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What Is Accor ALL Limitless Experiences? Auctions Guide

July 18, 2026By PointAuctions Editorial

If you hold ALL Reward points, there is a corner of the Accor world most members never open: Limitless Experiences, Accor's own marketplace where you can bid points on hospitality and event packages, buy others at a fixed price, and enter prize draws for a small handful of points. Roland-Garros hospitality in Paris, SailGP grandstands on the Baltic coast, London concert tickets, a Grand Prix weekend with a Fairmont stay in Washington, D.C. It is one of the most internationally varied auction slates we track on PointAuctions.com, and thanks to a quirk of Accor's program math, it is also the easiest one to bid on rationally.

There are 26 Accor lots live right now. This guide walks a newcomer through the platform: the three formats, the bidding mechanics (which differ from the other hotel programs in one important way), and, honestly labeled, what Accor auctions have actually closed at in our data. If you are brand new to the whole idea of points auctions, start with our guide to how points auctions work, then come back for the Accor specifics.

What Limitless Experiences actually is

Limitless Experiences is Accor's e-store and auction platform for members of ALL, short for Accor Live Limitless, the loyalty program behind brands like Sofitel, Fairmont, Pullman, Novotel, and ibis. Per the platform's own terms, it is reserved for members of the ALL loyalty program. Membership is free, and you sign in with your regular ALL account.

What makes Accor different from every other program we track is that its points carry a published cash-equivalent floor: 2,000 ALL Reward points take 40 euros off a participating hotel stay, per Accor's own booking-with-points page (verified as of July 2026). No other major hotel program publishes a fixed rate like that. It matters here because every Limitless Experiences bid can be checked against a known alternative use of the same points. We wrote up the full framework in the Accor auction arbitrage math, and the bidding advice below leans on it.

Three formats: auctions, fixed price, prize draws

FormatHow you payHow to winWhere it lives
AuctionBid ALL Reward points against other membersHighest bid when the lot closes winsMarquee hospitality (Roland-Garros, PSG matchdays, SailGP weekends, hotel getaways)
Fixed priceSet points cost, no biddingFirst come, first servedWe classify these as Buy It Now (BIN), the same as any non-auction listing
Prize drawA few points per entry (Roland-Garros draws this spring ran 30 to 40 points)Random draw among entrantsPeriodic raffles the arbitrage post runs the numbers on

A couple of details behind the table. Per the terms Accor posts on its own auction lots, the member with the highest bid at the end of the auction is the winner. The platform's FAQ describes a FlexPay option that splits payment between points and a card on fixed-price items, though the site's terms flagged FlexPay as temporarily unavailable when we last checked (as of July 2026). And at 30-to-40-point entry prices, the prize-draw expected-value math is unusually good; the arbitrage post runs those numbers.

How the bidding works

This is where Accor parts ways with the other hotel auction platforms we cover.

The rules live on each lot, not in a global FAQ. Accor's platform terms say only that the company may organize special offers such as raffles and auctions; the operative rules (starting bid, increment, closing behavior) are printed on the individual lot pages, and they genuinely vary. On lots we have read, some accept raises of 500 to 5,000 points over the current bid, while others state a 1,000-point minimum raise with no maximum. Treat the lot page as the rulebook.

A points figure on a lot with zero bids is the starting price, not a bid. Accor auctions display a points amount from the moment they open. Until the bid counter reads at least 1, nobody has bid anything; that figure is simply where bidding must start.

We have found no advertised anti-snipe extension. Several other programs' auction platforms extend the close when a late bid lands, which makes last-second sniping pointless. Accor is different, as far as we can verify: we have found no extension rule advertised anywhere on the platform, and terms on several Accor lots state that a 30-second interval is required between bids, so a higher bid placed less than 30 seconds before the end of an auction can no longer be outbid before it closes.

On lots carrying the 30-second-interval language, a well-timed final bid can be literally unanswerable: with no anti-snipe extension we can find, the clock does not reset, and there may be no window to raise back. If you are the high bidder near the close, do not assume you will get time to respond to a late bid, and do not walk away from a lot you actually want to win.

Decide your ceiling with the hotel floor. Because 2,000 points always equal 40 euros of hotel credit, every Accor bid has a built-in benchmark: would you rather have this experience, or that many euros off Accor stays? Write your maximum down before the auction heats up. Our cents-per-point guide walks through the general method for any program.

