Qatar Airways Privilege Club is running a 50% bonus on Avios purchases through May 25, 2026. Buy enough to hit the top tier and you’re looking at an effective 1.53 cents per Avios — close enough to the mythical 1.4 cents that the headline writers are already rounding down. That pricing floor changes the math on several premium cabin redemptions where transferring from Amex, Chase, or Citi suddenly looks expensive.
The promotion offers tiered bonuses: 20% above 3,000 Avios, scaling up to 50% once you buy 66,000 or more (with some reports showing the 50% kicking in as low as 21,000–42,000 depending on targeting). Maximum purchase is 250,000 Avios per calendar year before bonus, so one big transaction gets you 375,000 total for roughly $5,750. Avios post within 72 hours and, as usual, are non-refundable. The window slams shut at 23:59 GMT+3 on May 25.
Where Buying at 1.53¢ Crushes Transfer Math
Chase Ultimate Rewards currently has no transfer bonus to Qatar Avios. A standard 1:1 transfer means you need about 1.53 Chase points to buy one Avios outright at this rate. If your redemption is worth more than 1.53 cents per Avios, buying wins. Most high-end Avios redemptions clear that bar easily.
Off-peak Qsuites from the US to Doha are the poster child. JFK, LAX, ORD, MIA, IAH, and several others price at 70,000 Avios one-way in business. Cash fares routinely run $4,000–$7,000. That’s 5.7–10 cents per Avios. Buying 70,000 Avios costs you about $1,071. Transferring the same from Chase or Amex would require 70,000 points you could have used elsewhere at 2+ cents each. The gap is real.
Even better: connect in Doha. Off-peak Qsuites from the US to the Maldives, Cape Town, or Singapore via Doha often price around 85,000–95,000 Avios total. Still well above the 1.53 cents threshold. The product is the same double-bed suite with closing doors; only the second leg changes. Stopovers are permitted and underused.
Shorter hops from Doha deliver even higher cents-per-point. London at 42,500 off-peak or Bangkok/Singapore at 42,500–50,000 in Qsuites routinely value out at 6–8 cents per Avios. These are the routes where buying feels like printing money while the bonus lasts.
The Philippine Airlines Angle
New this year: Qatar Avios now redeem on Philippine Airlines. No published chart, but it’s distance-based and bookable directly on the Qatar site. LAX to Manila starts at 110,000 Avios one-way in business. JFK-MNL runs 154,500. Taxes are reasonable compared to legacy carriers.
These redemptions are wide open right now. If you’ve been staring at $6,000+ cash prices for a decent lie-flat seat to Manila, 110,000 bought Avios at $1,683 is absurdly cheap. The math beats transferring Citi ThankYou Points or Chase points unless you have a 30%+ transfer bonus we haven’t seen yet.
Compare that to standard Avios partner redemptions on American or Alaska — perfectly fine, but rarely delivering the 5+ cents per point that Qsuites and PAL business do. Buying for those is usually a waste.
Bottom line: This isn’t a “buy a ton and hope” situation. It’s a targeted strike. Lock in confirmed Qsuites availability to or through Doha, or a PAL business seat to Manila, then buy the exact shortfall. Anything else and you’re better off transferring when a real bonus appears.
The promotion ends in a few days. If you see the award space, pull the trigger. These 1.5-cent Avios won’t be here long, and Qsuites availability has a habit of disappearing right when you finally have the points.
Action item: Search Qatar Privilege Club for your exact route today. If it prices at 70k, 85k, or the PAL 110k sweet spots and you have the award locked, buy the Avios before May 25. Otherwise, keep transferring and wait for a better sale.