A Complete Guide to ALL Accor+ Hotel Subscriptions

ALL Accor+ is Accor's family of paid subscriptions, a set of models that hand you fixed discounts and instant elite status the moment you pay, rather than making you earn them over a year of stays.
It's one of the more misunderstood corners of the hotel loyalty world, partly because Accor keeps renaming things and partly because the benefits shift depending on where you are.
I subscribed to the Explorer model to work out how the whole lineup actually fits together. This guide walks through all four models plus the separate program in China, who each one suits, and how to buy in without overpaying.
What a Paid Hotel Subscription Actually Buys You
The idea is simple. Instead of earning perks slowly through stays, you pay one flat annual fee and the perks show up the same day, whether you stay three nights this year or 30.
This isn't a new gimmick, either. Accor has run the model in Asia-Pacific for about 30 years under the Accor Plus name, so it's well past the proof-of-concept stage.
The exact package depends on the model, but they're all built from the same ingredients.
- A flat 15% discount: off public rates at participating hotels, replacing the 2 to 10% member discount that free ALL members get.
- Instant elite status: each model deposits 10 to 30 Status Nights the day you subscribe, enough for Silver or Gold without a single stay.
- Model-specific extras: free nights, dining discounts, flash sales, or a monthly points drip, depending on which one you pick.
Everything sits on top of the free ALL program. You keep every point and Status Night you've already banked, and you keep earning both on your stays as usual.
One quick thing I'd like to mention is that Accor's footprint in Canada is very thin, so these really earn their keep on trips to Europe and Asia, where the brands are almost everywhere.

The Four ALL Accor+ Models at a Glance
Accor is unifying its regional paid programs under the ALL Accor+ name in stages. Asia-Pacific's Accor Plus became ALL Accor+ Explorer on October 1, 2025. Europe's ALL Plus Voyageur rolled into Voyager from January 2026, and Brazil's ALL Signature is being rebranded into the family through 2026.

There are four models to choose from, plus a separate program in China that I'll come to shortly. All euro prices below are converted to Canadian dollars at 1.62, as of July 13, 2026.
| Model | Annual Fee | Best For | Core Benefit |
|---|---|---|---|
| ALL Accor+ ibis | €99 (C$160) | Budget stays, Europe-led | 15% off the ibis family, instant Silver |
| ALL Accor+ Voyager | €179 (C$290) | Global all-rounder | 15% off 30+ brands, instant Silver |
| ALL Accor+ Explorer | €215 (C$348) | Asia-Pacific and the UAE | Two free nights, dining discounts, instant Gold |
| ALL Signature | from €135 (C$219) | South America, points collectors | Monthly points drip |
Each model fits a different kind of traveller, so it's worth walking through them one at a time.
ALL Accor+ ibis – The Budget Specialist (€99 / C$160)
This is the entry point. You get a flat 15% off the best public rate across ibis, ibis Styles, and the wider economy family. The discount runs all year, on one or two rooms per stay, for business or leisure.

Put a number on it. A typical ibis night in Europe runs around €75 (C$122), so the 15% is roughly €11 off. Stay nine or ten nights a year and the €99 fee is already covered.
It also throws in 10 Status Nights on signup, enough for instant Silver. That level brings a welcome drink and late checkout at participating hotels.
Two smaller perks round it out. Guaranteed availability holds a room for you up to two days before arrival even when the hotel is sold out, though you can't pair it with the discount. You also get a direct line to priority support for bookings and changes.
Honestly, unless you're making lots of business trips where your options always narrow down to ibis hotels for budget reasons, this one is hard to get excited about. The discount never stretches past the economy tier, and the Silver status it comes with is the thinnest in the program.
For that specific commuter, though, the math works with room to spare. For everyone else, Voyager is the smarter buy.
ALL Accor+ Voyager – The Global All-Rounder (€179 / C$290)
Voyager stretches the same 15% discount across 30-plus brands and 4,500-plus hotels, from Sofitel at the top to ibis budget at the bottom. It applies to one or two rooms per stay.

The upside scales with how much you spend. Fifteen percent off a €250 (C$405) Sofitel night is nearly €38, so a single week in Europe can clear the €179 fee on its own.
You get 20 Status Nights on signup, which lands you at Silver and two-thirds of the way to Gold before your first stay. Like ibis, it includes guaranteed availability up to two days before arrival at sold-out hotels.
Raffles and Fairmont were excluded at launch, but they joined the discount in January 2026, so the luxury end is now firmly in play.
There's a business angle as well. Order subscriptions for a team and you unlock volume pricing plus dedicated account support. If you mix brands and regions and spend north of C$1,900 a year with Accor, this is the workhorse.
The fee gap to Explorer is small, so the real decision is geography, not price. If Asia-Pacific isn't on your calendar, Voyager is the one to hold. If you only ever book ibis, save the money and take the cheaper ibis subscription instead.
ALL Accor+ Explorer – The Asia-Pacific Powerhouse (€215 / C$348)
This is the one I subscribed to, and it's the most interesting model in the lineup, with one big asterisk. Its headline perks are locked to 22 Asia-Pacific countries plus the UAE.

