Skip to content

How a 2-night New York City hotel stay earned me enough miles to fly to Europe using Rove Miles

Dec. 10, 2025
6 min read
Life Hotel New York
The cards we feature here are from partners who compensate us when you are approved through our site, and this may impact how or where these products appear. We don’t cover all available credit cards, but our analysis, reviews, and opinions are entirely from our editorial team. Terms apply to the offers listed on this page. Please view our advertising policy and product review methodology for more information.

Recently, I needed to book a two-night stay in New York City, and, as often happens in the fall, rates weren't especially pretty, no matter what I did while exploring my options.

This meant it was a great time to try something new and earn over 20,000 miles in the process of booking my hotel. That's more than enough to fly from my home airport in Houston all the way to Paris if booking strategically.

Since I couldn't get a great rate at one of my usual haunts, I tried something new to me: booking through Rove Miles to test out its enticing mileage earning rates.

Related: Earn up to 45 miles per dollar: Top hotel deals you can book right now through Rove Miles

If you aren't yet familiar, Rove Miles is a newer program that allows you to earn miles on travel and shopping purchases. You can then redeem those miles toward travel through the Rove Miles platform or transfer them to a small but interesting list of airline transfer partners, including some well-loved favorites of mine (such as Air France-KLM Flying Blue), so you can get to destinations like Paris for just 18,800 miles (plus taxes and fees).

ROVE MILES

You can read all about Rove Miles and how exactly it works here, but I wanted to put it to the test and see how it all worked out in practice.

SUMMER HULL/THE POINTS GUY

Booking a hotel to earn 28 miles per dollar via Rove Miles

When searching for a hotel in the Big Apple using Rove Miles, my first observation was that most of the options presented weren't places I'd stayed at before. They were, at least to me, mostly outside my typical list of big-brand go-to spots within World of Hyatt, Marriott Bonvoy and other similar programs.

There are some exceptions, though — you can even earn hotel loyalty benefits on select chain hotel stays booked via Rove Miles.

To more easily spot those options, just toggle on the option under "Loyalty Eligible," as shown in the lower-left part of the image below.

Daily Newsletter
Reward your inbox with the TPG Daily newsletter
Join over 700,000 readers for breaking news, in-depth guides and exclusive deals from TPG’s experts
ROVE MILES

But the best overall deals for my trip — when factoring in price, hotel quality and bonus miles earned — were at some nonchain properties.

During my search, it also became clear that when using Rove Miles to book a hotel stay, you really have to pay attention, as the higher mileage payout rates are only available with a significantly higher nightly room rate.

For example, as shown below, for one particular property, I could pay about $356 per night and earn 28 miles per dollar spent. Or, I could pay $941 per night and earn 38 miles per dollar spent for a pricier rate at the same hotel.

ROVE MILES

That higher earning rate also included breakfast, but it’s safe to assume I could find a solid meal for much less than the nearly $600 per night premium required to earn an extra 10 miles per dollar spent.

Ultimately, I booked the option without breakfast, which cost about $356 (plus taxes and fees) per night and resulted in me earning 28 miles per dollar spent. That rang in at a total of 21,746 miles for the two-night stay.

Note that I owed some taxes and fees directly to the hotel during the stay, which Rove Miles indicated would be $66.56 at the time of booking. In practice, the rates and fees cost exactly that amount.

It's also worth noting that the price being charged via Rove Miles was within a few dollars of what it would cost to book directly with the hotel on my dates.

ROVE MILES

The miles posted very quickly after the stay, within a day or two. If I had wanted them even sooner, I could've earned them instantly at booking by making the stay nonrefundable. I wanted a bit more flexibility, so I had a rate that was refundable until four days before the stay.

What my stay at a hotel booked through Rove Miles was like

As for the stay itself, check-in at the Life Hotel New York in the city's NoMad neighborhood was blessedly uneventful, which is always a relief to me when booking via a third-party site.

SUMMER HULL/THE POINTS GUY

It was certainly interesting staying in the building, where, as the name implies, Life magazine was once produced. That history is evident throughout the property — from iconic framed Life magazine covers to related artwork and even physical nods to the building’s past, such as a golden camera on display.

There's a classic yet elevated early and midcentury vibe in the lobby that harkens back to the heyday of print magazine journalism in a way that felt both nostalgic and important.

The building, unsurprisingly given its history, felt older, with smaller, slower elevators and compact rooms. Truthfully, it wasn’t my favorite New York City stay of all time, but it worked well enough for a quick two-night trip.

Bottom line

For the two-night stay I needed in New York, booking via Rove Miles netted me 21,746 miles, which I would conservatively value at over $325, marking a pretty significant rebate of sorts on that $843 stay. All that's left to do is transfer those Rove Miles to a transfer partner like Flying Blue to book a flight like the one to Paris for just 18,800 miles (plus taxes and fees).

All of the mechanics of booking through Rove Miles and receiving the bonus miles worked exactly as promised. While it remains to be seen if I'll need to stay at that exact hotel again, I have little doubt this won’t be my last time booking travel through Rove Miles if the earning rates stay this high.

If you want to try Rove Miles out for yourself, you can earn 1,000 bonus miles when you join through this link.

Featured image by SUMMER HULL/THE POINTS GUY
Editorial disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are the author’s alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airline or hotel chain, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.