Accor Live Limitless (ALL) and Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer are offering a 50% bonus on point transfers in both directions, valid from March 10–31, 2026.
The two programs first introduced two-way transfers back in September 2024, when a 50% launch bonus was offered alongside the new partnership. The value was marginal then, and now that the bonus is back for the partnership’s anniversary, not much has changed.
How It Works
The 50% bonus applies in both directions:
| Direction | Regular Rate | With 50% Bonus | Minimum |
|---|---|---|---|
| KrisFlyer → ALL | 9 miles = 2 pts | 9 miles = 3 pts | 4,500 KF miles |
| ALL → KrisFlyer | 2 pts = 1 mile | 2 pts = 1.5 miles | 2,000 ALL pts |
A few terms worth noting:
- Processing: Conversions are instant and free of charge, though bonus points may take up to seven business days to post
- Annual cap: A maximum of 180,000 KrisFlyer miles can be converted to ALL points per calendar year (no cap in the other direction)
- Name matching: Your names must match on both KrisFlyer and ALL accounts for transfers to process
Is Either Direction Worth It?
Let’s look at both directions through the lens of what you’re actually giving up.
KrisFlyer → ALL: With the bonus, 4,500 KrisFlyer miles gets you 1,500 ALL points. Since ALL points have a fixed redemption value of 2,000 points = €40 (~$60 CAD) toward hotel stays, dining, and spa treatments, 1,500 ALL points is worth about $45 CAD in hotel credit. That works out to roughly 1 cent per KrisFlyer mile – a mediocre return, and well below what you’d get from redeeming for Singapore Airlines business class or Suites flights.
ALL → KrisFlyer: In this direction, 2,000 ALL points gets you 1,500 KrisFlyer miles. You’re giving up roughly $60 CAD in guaranteed hotel value for 1,500 miles, which means you’d need to value each KrisFlyer mile at 4 cents or more just to break even. That’s a tall order, even for premium cabin redemptions. This direction is a hard pass.
So neither direction is particularly compelling on its own. The KrisFlyer-to-ALL conversion offers about 1 cent per mile, and the ALL-to-KrisFlyer direction requires an unrealistically high mile valuation to justify the trade.
That said, there’s an edge case worth flagging. If you’re planning travel in Southeast Asia and want to use KrisFlyer miles for short-haul Scoot flights, a small top-up from ALL points could make sense – especially if you’re just a few thousand miles short of a booking. Scoot’s fixed award chart starts at just 4,500 KrisFlyer miles one-way for short-haul routes, so even a modest conversion could get you over the line.

Scoot Introduces Fixed Award Chart
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The Canadian Angle
For Canadians, the picture is even less exciting. There are no Canadian credit cards that transfer to KrisFlyer, and none that transfer to Accor Live Limitless either. We don’t really have a natural source of either currency.
If you’re looking to fly Singapore Airlines from Canada, Aeroplan remains the most practical path by far. You can book SQ flights as a Star Alliance partner using Aeroplan points earned from Amex MR, TD, or CIBC cards. KrisFlyer mainly comes into play for products you can’t book via Aeroplan – most notably Suites Class – or for KrisFlyer-exclusive promotions like Spontaneous Escapes.
That said, there’s one creative workaround worth mentioning for anyone sitting on Rove Miles.

Rove Miles transfers to Accor Live Limitless at a 3:2 ratio (3,000 Rove Miles = 2,000 ALL points). With this 50% bonus, you could chain those onward to KrisFlyer:
3,000 Rove Miles → 2,000 ALL points → 1,500 KrisFlyer miles
That’s an effective 2:1 rate from Rove to KrisFlyer. It’s not a way to fund an entire SQ business class booking, but it could work as a top-up strategy if you’re a few thousand miles short of a Spontaneous Escapes or Scoot redemption.
I’d want to check the fine print first, though – transfer bonus terms sometimes exclude points that were transferred in from another program.
Conclusion
Neither direction of this promotion offers great value. Converting KrisFlyer miles to ALL nets you about 1 cent per mile, which is below what most flight redemptions would yield. Converting ALL points to KrisFlyer is even worse – giving up ~$60 CAD in hotel value for 1,500 miles is hard to stomach.
For most Canadian travellers, this one is easy to skip. If you happen to have Rove Miles and a specific KrisFlyer redemption in mind – whether it’s a Spontaneous Escapes deal or a cheap Scoot hop around Southeast Asia – the Rove–Accor–KrisFlyer chain is worth exploring. Just confirm the terms allow for transferred-in points first.
The promotion runs through March 31, 2026. For more on the programs involved, check out our guides to Accor Live Limitless and Rove Miles.
This story originally appeared on princeoftravel