The centrepiece is Stay Plus, which gives you two free nights a year at more than 1,300 hotels across Asia-Pacific. The mechanic is buy-one-get-one. You book two consecutive nights, and the pricier night comes free, so it works out to a two-night minimum.
The important part is that there's no obvious value cap. It works at premium properties, not just budget hotels.
Take a two-night stay at Fairmont Tokyo from our full Explorer guide. The member rate runs C$2,457, but Stay Plus makes the second night free and drops the total to C$1,116. That's a saving of over C$1,300 on a single booking.
I haven't redeemed mine yet, but on paper one good redemption pays for the whole subscription several times over. The screenshots below show the same room with and without Stay Plus.


You also get 30% off dining and 15% off drinks at participating Asia-Pacific restaurants and bars. I put this to use at El Santo, the Mexican restaurant at Novotel Living Bangkok Sukhumvit, during the same stay where I tested whether Aeroplan HotelSavers is worth it. The 30% came straight off the bill with no fuss.

That dining break adds up faster than you'd expect. Thirty percent off a proper dinner for two in Bangkok or Singapore can be C$40 or C$50 back in one sitting, and it stacks across a whole trip.
Then there's Red Hot Rooms, an Explorer-only flash-sale channel with member rates up to 50% off across Asia-Pacific. It's the perk I'm most curious to test on a longer trip.

The 15% stay discount itself now applies worldwide, so the subscription isn't dead weight once you leave the region. Make no mistake, though, the reason to buy Explorer is Asia-Pacific.
The best part for me was the status. The 30 Status Nights hit my account the moment I paid, and I was Gold instantly, with no stays required. Since then, a room upgrade and late checkout have been routine whenever I ask for them.
Those 30 nights also leave you halfway to Platinum, which adds free breakfast and lounge access at Asia-Pacific hotels. One more detail worth knowing is that the fee can be paid with 14,000 ALL Reward points instead of cash. Run the numbers first, though, since those points carry about €280 of face value against a €215 fee, so cash is usually the better way to pay.
My honest take is simple. If Asia-Pacific or the UAE is anywhere on your travel map, Explorer is one you should definitely consider signing up for. The free nights and dining discounts alone can outrun the fee on a single trip.
ALL Signature – The Points Collector’s Play (from €135 / C$219)
Signature is the odd one out. It's a Brazil-based points subscription billed in Brazilian reais, with no residency requirement to sign up. Instead of a discount, it pays you in points.
It's sold in four plans that scale from a light points trickle to a serious earning engine. For the value column, ALL points redeem at a fixed 2,000 points for €40, which works out to 2 euro cents apiece, or about 3.2 Canadian cents at current exchange rates.
| Plan | Yearly Price | Monthly Points | Points per Year | Points Value | Status Nights |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Essential | R$912 (C$237) | +500 | 7,500 | ~C$243 | 1 every 2 months |
| Discover | R$1,740 (C$452) | +1,000 | 15,000 | ~C$486 | 1 per month |
| Explorer | R$5,040 (C$1,310) | +3,000 | 45,000 | ~C$1,458 | 1 per month |
| Absolute | R$9,120 (C$2,371) | +5,000 | 75,000 | ~C$2,430 | 5 per month |
The earning works as a drip. Each plan credits its monthly points automatically, then adds a matching bonus every fourth month. That's how Essential's 500 a month lands at 7,500 for the year, and Absolute's 5,000 a month reaches 75,000.
The Status Nights drip in the same way, but watch the ceiling. Bonus Status Nights are capped at 30 per account per year across every subscription you hold. Absolute grants five a month, so it maxes out that cap by mid-year and the rest simply don't count.
Each plan also credits Status Points on top, from 1,200 a year on Essential up to 12,000 on Absolute. Those push you toward status directly, and Absolute's 12,000 is the only subscription route that chips away at Diamond, since Diamond is points-only.
Timing matters, too. Status Points reset every December 31, so starting a plan in January banks a full year's worth inside one status year. Sign up mid-year and the drip splits across two, which blunts any run at status.
The value math is sobering. Each plan's yearly points are worth almost exactly what the plan costs, so you're buying ALL points at close to face value. The real upside sits on top of the points, in the Status Points on every plan and the streaming and São Paulo lounge perks on the pricier ones.
Points never expire and redeem worldwide, and you get a 10% bonus on points transferred in from partners like Livelo, Smiles, TudoAzul, and LATAM Pass.

