Wyndham Rewards has a solid promotion going on right now for buying points. It runs from July 7, 2025, to August 6, 2025, and offers a bonus of up to 60 percent on purchases. This deal stands out, especially since typical offers hover around 30 to 40 percent bonuses or 25 to 30 percent discounts.
Here is how the bonus breaks down. All Wyndham Rewards members get a 50 percent bonus when buying at least 3,000 points in one go. If you hold a co-branded Wyndham credit card, that jumps to 60 percent. Points normally cost 1.3 cents each but with the 50 percent bonus, you can get them for about 0.87 cents per point. The 60 percent bonus drops it to 0.81 cents. For instance, maxing out at $1,300 buys you 150,000 points with the 50 percent bonus or 160,000 with 60 percent.
Keep in mind the limits. You can buy up to 100,000 points per account per year before any bonuses apply. These purchases process through points.com, so they do not count as hotel spending on your credit card. It is a good opportunity if you are hitting minimum spend on cards like the Chase Freedom Unlimited or Citi Double Cash for everyday rewards.

Wyndham boasts over 9,000 hotels in more than 80 countries across 20 brands, like Wyndham Grand, La Quinta, Ramada, and Super 8. We bought 105,000 points to use for our stay at the Wyndham Garden Cam Ranh in Vietnam. We booked the three-bedroom beach villa at 15,000 per night, which is the same point value of every unit on the property. It was an incredible deal for a one-week stay in a three-bedroom beach villa with a private pool.
Points expire after 18 months of inactivity or four years from earning; whichever hits first. Any earn or redeem keeps them alive. The advice here is to buy only if you have a specific redemption in mind soon, like peak dates for events or topping off for a stay. Past deals included a 70 percent bonus earlier in 2025, but this one is still strong.
If you travel often and love Wyndham’s network, this could stretch your budget further. Check it out before August 6. Safe travels!
Word of caution – the 4 year expiration date after earning is a hard expiration. Additional earnings or redemptions won’t keep them alive.