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HomeTRAVELTargeted Offer: 30,000 Bonus TD Rewards Points with Expedia for TD

Targeted Offer: 30,000 Bonus TD Rewards Points with Expedia for TD


If you hold the TD First Class Travel® Visa Infinite* Card, it’s worth a look in your inbox right now. TD is sending select cardholders a targeted offer worth 30,000 bonus TD Rewards points on a single booking through Expedia for TD.

This one landed in my own inbox, which is what sent me digging through the fine print. I haven’t booked through it yet, but I’m planning to register and put it to use before the deadline.

Below, I’ll walk through how the offer works, what the points are actually worth, and how to squeeze even more value out of it by stacking the card’s annual travel credit.

30,000 Bonus Points for a $750 Expedia for TD Booking

The offer runs from June 2 to June 16, 2026, and it’s aimed at the primary cardholder on accounts that received the email. Spots are limited and handed out on a first-come, first-served basis, so this isn’t one to sit on.

To qualify, you need to register first, then complete your first Expedia for TD purchase of at least $750 during the offer period. That $750 is the total charged to your card, taxes and fees included, measured net of any credits or refunds, and the charge has to post to your account by June 16.

Your travel also needs to be completed between June 2 and October 31, 2026, so this is built for trips you’re taking this summer or early fall, not a booking for next year.

Registering takes two clicks. Select “Accept offer” in the email, then “Register now” on the landing page to confirm your opt-in before June 16.

From there, book online at ExpediaForTD.com or by phone. The 30,000 bonus points post within 120 days of qualifying. One thing to keep in mind is that TD can claw the points back if you cancel or refund the booking before your travel is complete, so only count on them once you’ve actually taken the trip.

What the Points Are Actually Worth

When you redeem TD Rewards points directly through Expedia for TD, every 200 points are worth $1. That puts the 30,000-point bonus at exactly $150 in travel value.

So the headline is simple. Spend $750 on an eligible booking, and you’re effectively getting $150 back in points toward future travel, or roughly 20% of your spend returned.

It’s worth being clear-eyed about the rate. At 200 points per dollar, TD Rewards points are fixed at 0.5 cents per point through the Expedia for TD portal, which isn’t a number that’ll excite anyone chasing outsized redemptions. But this is a bonus layered on top of spending you were likely going to do anyway, so I’d treat the $150 as a straight discount rather than a points play.

The slightly awkward part is that your reward comes back as points, not cash. To actually turn that $150 into travel, you have to make another Expedia for TD booking down the road, so the value only fully lands if you’ve got a future trip in mind.

If you don’t, there’s a fallback. TD Rewards lets you redeem points to pay off eligible purchases on your statement at 0.44 cents each. That’s a bit below the 0.5 cents per point you’d get through Expedia for TD, but it’s still a decent way to cash out if you’d rather not lock yourself into booking through the portal again. We covered how those redemption rates compare here.

TD Rewards Adds More Redemption Flexibility

Read more

Stacking the $100 Travel Credit on Top

This is where the offer gets more interesting. The TD First Class Travel® Visa Infinite* Card comes with a $100 annual TD Travel Credit, and the same booking can trigger both perks at once.

The travel credit applies to your first eligible purchase of the calendar year, as long as it’s a hotel, motel, lodging, or vacation rental booking of $500 or more (CAD) through Expedia for TD. A qualifying vacation package that bundles a stay with transportation counts too.

If your $750 booking includes a hotel portion of at least $500, you can land the 30,000 bonus points and the $100 statement credit on the very same transaction.

Stack them and you’re looking at $150 in points plus $100 back on a $750 booking. That’s $250 in total value, or roughly a third of your spend returned, which is a much better story than the bonus alone.

The one caveat is the travel credit resets per calendar year. If you’ve already used your $100 credit on an earlier 2026 booking, you’ll only see the points from this offer.

50,000+ travellers get this email

Weekly deals, credit card insights, and points strategies – free forever.

Welcome bonus146,000 TD Rewards Points

Earn 20,000 points on first purchase

Earn 126,000 points upon spending $7,500 in the first 6 months

Earning rates

8xExpedia for TD6xGroceries6xDining6xTransit4xBills4xStreaming2xEverything Else

Key perks

  • 4 Visa Airport Companion lounge visits per year
  • $100 annual Expedia for TD travel credit
  • Annual birthday bonus up to 10,000 TD Rewards points
Prince of Travel Award

An Example Booking

To show how this comes together, here’s a booking I’ve been eyeing myself. The Nine Tree Parnas Seoul Myeongdong runs $765.22 for three nights through Expedia for TD, which clears the $750 threshold with a little room to spare.

Nine Tree Parnas Seoul Myeongdong
The Nine Tree Parnas Seoul Myeongdong sits in the heart of Seoul’s Myeongdong district.

The hotel sits right in the heart of Seoul, in the Myeongdong district, one of the city’s busiest shopping and street-food neighbourhoods.

I’ll be honest, Myeongdong has slowly turned into a bit of a tourist trap, and prices have crept up with it. But the location convenience can’t be beat.

It’s walkable to the major sights and steps from two subway lines, so it still works as a great base whether it’s your first trip or a return visit.

I’ve stayed at a Nine Tree property before, and it was a reliable mid-range pick, a clean and modern room in a central spot without a premium price tag.

This is how the value stacks up on this single booking.

  • 30,000 bonus points ($150): the $765.22 spend clears the $750 minimum, so the targeted offer pays out.
  • $100 travel credit: the hotel booking is well above $500, which triggers the annual TD Travel Credit.
  • 6,121 base points (about $30): the card earns 8 TD Rewards points per dollar on Expedia for TD bookings, adding another 6,121 points on this spend.

Add it up and you’re looking at roughly $280 back on a $765 booking, or about 37% of the cost returned in points and credit.

Nine Tree Parnas Seoul Myeongdong hotel search results on Expedia for TD

Expedia for TD shows the full price up front, so it’s easy to confirm you’re clearing the $750 minimum before you book.

Is This a Good Deal?

If you have a trip to book and the dates line up, yes. A $250 return on a $750 hotel or package booking is hard to argue with, especially on travel you were planning anyway.

The ideal candidate here is someone with a summer or early-fall trip already on the calendar, ideally one heavy on the hotel side so the $500 threshold for the travel credit is easy to clear. If that’s you, registering is a no-brainer.

Where I’d pump the brakes is if you’d be booking purely to chase the bonus. Expedia for TD isn’t always the cheapest place to book, and a fixed value of 0.5 cents per point means there’s no upside beyond the flat $150. Forcing a $750 booking you don’t need rarely works out.

It’s also worth remembering this is targeted and capped. Not every cardholder will see it, the supply is limited, and you only earn the bonus once even if you make multiple bookings.

Conclusion

This one’s an easy yes for me. I’ve got travel to book before the end of October, so I’m registering and lining up a hotel-heavy booking to catch both the points and the $100 credit. That combination is the whole reason this offer is worth your attention.

If you don’t hold the card, this is a small reminder of why the TD First Class Travel® Visa Infinite* Card keeps earning its spot in a lot of Canadian wallets, with targeted top-ups like this landing on top of the everyday earn rate. For a fuller picture of how the points work, our guide to TD Rewards breaks down every redemption path.

Registration closes June 16, so if the email is sitting in your inbox, don’t let it expire before you’ve had a chance to use it.



This story originally appeared on princeoftravel

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