the status will only last until the end of next year.
Great Tip..called Marriott and they were willing to offer any status you wanted. The rewards agent said go with what you think you can achieve and that way you will have that guaranteed till end of year 2013 and all of 2014. 6 Stays for Gold and 9 Stays for Platinum.
Hi,
I’m travelling quite extensively at the end of this year and was wondering if I started the challenge say in October and completed it in Jan 2014, would that mean I could keep the status until 2016 or do I need to start it in Jan 2014?
Cheers,
rkaradi: It sounds like that is happening to more and more people. Regardless, Gold status is pretty good too.
Thanks for the info here, called to request Plat Challenge, they would only offer Gold. I told them I was a Hilton Diamond and SPG Plat, and they were not impressed. The CSR mentioned I only had four stays at Marriots, and that my activity would not prompt Plat.
I’ll live with Gold I only have one future stay at Marriot, so it will not be a deal breaker, would like to have had Plat though.
[…] last year I had completed Marriott’s Taste of Platinum Challenge which resulted in my getting Marriott Platinum status that would last throughout 2013 and I had […]
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