One quick warning. Signature's "Explorer" plan has nothing to do with the Explorer subscription above. Accor reused the name, which is needlessly confusing.
Yearly billing is exactly 12 times the monthly price, so the value comes from the recurring 15% to 30% annual-plan promos.
Don't let the Brazil framing put you off, though. I think Signature is worth it in its own right. The points drip alone covers the fee, and the Status Points, the transfer bonus, and the extras all ride along on top of that.
It's also the only model to go for if you see yourself reaching all the way to Diamond. That tier is earned purely through Status Points, and Signature is the one subscription that generates them.
Accor Plus 2.0: China’s Separate Subscription Program
China is the one market Accor keeps walled off. Instead of the global models, mainland China runs a program called Accor Plus 2.0, sold through WeChat and Taobao rather than Accor's homepage.
It works differently, too. Rather than an always-on 15% discount, it hands you a book of single-use vouchers, which makes it strong for planned trips and weaker for spontaneous ones.
There are three tiers, and the room and dining benefits are valid across mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau. Yuan prices are converted to Canadian dollars at 0.20, as of July 13, 2026.
| Tier | Price | Status Nights | Highlights |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic | ¥499 (C$100) | 5 | 40% and 30% off room vouchers, buffet vouchers up to 50% off |
| Premium | ¥1,288 (C$258) | 20 (Silver) | One free night, room upgrades, lounge and spa vouchers |
| Supreme | ¥2,288 (C$458) | 30 (Gold) | Two free nights, breakfast vouchers, year-round buffet discount |
Premium and Supreme show promotional prices here. The list prices are ¥1,488 (C$298) and ¥2,688 (C$538), so the promos are worth catching.

The detail that travels well is that the Status Nights count toward your global ALL status. The Gold you unlock through the Supreme tier is valid worldwide, not just in China.
How Status Nights Fast-Track Your Elite Status
The discounts get the marketing, but the instant elite status is the part I'd actually pay for.
Each model front-loads elite nights the day you subscribe. ibis grants 10, Voyager 20, and Explorer 30. Explorer's 30 nights clear the Gold bar outright, which normally takes around €2,800 (C$4,536) of eligible spend to reach the hard way.
Those nights stack with the nights you earn from real stays, so you can subscribe and then keep climbing toward Platinum from an elevated starting line.

There are two limits worth knowing before you get too excited.
First, bonus Status Nights are capped at 30 per account per year. The cap pools every subscription together with Accor's co-branded bank credit cards, which exist in a few countries but not in Canada. You can't stack Explorer plus a second subscription to reach 60 and shortcut your way to Platinum.
Second, Diamond is points-only. It's earned through Status Points rather than Status Nights, so none of these night lump-sums move you toward it. The only subscription that helps is Signature's top Absolute plan, which drips 12,000 Status Points a year, and even that covers less than half of what Diamond requires.
When a Subscription Pays Off, and How to Buy Smart
The quick test for your wallet is simple. Take your expected annual Accor spend, multiply it by 15%, and if that beats the fee, the subscription pays for itself on discounts alone.
Taken at the full 15%, the three discount models break even at these levels.
| Model | Annual Fee | Break-Even Spend |
|---|---|---|
| ibis | €99 (C$160) | €660 (C$1,069) in ibis-family stays |
| Voyager | €179 (C$290) | €1,193 (C$1,933) across any brand |
| Explorer | €215 (C$348) | €1,433 (C$2,322), or one Asia-Pacific trip |
Explorer bends that math, because the two free nights and the dining discounts can clear the fee in a single Asia-Pacific trip, long before the 15% matters. Just remember to measure everything against the free member rate you'd already get, not the public rate.
There's also a buying tip that saves real money. Accor almost always has a signup promotion running, and the recurring one worth waiting for grants around 2,000 bonus ALL points, worth roughly €40 (C$65).
Refer-a-friend offers also pop up occasionally, though they tend to pay out in dining vouchers, so they're weaker for most people than the points promo. Unless you need the benefits within weeks, waiting for a points offer is close to free money, because the subscription is identical either way.
One last thing for Canadians. You're paying the fee in euros or reais, so put it on a credit card with no foreign transaction fees to keep a 2.5% surcharge from eating into the value.
Which ALL Accor+ Model Fits Which Traveller?
Once you strip away the marketing, the decision comes down to geography and how you travel. This is where I'd point each type of person.
- The budget commuter: ibis, if your work or weekend stays live in the ibis family across Europe.
- The global all-rounder: Voyager, if you mix brands and regions and spend C$1,900 or more a year with Accor.
- The Asia-Pacific regular: Explorer, if you take at least one trip a year to the region or the UAE and enjoy eating out.
- The points collector or Diamond chaser: Signature, whether you're travelling around South America or building Status Points toward Diamond.
- The China-based traveller: Accor Plus 2.0, for domestic stays and dining across mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau.
For most Canadians reading this, the honest shortlist is two models. Explorer if Asia-Pacific is anywhere on your calendar, and Signature if you'd rather collect points and Status Points that pay off no matter where you travel.
Conclusion
ALL Accor+ is one of the few hotel programs where paying upfront can beat earning perks the slow way, as long as you actually stay at Accor hotels.
The decision really comes down to geography. Explorer is the clear pick for Asia-Pacific and the UAE, Voyager is the flexible global option, and ibis is the budget specialist. Signature is the quiet sleeper of the group, and the only path worth taking if Diamond is the summit you're aiming for.
If you travel to Europe or Asia with any regularity, work out your expected Accor spend, wait for a points promo, and pick the model that matches your map. If you rarely stay with Accor, the free ALL program is all you need.







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