Last month, Chocolate Finance trialed a new feature that allowed selected accountholders to convert their returns into Max Miles.
This was basically an opportunity to buy Max Miles at 1.6 cents each, a no-lose proposition in my view. Not only was this 20% cheaper than HeyMax’s own Max Miles Boost campaign, but you could cash out Max Miles at 1.8 cents each through the FlyAnywhere feature, or get even higher value converting them into airline miles or hotel points.
This campaign has just been renewed, with March 2026’s returns now eligible for conversion into Max Miles. I’ve also been told that Chocolate has expanded the pool of eligible users this month, and plans to continue the campaign for April 2026’s returns as well.
As I said previously, this is an arbitrage opportunity, and one you should definitely take advantage of, assuming you have funds in Chocolate Finance already.
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Convert Chocolate Finance returns into Max Miles

Chocolate Finance is now offering selected customers the opportunity to convert their previous month’s returns into Max Miles, at a rate of 62.5 Max Miles per S$1 of returns.
If you’ve been targeted to participate, you’ll see this banner in the Chocolate Finance app.

Tapping on the banner will bring you to a form, where you’ll indicate how much of your March 2026 returns you want to convert into Max Miles.
- The form must be submitted by 6 p.m on 30 April 2026
- On 1 May 2026, Chocolate will withdraw the chosen amount from your balance
- Max Miles will be awarded by 10 May 2026
- Your HeyMax email address must match the email used on Chocolate Finance in order for miles to be properly credited.

For example, if your returns for March 2026 were S$100, you can opt to convert up to S$100 into 6,250 Max Miles. You don’t have to convert your entire balance if you don’t want to, but, as we’ll see in the next section, you really should.
| ⚠️ Important Note |
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The Max Miles conversion campaign is separate from the Max Miles earned from spending on the Chocolate Visa Debit Card. Cardholders will continue to earn 1 Max Mile per S$1, capped at the first S$1,000 per calendar month, and 0.4 Max Miles per S$1 subsequently (with a 100 Max Miles/month cap on bill payments). Spending on the Chocolate Visa Debit Card is not a prerequisite to be targeted for this campaign. |
Terms & Conditions
The T&Cs for the Max Miles conversion campaign can be found here.
Is it worth it?
Simply put: yes.
If you’ve been selected to participate, this is an offer you should absolutely take up — even if you have very little interest in miles otherwise. Why? Because the HeyMax FlyAnywhere feature allows you to cash out Max Miles at 1.8 cents each, as a direct deposit to your bank account.

In other words, you earn an extra return by buying Max Miles at 1.6 cents and redeeming them at 1.8 cents. The table below compares the returns from cashing out Chocolate Finance returns in cash, versus Max Miles.
| One-Month Returns, Cash vs Max Miles |
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| Amount | Returns (Cash) |
Returns (Max Miles) |
| First S$20,000 | S$33.33 2% |
S$37.50 2.25% |
| Next S$30,000 | S$45 1.8% |
S$50.63 2.03% |
If you already have funds inside Chocolate Finance, then you might as well boost those returns to 2.25% and 2.03% respectively through the Max Miles conversion option.
Here’s how FlyAnywhere works:
- Book your air tickets however you like: through the airline’s official website, an OTA, or even a traditional brick-and-mortar travel agency.
- Submit a FlyAnywhere redemption request and upload the receipt
- Get reimbursed for your flight in cash, via PayNow, at a rate of S$0.018 per Max Mile
FlyAnywhere redemptions can be made for anyone, so even if you don’t have any recent or upcoming travel plans, you can always get a friend or family member to forward you their ticket as the basis for your claim.
There are two points worth highlighting:
- FlyAnywhere requires a minimum redemption of 1,000 Max Miles (equivalent to S$16 of Chocolate returns), but there is no fixed redemption denomination beyond that threshold
- Partial redemptions are not allowed. You must have enough Max Miles to cover the entire cost of the ticket
Therefore, if you were starting from a zero Max Miles balance, then you might end up with orphan miles.
That said, even if your Chocolate Finance returns are insufficient to cover the cost of a commercial ticket, FlyAnywhere also supports award flights. In this scenario, you’ll be reimbursed for the cash component of the ticket, i.e. taxes and surcharges.
These start at S$65.20 or 3,622 Max Miles for flights from Singapore. Taxes can be even lower for other points of origin (e.g. just US$5.60 from the USA), so it shouldn’t be too difficult to cash out.

A few more points to know about FlyAnywhere:
- Requests can be submitted for any flight booked within the past one month (whether or not it’s already been flown)
- Both budget and full service carriers are supported, with no airline restrictions
- Tickets in foreign currency will be converted into SGD at the current spot rate to calculate the Max Miles deduction
- If you use a non-cash instrument to pay for part of your commercial ticket, e.g. United TravelBank or some other airline credits, Max Miles can only be redeemed for the remaining component paid in cash
I’ve written a detailed guide to FlyAnywhere, which can be found below.
HeyMax FlyAnywhere guide: Redeem Max Miles for any seat, any airline, anywhere
What else can you do with Max Miles?
Apart from FlyAnywhere, Max Miles can be converted to more than 30 airline and hotel partners, at a 1:1 ratio for all programmes (except AirAsia Rewards, Shangri-La Circle and IHG One Rewards).
| HeyMax Transfer Partners | |
| ✈️ Airlines | |
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| 🏨 Hotels | |
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| All partners with a Direct tag support in-app transfers via the HeyMax app (usually instant, but not always). For all other partners, HeyMax will issue a prepaid Visa card to purchase points from the relevant programme. | |
You could certainly get more than 1.6 cents per Max Mile from some of these programmes. The ones that immediately jump to mind are World of Hyatt points and Accor points. Accor points, in particular, have a fixed redemption value of 2 Euro cents each (2.97 cents), so buying them at 1.6 cents is like locking in a discount of ~46% on future hotel stays.
During a recent promotion, HeyMax offered an uncapped 20% transfer bonus to Accor points, which allowed you to net 3.56 cents per Max Mile!
Conclusion
Chocolate Finance has extended its campaign for converting returns into Max Miles, which is basically an opportunity to purchase miles at 1.6 cents each.
With the FlyAnywhere cash-out option valuing Max Miles at 1.8 cents each, this is essentially an arbitrage opportunity. Moreover, 1.8 cents should be the floor valuation, because you can achieve higher returns by converting those Max Miles into miles or points with HeyMax’s 30+ partners.
This campaign will also be extended to April 2026’s returns, so keep that in mind when deciding how much you want to deposit for the month.

The big question is whether Chocolate could survive.
Only question is will this be sustainable . See AXS
I’ve been rejected from FlyAnywhere because it does not support award flights. Is redeeming the taxes and surcharges portion of an award flight a new feature?
it was added a few months ago
Interesting. I saw the app says award flights allowed, but the chatbot insists that award flights are not eligible for flyanywhere
you still dare to put big amount money just to get small interest with their track record of pause withdrawal
if that incident got you panicking, you really don’t understand how the product works.
unfortunately im still not a targeted user for this…