Same title, separate auctions. Accor lists multiple copies of the same package as numbered lots, like "(1/4)" or "[3/4]", and each numbered lot is its own auction with its own close and its own price. Accor also re-runs experiences: when a title you saw close reappears weeks later, treat it as a similar auction with the same title, not the same lot running again. The dates and details often differ, and so do the closing prices, sometimes wildly.

What is actually on the block

Accor's slate is the most France-anchored of the programs we track, and the most sports-heavy: roughly six in ten of the Accor auction closes in our archive are sports lots, with Roland-Garros hospitality and Paris Saint-Germain matchdays the recurring anchors. That France-plus-sport tilt is a real signature; it is part of the wider pattern we mapped in the geography of points auctions. But the reach is genuinely global. In early July 2026, the live slate spanned London concerts (Andre Rieu, Anastacia, The Neighbourhood), SailGP grandstand lots in Sassnitz and Geneva, a Pacific Airshow package with a Gold Coast stay, and a Grand Prix weekend with a Fairmont stay in Washington, D.C., with live bidding sitting between 6,000 and roughly 46,000 points. The platform has also run Australian marquee lots like AFL Grand Final and British & Irish Lions tickets.

The fixed-price side is smaller but ranges wide: in the same early-July snapshot it held a 1,300-point airshow day ticket and a 19,000-point family camping night at a Sao Paulo Novotel.

What Accor auctions close at

A transparency note before any numbers. Not every close we record comes with a verified winning bid. For Accor, just under half of our figures are verified winning bids that we confirmed after the auction closed; the rest are last-observed bids, meaning where bidding stood when we last saw the auction before it ended. We label every figure accordingly and never blur the two.

With that said, here is the picture (updated monthly), drawn from 157 verified Accor auction closes plus a comparable number of last-observed closes, all with real bidding on record since late March 2026:

Median close: about 28,000 points

Typical range (middle half of closes): roughly 12,000 to 62,101 points

Bidding depth: about 5 bids per auction on average, so these are quieter rooms than the mega-programs

Sports prices above entertainment: sports lots' median close is around 51,000 points, while concert and show lots' median is nearer 12,000 points

The high-water marks show both the ceiling and why title-reading matters:

• The highest verified close in our archive: a Roland-Garros weekend built around a tennis experience with Gael Monfils and a stay at Royal Monceau, Raffles Paris, which sold for 310,000 points (4 bids). Two other auctions ran under that same title: one sold for 229,765 points (11 bids), and an earlier one closed with bidding at 130,000 points (last observed, 13 bids). Same words on the page, three separate auctions, three very different results.

• Roland-Garros 2026 finals tickets on Court Philippe-Chatrier sold for 210,000 points (13 bids).

• A three-ticket Paris Saint-Germain matchday package (including a mascot walk-on for a kid) closed with bidding at 170,012 points (last observed, 2 bids).

In our tracking, Accor's price distribution is unusually bimodal for a hotel program: entertainment lots cluster tightly in the low five figures while French sports hospitality carries almost all of the six-figure closes, so the "average" Accor lot barely exists. Most auctions close in the five figures, and whether any of it is a good use of your points comes back to the floor math: run the cash value of the experience against the 2,000-points-per-40-euro benchmark before you bid. Our Accor archive only reaches back to March 2026, so treat these as calibration points rather than a settled market report. For the cross-program version of this table, see what 2,000 closed auctions reveal about each program; for the giant-marketplace contrast, Marriott Bonvoy Moments runs a far busier, pricier room than Accor's.

Here is a live look at what recent Accor lots have actually ended at, verified and last-observed alike:

What is live right now

A snapshot of the Accor lots closing soonest:

You can browse the full slate on our Accor ALL Rewards program page, or jump straight to every live Accor lot in search.

How to get started

1. Join ALL (it is free) and sign in. The platform is members-only.

2. Identify the format before you click. Auction, fixed price, and prize draw all live on the same site, and the commitment is different for each.

3. Write down your maximum bid first. Use the 2,000-points-per-40-euro hotel floor as the yardstick, and hold the line when the close gets exciting.

4. Read the lot's own terms. Increments and closing rules vary lot to lot on Accor; the lot page is the rulebook.

5. Be present at the close. With no advertised extension and a 30-second bid interval on the lots we have read, the final minutes decide Accor auctions in a way they do not on soft-close platforms.

Accor's auction room is smaller and quieter than the giant hotel marketplaces, and that is its appeal: modest bid depth, a published points floor that makes every bid a solvable math problem, and a steady stream of French sports hospitality nobody else auctions. You can watch every live points auction across the programs we track on PointAuctions.com, and see what past Accor lots ended at, verified and last-observed alike, in our Accor closed-auction archive.